Following a 2009 Drama Desk nomination for Jan Maxwell in last season's Scenes From An Execution by Howard Barker, PTP/NYC, formerly known as The Potomac Theatre Project, in association with Middlebury College, proudly presents its 23rd repertory season, its 3rd consecutive in NY. This season's menu includes the U.S. Premiere of The Europeans, written by Howard Barker and directed by PTP's Co-Artistic Director Richard Romagnoli (Barker's "American ally"), and Therese Raquin, written by Neal Bell and directed by PTP's Co-Artistic Director Jim Petosa.
Performances will run from June 30 to July 26, 2009 in a limited engagement at The Atlantic Stage 2, located at 330 West 16th Street between 8th & 9th Avenues in NYC. The rep season will also include PTP/NYC's ‘After Dark 2009: the playground for young artists', off-hours theatre in multiple shapes and sizes. Tickets are $20 and $10 for students/seniors and can be purchased at www.TicketCentral.com or at 212-279-4200. $15
tickets are available for all previews from June 30 to July 5. Train access via A,C,E,L to 14 St./8 Ave. or 1 to 18 St. For more information visit www.PotomacTheatreProject.org.
Howard Barker's The Europeans takes place in war-ravaged Vienna after the Turkish invasion of the late 1600's, during which Christianity and Islam brutally collided. Vienna is now a place where manners have disappeared, women sell their bodies for loaves of bread, and the blood of Turkish prisoners runs free. The Emperor craves the normality of the past, but only Starhemburg, the military commander, realizes that a new future must be forged, and sees Katrin - a young woman mutilated, raped and impregnated by the Turks - as the agent for change. Thus begins a harrowing love story. The Europeans unapologetically reveals us as primal beasts struggling to learn the love of self and finding the spirit to love each another.
Originally a novel by Emile Zola published in 1867, Therese Raquin is a dark erotic exploration of the human subconscious, told through a series of short scenes that alternate between comic and horrific. Therese, a young half-French, half-Algerian woman, was unhappily married to her sickly first cousin by a well-intentioned but overbearing aunt. When the opportunity arises, she enters into an affair with her husband's friend, Laurent, leading to brutal and tragic consequences. Michael Feingold of The Village Voice wrote that this adaptation by Neal Bell, "Keeps the grit and erotic animality...using the grotesque tiny details to imply feelings and situations in vivid shorthand. Naturalism as haiku."
On October 21, 2009, PTP/NYC will be participating in 21 FOR 21, an international festival featuring more than 50 theatre companies across the world joining together to celebrate the 21st birthday of Howard Barker's theatre company, the Wrestling School. For more info visit www.21421.co.uk. In addition, Richard Romagnoli will be participating in a spring 2010 CUNY event at the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center honoring the work of Howard Barker. Part of its InterNational Theatre Series, the event will be moderated by George Hunka.