Marquee Digital

Ivoryton Playhouse

By SHERRY LUTKEN, LISA HELMI JOHANSON,
MORGAN MORSE, & DAVID M. LUTKEN


Featuring  

LISA HELMI JOHANSON*

DAVID M. LUTKEN*

MORGAN MORSE*

EJ ZIMMERMAN*

Music Director

DAVID M. LUTKEN*

Stage Management

James Joseph Clark*

Scenic Design

Martin Scott Marchitto

Lighting Design

ALAN PIOTROWICZ

Costume Design

Elizabeth A. Saylor

Sound Designer

Tate R. Burmeister

Directed By

SHERRY LUTKEN

2021 Season Sponsors

Living Legends

Moguls

Stars

Cast
(in alphabetical order)

Mira

LISA HELMI JOHANSON*

Edgar

DAVID M. LUTKEN*

Beckett

MORGAN MORSE*

Mira (u/s)

EJ ZIMMERMAN*

Setting

Western North Carolina, Late Spring 2021

There will be one 15 minute intermission.

Videotaping or other video or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited.

Hearing Assisted Devices available at the Box Office

*Appearing through an Agreement between this theatre, Ivoryton Playhouse, and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.

Actors’ Equity Association (“Equity”), founded in 1913, is the U.S. labor union that represents more than 51,000 actors and stage managers, Equity fosters the art of live theatre as an essential component of society and advances the careers of its members by negotiating wages, improving working conditions and providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. Actors’ Equity is a member of the AFL-CIO and is affiliated with FIA, an International organization of performing arts unions. www.actorsequity.org

Playhouse Staff

Jacqueline Hubbard

Executive/Artistic Director

Todd underwood

Associate Artistic Director

Krista May

Managing Director

Diane Miezejeski

Office Manager

Susan McCann

Box Office Manager

Steve Phelan

Theatre Operations Manager
COVID Safety Officer

Ray Smith

Site and Technical Manager

Holly Price

Production Manager

Kevin DeChello

Technical Director

Jen Fedus

Assistant Technical Director

Elizabeth A. Saylor

Resident Costume and Wig Designer and Wardrobe Maintenance

Kyle R. Kleinschmidt, Steve Phelan,
Nate Russo

Box Office

Bryan McManamy

Master Electrician

Rachel Smith

Scenic Painter

Tommy mehrtens

Carpenter

Jonathan Steele

Photographer

David Bradley, Jacob Graham

Sound Operators

Overabove

Strategic Branding and Marketing Partner

Marquee Digital

Digital Playbill Development

Friends of the
Ivoryton Playhouse

Ushers

Barry Felson, Kim Galvin,
Kaye Griffin, Louise Shaw

House Managers

This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
If you wish to file a Civil Rights program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, found online at http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint-filing-cust. html or at any USDA office, or call (866) 632-9992 to request a form. You may also write a letter containing all of the information requested in the form. Send your completed complaint form or letter to us by mail at U.S. Department of Agriculture, Director, Office Adjudication, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, by fax (202) 690-7442 or email at program.intake@usda.gov.

Board of Trustees

Officers

President

Al Jaffe

Vice President

Bonnie Stone

Treasurer

Norman Needleman

Secretary

Susan Origlia

Board Members

Suzy burke

carly callahan

robert dryfoos

joseph ettore

ralph guardiano

bill jacaruso

thomas johnston

paula merrick

toni robinson

Artistic/Executive Director

Jacqueline hubbard

The Ivoryton Playhouse Board of Trustees is deeply grateful to each and every one of you who support the Playhouse through donations, sponsorships and ticket purchases.

You make everything possible. Thank you.

