Stephen Spinella, Penny Fuller, David Greenspan Set for Reading of Stuff, About the Collyer Brothers | Playbill

Related Articles
News Stephen Spinella, Penny Fuller, David Greenspan Set for Reading of Stuff, About the Collyer Brothers A by-invitation-only reading of Michael McKeever’s new play Stuff, which "reexamines the life of the infamous Collyer Brothers, New York City’s most infamous hoarders," will be presented June 28 in Manhattan.

//assets.playbill.com/editorial/4521f90080786404d6d2fcc8c1e03619-EditMidsummerPartyJM3_1340136213.jpg
David Greenspan Photo by Joseph Marzullo/WENN

The 3 PM reading, directed by Shelley Butler, will feature the talents of Sheldon Best (Freed), Penny Fuller (Dividing the Estate), David Greenspan (A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Patsy), Sheldon Best and Tony winner Stephen Spinella (An Iliad, As You Like It).

Winner of the 2011 Carbonell Award for Best New Work, Stuff, according to press notes, is described as such: "Born into a gilded world of opulence and breeding, Homer (David Greenspan) and Langley Collyer (Stephen Spinella) have it all: Great wealth, intelligence and a future bright with the golden glow of the American Dream. What they don’t realize is that their coddled world of privilege has left them completely unable to cope with the realities of the Twentieth Century as it evolves around them. And that their four story Harlem Mansion, stuffed from floor to ceiling with a lifetime of memories and mementos, has become their prison. With great humor, insight and pathos, Stuff charts the fascinatingly twisted decline of two of America’s most notorious hermits, from the loss of their beloved mother (Penny Fuller) in 1929 to their own ironic deaths two decades later."

Michael McKeever’s other plays include 37 Postcards (Hudson Stage Company), The Garden of Hannah List (Hypothetical Theatre Company) and Charlie Cox Runs with Scissors (Marin County Playhouse, Florida Stage).

 
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!