World Premiere, 'The Good German', with Boyd Gaines, Begins in Westport
Published:
27 June 2003 y., Friday
Three-time Tony-winner Boyd Gaines will lead the cast of The Good German by David Wiltse, which will have its premiere at the Westport Country Playhouse in Connecticut. Performances began June 25 and will continue through July 12.
The play "tells the story of a couple who, against the objections of the husband, harbors a Jewish publisher under the nose of their Nazi friend. Dangerous circumstances force all concerned to examine attitudes of morality, hate, and human decency." James Naughton, who directed the Broadway transfer of Our Town last year, is at the helm.
Also in the cast are Casey Biggs, Kathleen McNenny and Victor Slezak (who replaced Naughton in the Off-Broadway play Roses in December earlier this spring). Biggs and McNenny play the sheltering German couple. Slezak in the Jewish publisher, and Gaines, playing against type, is the Nazi.
Wiltse's Temporary Help was given a production Off-Broadway this past season. His best known play is probably the 1985 Broadway comedy Doubles.
Gaines won his Tonys for The Heidi Chronicles, She Loves Me and Contact. The last was his most recent Broadway appearance. Others include Company, The Show-Off and Cabaret.
Šaltinis:
news.yahoo.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A growing number of websites are going back to the future. The new horizon: old-fashioned print
more »
Why the Beatles greatest hits album is topping the charts.
more »
Despite the expectations of publishers, a report by Forrester Research forecasts slow growth for both eBooks and eBook reading devices.
more »
The director and the basketball legend are among celebrities whose stars will be added next year to the more than 2,000 that line Hollywood Boulevard, it was announced Sunday.
more »
"AntiTrust," a new motion picture from MGM scheduled to hit theaters Jan. 12, 2001, explores the headlong, and often cutthroat race for supremacy in the world of digital convergence
more »
Madonna has finally tied the knot with her fiance Guy Ritchie
more »
Dublin's National Library paid $1.5 million for a signed, handwritten manuscript of the longest chapter of James Joyce's ``Ulysses.''
more »
Using the Internet as an artistic medium for filmmakers, the Sundance Institute unveiled Friday the lineup for its first Sundance Online Film Festival.
more »
Net-based firms use veteran actors to capitalize on the past
more »
Horror writer Stephen King is taking a break from his online serial novel, The Plant, so he can focus on other, perhaps more lucrative, projects.
more »