Director's Note from Sherry Lutken

Let not anyone pacify his conscience by the delusion that he can do no harm if he takes no part, and forms no opinion. Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing. He is not a good man, who without protest, allows wrong to be committed in his name, and with the means which he helps to supply, because he will not trouble himself to use his mind on the subject. - John Stuart Mill (1867)

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter - Martin Luther King, Jr.  (1965)

Written 100 years apart, these ideas—and the lives of the men who wrote them—are proof positive that we continue to be faced with the same choices and the same truths about ourselves and our world. We are living through extraordinary times: Racial Injustice, Income Inequality, Climate Change, Gender Discrimination, Political and Religious Extremism, the list goes on and on, yet our ‘Times’ are by no means unique. Everyday we are faced with decisions, the sheer number and scale of which can make us turn away or stay on the sidelines. But abstention is a choice. We can’t sit things out just because we’re not thrilled with hand we’ve been dealt.

That can seem unfair. After all, we don’t choose when we get to be on this earth. It’s easy to look around at the state of things and blame the generation before or after, and, yes, sometimes they deserve part of the blame. Hindsight, though, is just that. Every new generation will learn some of the lessons that time and experience teach, and also see how some choices don’t age well. In those clear-eyed moments, hindsight can be a gift—looking back and examining decisions (or moments of silence) that have contributed to our present in ways both small and large, and to have the chance to try again—to right old wrongs, to hear new voices, to hold new thoughts. To appreciate experience as well as new ideas. To speak up, to act, to do something even when it isn’t easy.

The greatest menace to freedom is an inert people - Ruth Bader Ginsburg

The History of Ivoryton Playhouse

Photo by Brian J. Wilson

The building that is now the Ivoryton Playhouse was built in 1911 as a recreation hall for the employees of the Comstock-Cheney factory. In all likelihood, thebuilding would have been demolished but for its chance encounter with a remarkable man named Milton Stiefel. After a long career in theatre, Stiefel discovered the unused recreation hall, knew it would be perfect for a resident stock company and set about drafting contracts, and putting a cast together. “Broken Dishes” had just closed in New York and Stiefel opened with it during the week of June 17, 1930. Thus the Ivoryton Playhouse became the first summer theater in Connecticut.

The theater gained in prestige and invitations to work there were highly prized. Established actors like Henry Hull and Norma Terris signed on to perform. Newcomers like Katharine Hepburn and Cliff Robertson, both on their way to Hollywood stardom, came along to help the Ivoryton legend. Ivoryton’s fame as one of Americas leading summer theatres continued to grow until the outbreak of WWII when the theater went dark, mainly because gasoline rationing made it difficult for audiences to travel. Stiefel reopened the playhouse after the war and resuming a parade of stars that included, among others, Marlon Brando, Art Carney, Talullah Bankhead, Betty Grable, Groucho Marx, and Gloria Vanderbilt. Stiefel continued at Ivoryton until 1973, when he sold the theater. In 1979, the non-profit Ivoryton Playhouse Foundation was organized and the property purchased for $115,000.

During the Foundation’s early years (1979-1986), four different producers put the Playhouse summer season back on the road. In 1987, The River Rep came to Ivoryton and they spent 18 years re-establishing the Playhouse as one of the leading summer theatres in the nation.

In 1999, Jacqueline Hubbard was hired as the Artistic Executive Director. Under her leadership, the Ivoryton Playhouse Foundation has completed a total renovation of the building, including new shingles, a new heating and air-conditioning system with Covid compliant updates to the filters and duct work , new seats and state-of-the-art theatrical sound and lighting systems as well. Since 2006, the Ivoryton Playhouse has operated year round as a professional, AEA theatre and has seen its membership and its audiences grow every year. Today, the Ivoryton Playhouse still stands as the heart of this community, a cultural gem on the Connecticut Shoreline.

The Ivoryton Playhouse Foundation is a non-profit organization formed for the purpose of owning, restoring and operating the 100 year old Playhouse, and maintaining its cultural, educational, entertainment and service value to the community at large. The Foundation is committed to providing exceptional theatre experiences of high professional quality to enrich, enlighten, educate and entertain the diverse audience in the Shoreline region and beyond. Strong educational and training programs are central parts of our commitment to the local and national artistic communities.

NOTICE
Pursuant to an agreement with the State of Connecticut Historical Commission consumated as the result of a grant, the Playhouse will be open to the public for viewing of its exterior and interior between the hours of 10:00 am and 4:00 pm of a day set by appointment or specifically,  August 21, 2021 and October 9, 2021.

