West's Jar The Floor Seeks NYC Remount in February | Playbill

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News West's Jar The Floor Seeks NYC Remount in February Though Jar The Floor couldn't further extend its run at off Broadway's Second Stage Theatre this past summer, the show may indeed return, albeit to a different -- and possibly Broadway -- venue.

Though Jar The Floor couldn't further extend its run at off Broadway's Second Stage Theatre this past summer, the show may indeed return, albeit to a different -- and possibly Broadway -- venue.

Second Stage marketing associate David Henderson told Playbill On-Line lead producers Liz McCann and Roy Gabay are currently juggling between Broadway and off-Broadway for the remount, which could come as early as February 2000.

Jar the Floor, the latest by playwright Cheryl L. West (Holiday Heart), had an extended run at Second Stage July 28-Sept. 12, officially opening there Aug. 16. The play was directed by Marion McClinton and featured Regina Taylor, Irma P. Hall, Lynne Thigpen, Linda Powell and Welker White who are expected to be on hand for the commercial run.

Author West has a history at Second Stage, which previously mounted her Before It Hits Home. Though Jar the Floor has been around for several years and received many regional productions (including seven featuring Hall), the summer production marked its New York premiere. West reportedly made substantial revisions to the script in preparation for the Second Stage production.

The play looks at four generations of African-American women who gather to celebrate the family's great grandmother's 90th birthday. The connections between the various mothers and daughters are exposed when the youngest member of the clan arrives with an unexpected guest. Taylor, a playwright herself, has appeared Off-Broadway in The Illusion and A Map of the World. Her own plays include Escape from Paradise. On television, she starred in the well-regarded series "I'll Fly Away."

Thigpen is a stage veteran, winning a Tony nomination for the musical Tintypes and the award itself for her portrayal of a Jewish, black professional experiencing a mid-life meltdown in Wendy Wasserstein's An American Daughter. Her many film credits include "The Paper" and "Tootsie."

McClinton is best known for his extensive work with playwright August Wilson. He most recently directed Wilson's Jitney at several theatres across the nation and will stage the show again at Second Stage in mid-April 2000, after a run at the Mark Taper Forum, which is co producing.

The Second Stage will present Stephen Sondheim's early musical, Saturday Night in January.

-- By David Lefkowitz

 
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