New Play About Muralist Diego Rivera To Hit MI's Meadow Brook Canvas in March | Playbill

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News New Play About Muralist Diego Rivera To Hit MI's Meadow Brook Canvas in March A world premiere play about the creation of one of muralist Diego Rivera's most controversial and enduring works -- a Detroit arts legend -- is part of the 1998-99 season at Meadow Brook Theatre, Michigan's largest nonprofit resident theatre.

A world premiere play about the creation of one of muralist Diego Rivera's most controversial and enduring works -- a Detroit arts legend -- is part of the 1998-99 season at Meadow Brook Theatre, Michigan's largest nonprofit resident theatre.

A Gift of Glory: Edsel Ford and the Diego Rivera Murals, by Meadow Brook's resident playwright Karim Alrawi, will debut with previews starting March 10, 1999. The show opens March 13, 1999 and continues through April 4, 1999 as part of the current, seven-show season, which began Sept. 19 with a New Mexico set staging of The Merry Wives of Windsor, conceived by artistic director Geoffrey Sherman.

Meadow Brook is a cultural program of Oakland University in suburban Rochester, MI., 15 miles north of Detroit. It operates in a 585-seat house on the campus in a League of Resident Theatres arrangement with Actors' Equity. It is Michigan's only LORT house.

The Rivera-inspired drama centers on auto scion Edsel Ford and the controversy surrounding his wish to allow Mexican muralist Rivera to install the famous "Detroit Industry" frescoes in a courtyard within the Detroit Institute of Arts in the 1930s. The two-story tall murals, which depict sinewy auto-line workers, machine parts, fetuses growing underground, planes from the war industry and more, were considered vulgar and leftist by some Detroiters at the time. Today, the Rivera work is one of the state's art treasures and a major attraction at the DIA.

* Since Sherman took over as artistic director at Meadow Brook in fall 1995, he's shifted emphasis from mainstream and museum fare (popular with suburban audiences in the 1970s and '80s) to more contemporary or multicultural works such as Three Tall Women. (The changes have met with some subscriber resistance; before August Wilson's The Piano Lesson was staged under Sherman, no play by an African-American had not been staged at Meadow Brook in 30 years.)

Sherman, former artistic director of the Portland Repertory Theatre in Oregon and the Hudson Guild Theatre in New York City, still spices Meadow Brook seasons with murder mysteries and light comedies, such as the regional hit, Beau Jest. A Gift of Glory is the first world premiere during his term.

Sherman and managing director Gregg Bloomfield have also been responsible for encouraging talkbacks, starting a theatre newsletter, sending special invitations to campus students and, in a groundbreaking move, staging a co-production of part one of Angels in America last spring with the university drama department, mixing students and Equity actors. Such aggressive marketing and artistic moves were unheard of 15 years ago at Meadow Brook.

Sherman was out of the country (Sept. 23) and not available to comment on the new season.

*

Also on the Meadow Brook schedule is the Michigan premiere of the Jeffrey Hatcher's 1992 Titanic drama, Scotland Road, about the present-day discovery of a woman wearing 1912-era clothing and found clinging to an iceberg, uttering the word, "Titanic." It opens in previews Feb. 10, 1999, with an opening night of Feb. 13, 1999 for a run through March 7, 1999.

Scotland Road, which had its Off-Broadway premiere at Primary Stages earlier this year, replaces Alrawi's world premiere adaptation of Tales of the Arabian Nights, which is now bumped to the 1999 season.

Also on the Meadow Brook slate:

Oct. 24-Nov. 15 (Previews Oct. 21-23) The Miracle Worker.

Nov. 27-Dec. 27 (Previews Nov. 21-26) A Christmas Carol.

Jan. 9-31, 1999 (Previews Jan. 6-8, 1999) Having Our Say.

April 17-May 9, 1999 (Previews April 14-16, 1999) The Rocky Horror Show.

Tickets to Meadow Brook shows are $19.50-$35. Call (248) 377-3300 for information.

-- By Kenneth Jones

 
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