Please Join Our Ovation Society

Stand at the back of the theatre after a show one night and see how deeply people of all ages are moved by the performance they just shared. Help us to continue offering the highest quality theatre for decades to come by including the Ivoryton Playhouse in your will.

Whether you leave a simple bequest in your will or designate the Playhouse as the beneficiary of a life insurance policy or a 401(k), every gift means the world to us! In addition to leaving a lasting legacy, your family will receive important tax advantages and you will receive exciting philanthropic benefits in your lifetime.

Members of our Ovation Society will receive invitations to exclusive special events and be recognized in a permanent way at the Playhouse.

Please consider including the Ivoryton Playhouse in your estate plan. All gifts welcome!

For more information about our Ovation Society, please contact our Artistic Director, Jacqui Hubbard at 860.767.9520.

Ovation Society

Caryl Anderson

Anonymous*

Anne and Jan Bishop*

Ed and Suzy Burke*

David A. Carey*

Helen and Bill Chatman*

Donald Y. Church and Anthony E. Schillaci*

Verena and David Harfst*

Harvey Hoberman

Jacqueline Hubbard and Norman Needleman*

Sally and George Mayer

Paula Merrick*

Noah Rice

Dr. David M. and Liana Snyderman*

Peter Walker*

*Founding Members fo the Ovation Society
Planned Gifts

Producers Circle

Executive Producer
$10,000 and above

John and Jen Bauman

Robert and Theresa Dryfoos

Ralph Guardiano

Jacqueline Hubbard and Norman Needleman

Joanne and Michael Masin

Sally and George Mayer

Toni Robinson and Michael Plouf

John Visgilio

Living Legends
$5,000 - $9,999

Carly and Matthew Callahan

Jane Cullen

Frank and Carolyn Dranginis

Rob and Judith Hamilton

David and Verena Harfst

Al and Kathleen Jaffe

Tom and Sherry Johnston

The Kitchings Family

Ken and Paula Munson

Chris and Jamie Shane

Tom and Bonnie Stone

Jean T. Walker

The Zachem Family

Patron
$2,500 - $4,999

Alison and Stephen Brinkmann

Sherry and Herb Clark

Ms. Margaret J. Coe

Charles and Catherine Hill

Rosalind and Richard Hinman

Frank and Diane Kelly

RADM and Mrs. John B. Padgett, III

Sandy and Andrea Seidman

Brant and Mauriane Smith

Benefactor
$1,500 - $2,499

Suzy and Ed Burke

Philip and Clio Coles

Sean and Erin Conlan

Nancy Fischbach and Martin Wolman

Julia Francis and Victor Vroom

Constance Holmes

Emily (Red) Kaufman

Patricia Miller

Ken and Paula Munson

Chuck and Diane Ramsey

Peter and Sher Walton Scranton

Gregory and Elizabeth Smith

Star
$1,000 - $1,499

Robert Bartholomew

Anne and Jan Bishop

Richard and Barbara Booth

William and Mary Ellen Bridges

William and Helen Chatman

Susan and Thomas Childs

Mrs. Susan K. Childs and Mr. Thomas S. Childs, Jr.

Philip Darney and Uta Landy

Ann Field

Elizabeth Haigis

Constance Hanarhan

The Hernandez-Underwood Family

William and Bo Jacaruso

Jeffrey Alan Johnson

Kathryn Johnson and Thomas Scanlon

Robert Kaufman and Joann Chapel

Pamela and Gary Knowles

John and JoAnna Koster

Susan Malan and Robert Ward

Mather & Pitts Insurance

Bruce and Renee McIntyre

Paula Merrick

Max Miezejeski

Marnie Murdoch

Michael and Beverley Ricci

Paul Serenbetz

Doris Simoneau

Jennifer Tate

Patti Anne Vassia

Burton Warner

Thomas and Betsy Whidden

Jon and Beth Winikur

Victoria Winterer

Meet Our Ivoryton Playhouse Donors
(as of February 14, 2020)
Cast
Creative

Meet the Cast

Lisa Helmi Johanson*

(Mira)

