Swoosie Kurtz and Harry Groener Join Cast of Bway-Bound Imaginary Friends | Playbill

Related Articles
News Swoosie Kurtz and Harry Groener Join Cast of Bway-Bound Imaginary Friends Swoosie Kurtz, who just returned to the New York stage in The Guys, will make her way back to Broadway as Lillian Hellman in Nora Ephron's play with music Imaginary Friends. Harry Groener rejoins his castmate Cherry Jones — who reprises her role of Mary McCarthy— from the original reading.
//assets.playbill.com/editorial/810df604022f6efda116f6847f4b1090-ne_110752.gif
Swoosie Kurtz and Harry Groener.

Swoosie Kurtz, who just returned to the New York stage in The Guys, will make her way back to Broadway as Lillian Hellman in Nora Ephron's play with music Imaginary Friends. Harry Groener rejoins his castmate Cherry Jones — who reprises her role of Mary McCarthy— from the original reading.

As previously reported, the Broadway-bound production will make its world premiere run at San Diego's The Globe Theatre Sept. 21-Nov. 3. The production is then aiming to begin previews on Broadway in November and have its official opening in December at a Shubert Theatre to be announced, according to production spokesperson.

Helmer Jack O'Brien directed the reading and will stay at the helm with Hairspray cohort Jerry Mitchell choreographing. The creative team has been confirmed as Michael Levine (sets), Robert Morgan (costumes), Kenneth Posner (lights) and Jon Weston (sound). Ron Melrose will serve as musical director.

Imaginary Friends will mark the first stagework by writer Ephron. The play with music centers around the feuding literary femmes Lillian Hellman and Mary McCarthy. The libel lawsuit-laden battle ended only by the death of Hellman in 1984.

Songs featured in the play are penned by the composer-lyricist team of Marvin Hamlisch and Craig Carnelia. The duo are already on the boards with their Sweet Smell of Success. The new work opens at San Diego's The Globe Theatre — where O'Brien serves as artistic director. Ephron — or, rather, her life — is no stranger to the stage; her early childhood was the focus of her stage and screenwriting parents' Three's a Family, and Take Her, She's Mine was based on her correspondence with Henry and Phoebe Ephron during her college years. The writer is best known for her screenplays for "When Harry Met Sally...," "You've Got Mail" and "Sleepless in Seattle" (she directed the latter two).

Bill Haber, who heads USA Ostar Theatricals, produced the reading and will as well the Broadway production. USA Ostar Theatricals were also the producers of the new Broadway revival of Hedda Gabler as well as Neil LaBute's The Shape of Things.

 
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!