"Law & Order" Actress Annie Parisse Joins Cast of Coastal Disturbances at Berkshire Fest | Playbill

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News "Law & Order" Actress Annie Parisse Joins Cast of Coastal Disturbances at Berkshire Fest Annie Parisse, who plays assistant district attorney Alexandra Borgia in television's "Law & Order," is to star in the Berkshire Theatre Festival revival of Tina Howe's Coastal Disturbances, the Hartford Courant reported.

She will act opposite the previously announced Jeremy Davidson in the piece, which will run July 11 to 29. Mark Nelson directs.

The romantic drama takes place on a Massachusetts beach and explores the growing relationship between a quirky photographer and a handsome lifeguard. The original Broadway production starred Tim Daly and the then-unknown Annette Bening. It ran for nearly a year and is the only Howe play ever to reach Broadway.

Parisse's theatre credits include The Credeaux Canvas, Off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons in 2001.

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Peter Shaffer, Tennessee Williams, David Hare and Tony Kushner are some of the other major playwriting names that will be featured at the Berkshire Theatre Festival during the 2006 summer season. The season will commence May 25 with Kushner's adaptation of Corneille's The Illusion and run through Oct. 21, when David Hare's one-person, autobiographical show Via Dolorosa (here performed by Jonathan Epstein) ends its stay.

Both those shows will be on the festival's smaller Unicorn Stage. In between, the space will see Where Has Tommy Flowers Gone?, one of Terrence McNally's lesser-known, early works (playing June 28-July 22), and The Pilgrim Papers by Stephen Temperley (running July 28-Aug. 26). The former looks at the 1960s through the person of disenchanted, freeloading rebel Tommy Flowers. The latter—written by the author of Souvenir, a BTF production that traveled to Broadway earlier this season—purports to upend preconceptions about everything from Thanksgiving to the CIA.

The Main Stage season begins with Peter Shaffer's historical romp through the life of Mozart, Amadeus, directed by Eric Hill, starring Epstein and Randy Harrison ("Queer as Folk"), and playing June 20-July 8.

Williams' classic The Night of the Iguana comes next, with Anders Cato directing the tale of a group of outcasts, including a defrocked minister, trapped in a Mexican hotel. Last in the line-up is The Heidi Chronicles, the most famous work by the recently deceased Wendy Wasserstein. No director or cast have been announced. The production will likely be the most significant New York-area mounting of the period piece (action takes place from the late '60s to the mid-'80s) since the show first played Broadway in the late '80s. Dates are Aug. 15-Sept. 2.

 
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