Lisa is a singer/actor/musician/producer who has a passion for developing new works, authentic storytelling, and intentionality in representation as a means to further the work of racial justice and social equity. Off-Broadway/NYC: Avenue Q, Einstein’s Dreams (Original Cast), The Drowning Girls, Three Sisters, Women Beware Women, Rescue Rue. Tours: Fiasco’s Into the Woods, Avenue Q. Select Regional: Anything Goes (Arena Stage), Vietgone (Denver Center), The Chinese Lady (Milwaukee Rep; Best Actress award – Milwaukee Broadwayworld), Amadeus (Syracuse Stage), Once (Cape Playhouse), Waterfall (5th Avenue Theatre & Pasadena Playhouse), Priscilla… (Ogunquit & Gateway Playhouses), 4,000 Miles (St. Louis Rep.), Taming of the Shrew (VA Stage). Film/TV: Law & Order: SVU, Z-Rock (IFC), The Onion News Network. Lisa has spanned out to writing and producing during the pandemic and her first co-written piece, Kim Loo Gets a Redo (IG:@kimlooredo), was selected for the 2021 Ice Factory Festival at the New Ohio Theater in NYC in which she performed in while eight months pregnant. She and her husband are also close to launching a sitcom podcast called Preschool (IG:@preschoolsitcom; FB: Preschool the Podcast) in which she co-directs, acts, and sound designs. She is active in racial justice work through Interfaith Justice Queens/Court Square Justice as well as serving on the AAPI Advisory Council for the DA of Queens, NYC. Micah 6:8 For my J&J.

David M. Lutken*

(Edgar, Music Director)

David is excited to be back at The Ivoryton Playhouse where he was last seen as Woody Guthrie in Woody Sez. He also appeared here in The Road: My Life With John Denver; served as Music Director for Stand By Your Man, and played Johnny Cash in Ring of Fire.  BROADWAY: Inherit the Wind; Ring of Fire; The Civil War; The Will Rogers Follies.  OFF-BROADWAY: Woody Sez (Outer Critics’ Circle, Off-Broadway Alliance & Drama League Best Musical nominations) Southern Comfort; Stars in Your Eyes; Winter Man; The Portable Pioneer and Prairie Show.  N.Y. CITY OPERA: Paul Bunyan  LONDON: Woody Sez (Evening Standard Best Musical nomination); Dark of the Moon; Bonnie and Clyde; A Month In The Country.  REGIONAL: Our Town; Man of La Mancha; Big River; Elmer Gantry; Finian’s Rainbow; Fire On The Mountain; Lost Highway; Buddy; Pump Boys and Dinettes; The Love List; The Man Who Came to Dinner; On Golden Pond; Mark Twain’s River of Song, and many others.  He has performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, The 92nd St Y, at Cooper Union (with Ted Sperling’s ‘Master Voices’), Nashville’s  Ryman Auditorium, with the North Carolina Symphony and the Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra, on NPR, the BBC, Polskie Radio Troika, Voice Of America, and The Louisiana Hayride. With his original show, “Woody Sez: The Life & Music of Woody Guthrie”, he and his company have toured Europe, the British Isles, the US, the Middle East, and China. David won the Helen Hayes and the Joseph Jefferson Best Actor award for his portrayal of Woody Guthrie.

Morgan Morse*

(Beckett)

is an actor, musician, and writer originally from Ansonia, Connecticut. He is incredibly honored and excited to be back at the Ivoryton Playhouse, and to be part of bringing this new piece of theatre to life. Other credits include Once, Godspell, South Pacific and Stand By Your Man here at Ivoryton, Once at the Cape Playhouse, Hootenanny the Musicale at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater, Southern Comfort at the Public Theater in NYC, and Ring of Fire everywhere from Houston, TX to Vienna, Austria. In addition to theatre, he writes and performs original music which you can find online on his Soundcloud, and during the past year he made a TikTok account where he now has over 83,000 followers (because life is absurd, and nothing makes sense anymore!). He’d like to thank his parents, for lots of things, but especially for letting him crash with them for a much longer period of time than anyone anticipated during the surreal experience that was 2020. Much thanks to David, Sherry, and Lisa for being the best collaborators anyone could ask for, and much thanks to Jacqui and everyone at the Playhouse for continuing to make live theatre happen!

