Solo Show Southern Gothic Novel Will Get Off-Broadway Run in 2009 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Solo Show Southern Gothic Novel Will Get Off-Broadway Run in 2009 Southern Gothic Novel: The Aberdeen Mississippi Sex-Slave Incident, a solo-actor comedy conceived and written by Frank Blocker, who also plays all the roles in the tale, will open Off-Broadway Jan. 21, 2009.
//assets.playbill.com/editorial/377d95ca1f2c8afe4463c09f45e74be5-frankblocker200.jpg
Frank Blocker

Cheryl King directs the production at Stage Left Studio Theatre at 438 West 37th Street between Ninth and Tenth Avenues. Previews begin Jan. 7, 2009. Performances will play through Feb. 25. According to production notes, Blocker "valiantly plays all of the eccentric citizenry caught up in the now infamous incident that tore through Aberdeen like a tornado on its way to Biloxi. The whole thing started when Viola Haygood, the Assistant Librarian of the Charles B. Evans Memorial Library, fell in love for the umpteenth time. This one was new in town. He was tall. He was dark. He was handsome. And he smelled really good."

Blocker's plays include Eula Mae's Beauty, Bait & Tackle (co-authored with Chuck Richards), seen Off-Broadway in 2001; Suite Atlanta, Patient Number The Wisconsinners, Air Marshals, Jesus Takes Manhattan, Clarabee in Wichita Falls and the book to the musical Alice with composer William Wade. He also co-authored Macbeth: The Murder Mystery with Lydia Bolen-Gordon and Chameleüns with Rochelle Burdine.

Southern Gothic Novel has been seen at New York International Fringe Festival, Left Out Festival, Midtown Theatre Festival and in Columbus, Baltimore and Atlanta.

Director King is the owner and artistic and managing director of Stage Left Studio, the only solo-show repertory theatre in New York City. She is the resident acting coach at "All My Children," the Emmy-winning daytime drama at ABC.

Tickets are $25. For more information visit www.SmartTix.com or call (212) 868-4444.

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!