Fountain Theatre Launches 2001 Season on Jan. 18, 2001 | Playbill

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News Fountain Theatre Launches 2001 Season on Jan. 18, 2001 LOS ANGELES - Four mainstage productions (including two world premieres) headline the 2001 season just announced by the Fountain Theatre. The season will launch in January with the 40th anniversary production of Tennesee Williams' The Night of the Iguana and will conclude in October with the rarely-seen Arthur Miller classic, After the Fall.

LOS ANGELES - Four mainstage productions (including two world premieres) headline the 2001 season just announced by the Fountain Theatre. The season will launch in January with the 40th anniversary production of Tennesee Williams' The Night of the Iguana and will conclude in October with the rarely-seen Arthur Miller classic, After the Fall.

Iguana will be directed by Simon Levy, who won an Ovation Award last year for his staging of Williams' Summer and Smoke. Set in a rundown Mexican resort in 1941, the play stars Larry Poindexter as a defrocked priest, Jacqueline Schultz as a gentle spinster, and Karen Kondazian as the hotel's earthy proprietress. The run is Jan. 28-March 4.

The world premiere of Lynne Kaufman's Daisy in the Dreamtime will follow, March 30-May 6. Also directed by Levy, the play tells the true story of Daisy Ryan, an Irish emigre who, in 1913, pitched a tent in the Australian outback and became the first white woman to enter the "dreamtime" - living with and caring for the aborigines for 30 years. The play was nominated for the Kennedy Center/New American Plays Award.

Stephen Sachs' Central Avenue is up next, in a world premiere production (June 8-July 15). The drama with music deals with L.A.'s south-central black ghetto in the 1940s, the subject recently of three important books, "Central Avenue Sounds" by Steven Isoardi; "Upside Your Head," by Johnny Otis; and "Jazz Generations" by Buddy Collette. Sachs has focused his story on the attempt by the Colored Musicians Union to break down the barriers of segregation by merging with the White Musicians Union, at a time when William Parker rose to power in the LAPD and tried to prevent the mixing of the races in Central Avenue's famous jazz clubs.

The Fountain's New Works Festival will take place Aug. 1-Sept. 30, with a trio of new plays scheduled: The Scottsboro Boys by Mark Stein, directed by Bennett Bradley; Hair Pieces, a collection of short pieces about hair written by various female playwrights and presented in collaboration with the Jewish Women's Theatre Project and directed by Jan Lewis; and Hotel Lobby, a drama by L.A. writer Stephen Keep Mills, directed by Deborah Lawlor, co-artistic director of the Fountain.The season concludes (Oct. 2-Dec. 2) with Miller's After the Fall, starring Tracy Middendorf, who won an Ovation Award for her work in the Fountain's Summer and Smoke. Co-artistic director Stephen Sachs directs.

The Fountain has also scheduled numerous dance and outreach events during the coming year. For information and tickets call (323) 663-1525. The Fountain Theatre is located at 5060 Fountain Ave.

-- By Willard Manus
Southern California Correspondent

 
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