EJ Zimmerman*

(Mira u/s)

Ivoryton debut! Enormous gratitude to Lisa, Sherry, David, and Morgan for inviting me to join them in telling this special story. For Mrs. Vosough, who taught me how to play the violin. #REPRESENTATIONMATTERS

Creative Team

Sherry Lutken

(Director/Author)

Sherry is thrilled to be back at the Ivoryton Playhouse directing the premiere of The Porch On Windy Hill. Her credits as Director here at Ivoryton include The Million Dollar Quartet, Stand By Your Man: The Tammy Wynette Story, and the 2011 production of Ring Of Fire. Regional directing credits include: Hank Williams’ Lost Highway, and in March of 2020, the Covid-postponed premiere of Hootenanny: The Musicale—husband, David’s, original musical memoir at Milwaukee Rep. Sherry was part of the regional reinvention of Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash at North Carolina’s Flat Rock Playhouse in 2009. She has directed subsequent productions at the Merry-Go-Round Playhouse, Arts Garage, Adirondack Theater Festival, Arrow Rock Lyceum, People’s Light, and internationally at  Vienna’s English Theatre and The Deutsches Theater in Munich. Off-Broadway and other Regional Co-directing/staging/choreography credits include: The Bourgeois Gentleman, Pump Boys and Dinettes, Stars In Your Eyes and Anything Goes, among others. As associate Director of Woody Sez: The Life and Music of Woody Guthrie, Sherry has set productions of the critically acclaimed musical in Chicago (Joseph Jefferson Award nomination: Best Musical Revue), Washington D.C.  (Helen Hayes Award nomination: Best Musical), Florida and Pennsylvania as well as its first National Tour of the UK.

Author's Bios

David and I first came to the Playhouse with “Ring of Fire” ten years ago (August and September, 2011—interrupted by Hurricane Irene, for those who love Ivoryton trivia). We’ve been fortunate to frequent the stage here many times since —“Stand By Your Man”, “The Road: My life with John Denver”, “The Million Dollar Quartet”, “Woody Sez”.

After the pandemic began, Ivoryton’s Artistic Director, Jacqui Hubbard, encouraged us to write a “play-with-music” for our tenth anniversary production. Six months ago, still in the depths of isolation, the lightning bolt of an idea struck while we were driving (fifty miles to the grocery store in Mississippi—long story). The inspirations were a combination of terrible events in the news of the day, and several long-simmering thoughts and un-articulated concepts about the cross cultural integration and power of American music. The choice of Lisa Helmi Johanson (who immediately informed us that she was 5 months pregnant) and Morgan Morse as co-creators in the cast followed instantaneously, and we were quite chuffed that they wanted to dive in—

We had met Morgan, another frequent Ivorytonian, when he drove all the way from Ansonia to audition for the Tammy Wynette show in 2015. He got the part! (More trivia, Morgan has childhood memories of being at the Playhouse when his father, Peter Morse performed in “A Woman of a Certain Age”). Morgan and Lisa had performed together in “Once” (at The Cape Cod Playhouse). Lisa and David met in Milwaukee. He was in one theater playing Mark Twain, and having his weekly hootenannies. She was in another—acting in a beautiful play called “The Chinese Lady”—and stopped in one Sunday evening, fiddle in hand, ready to jump into the musical fray.

It has been truly thrilling to put this wonderfully talented group together, and to experience the birth of this play-with-music—even more so because Lisa’s daughter arrived in August and has gained several pounds since we started rehearsals. “The Porch On Windy Hill” is Sherry, Lisa, Morgan and David’s first collaborative play.

Jacqueline Hubbard

(Executive/Artistic Director)

Jacqueline Hubbard is amazed to realize she has been part of the Ivoryton Playhouse for 30 years; in 1991 she became a member of the Board and since 1999 she has been its Executive/Artistic Director. She has directed over 75 productions at Ivoryton including Steel Magnolias, Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me, Amadeus, The Glass Menagerie, Wait until Dark, The Miracle Worker, Rent, the US premiere of Calendar Girls, the world premiere of Comedy is Hard by Mike Reiss and Queens of the Golden Mask by Carole Lockwood. Acting credits include Titania in A Midsummer Night’s Dream; Katerina in Taming of the Shrew; Maureen in The Beauty Queen of Leenane; Annie in Calendar Girls and Shirley Valentine. She is recipient of the 2012 Connecticut Critics Circle Tom Killen Award for Outstanding Contribution to CT Theater and the 2020/21 recipient of the Middlesex County Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Citizen of the Year Award.

Martin Scott Marchitto

(Scenic Designer)

Martin Scott Marchitto is thrilled to be returning for another summer at the Ivoryton Playhouse. Previously he designed the sets for Having Our Say, Murder for Two, Godspell, The Fantastiks, Saturday Night Fever, A Chorus Line, Million Dollar Quartet, Chicago, Rent, Memphis and Little Shop of Horrors. Other credits include; Off Broadway Mack the Knife, the Life and Times of Bobby Darrin: The Theatre at Saint Peters, Lightnin Out: The Judith Anderson. Regional credits include My Three Angels, Broadway, The Last of the Red Hot Lovers: Studio Summer Theatre, Riggaletto, The Tenderland: Opera North, Elixir of Love: Illinois Opera, Shooting Starts, The Pirates of Penzance: Illinois Repertory Theatre, The Velveteen Rabbit: The Rose Theatre, The Rainforest Ballet, The Imperial Nutcracker The Omaha Theatre Ballet. Martin has served as resident set designer for the Blue Barn theatre since the fall of 2008. His memorable sets include The Goat or Who is Sylvia, Rabbit Hole, God of Carnage, Red and Red Summer.

Alan Piotrowicz

(Lighting Designer)

Alan makes his home in Milwaukee, WI, where he has designed for several companies including All In Productions, Cooperative Performance, Danceworks, Falls Patio Players, First Stage Children’s Theatre, Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, Next Act Theatre, Renaissance Theaterworks, Theatre Gigante, Theater RED, and Windfall Theatre, among others. He’s also designed for TITAN Theatre Company in New York City, Hope Summer Repertory Theatre in Holland, MI, and Brief Cameo Productions in Ivoryton, CT. He received his training at UW-Madison and The Santa Fe Opera. Proud board member of Cooperative Performance and Brief Cameo Productions.

Tate R. Burmeister

(Sound Designer)

Tate has worked as a designer and theatre artist throughout Connecticut, Minnesota, California, and New York. In Connecticut, she has designed for Ivoryton Playhouse, Seven Angels Theatre, Hartford Stage Education Department, Oddfellows Playhouse, Playhouse on Park, Albano Ballet, and others, as well as various local schools. It is so wonderful to be back in the theater sharing my life’s passion again.

Elizabeth A. Saylor

(Costume Designer)

Elizabeth A. Saylor has over 25 years of experience as a wig, makeup, and costume designer. Her work includes stage, opera, film and media productions. She has worked on Broadway showcases, off-Broadway productions, costumed staged readings, and film projects that have screened at Sundance and Telluride. Her theater costume credits include Ivoryton Playhouse (Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, Memphis, Chicago, Man of La Mancha, West Side Story, I Hate Musicals, The Fantastiks, Love Quest, Grease); Manhattan College (Legally Blonde, Rumors, Little Women, Dining Room); Oddfellows Playhouse (Oliver, Three Penny Opera, William Shakespeare’s Land of the Dead), New Paradigm Theater, and Madison Lyric Stage Company. She is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University. Visit her website at www.wigmubyecipollina.com to view photos and reels, and for further contact info.

James Joseph Clark*

(Stage Manager)

James Joseph Clark is thrilled to be spending another season at the Ivoryton Playhouse, having previously served as Stage Manager for Having Our Say, Murder for Two, Woody Sez, Shear Madness, Godspell, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, Burt & Me, Once, The Fantasticks, I Hate Musicals: The Musical, Biloxi Blues, Man of La Mancha, Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks, Little Shop of Horrors, The Last Romance, Stand By Your Man, Comedy is Hard!, I Ought To Be In Pictures, Shout!, and Home for the Holidays, as well Assistant Director for Coney Island Christmas, and Producer/Director for the Songs From The Elephant’s Trunk concert Series. Other recent credits include directing Ragtime: In Concert with Brief Cameo Productions, and productions and outreach programs for Long Wharf Theatre, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Yale Opera, Foote Summer Theater, Synapse Theatre Ensemble, Roebling and Driggs Productions, NY Fringe Festival, The New York Financial Writers’ Association’s annual Financial Follies, New Haven Theater Company, Act II Theater, Grassroots Theater Company, Sacred Heart Academy, New Haven Ballet, Fairfield University, and the Chancel Opera Company. Proud member of Actors’ Equity!

Laura Lynne Knowles*

(Assistant Stage Manager)

is so excited for another amazing season at Ivoryton! Stage Managing credits include: Evita, Fingers and Toes, All Shook Up, La Cage Aux Folles, The Road: My Life with John Denver, Rent, My Way, West Side Story, The Game’s Afoot!, Love Quest, A Night with Janis Joplin (Ivoryton Playhouse), Die Zauberflote, La nozzi di Figaro, Don Giovanni, Carmen, La Rossignol, The Bear, La Navarraise (Yale Opera), and the family stage at the International Festival of Arts and Ideas. Love to Mom, Dad, Rodney and my amazing William who makes me smile every day.

Marquee Digital

(Digital Program)

Marquee Digital is a New York-based tech startup innovating the theatre industry with ground-breaking digital program solutions. The Marquee is a theatrical program for the 21st century, employing contactless, eco-friendly, and ADA-compliant technology to create an interactive and highly intuitive experience for audience members.

Local

Pre-Show Dinner or
Post-Show Cocktail?

Don’t let the evening end when the curtain comes down. With The Marquee Local, you can find the perfect place for a pre-show snack, an evening meal, or a post-show cocktail. Enjoy exclusive deals from our local partners as you catch up, discuss the show, and create memories to last a lifetime.

Marquee Deals
Marquee users not only save paper– they also save $$$
Grab a Bite
Pre-show or post-show, our local partners have your dining needs covered
Deals

Check out the favorite local spots and gain access to these exclusive deals.

Ivoryton Tavern
Pub | 8 Summit Street, Ivoryton
Good food, good friends, good spirits and great burgers!. Recently refurbished casual pub food directly next door to the Ivoryton Playhouse. An Ivoryton tradition! Present your show ticket and receive 10% off your lunch or dinner.
Website
Free Chips and Salsa with Burrito Purchase
Grab a Bite

Enjoy a pre-show dinner or post-show cocktail with some of these neighborhood favorites.

Blue Hound Cookery and Taproom
Restaurant downstairs - Taproom upstairs | 107 Main Street, Ivoryton
Southern inspired coastal cuisine to the shoreline area. A dedication to fresh, made from scratch, authentic dishes created from years of travel, living and cooking in the south.
Website
The Essex
An Experience | 30 Main Street, Centerbook
Modern American cuisine that draws inspiration from the land, sea and deep heritage of the Connecticut River Valley, alongside a legion of international flavors. Current theme: A Study of Thailand.
Website
Copper Beech Inn
Country Inn | 46 Main Street, Ivoryton
Dinner at The Copper available for in house or to go. Restaurant features snug, distinctive dining rooms and summer outdoor dining, complemented by an award-winning wine cellar.
Website
Scotch Plains Tavern
Restaurant and Bar | 124 Westbrook Road, Essex
Menu has a vast variety of items, sure to please all friends and family. Large, open dining spaces with a downstairs dining room, outside patio (with fire pits and heaters) or an industrial-themed bar upstairs.
Website
Red House
Restaurant and Bar | 158 Main Street, Deep River
Our mission at Red House is to offer creative dishes as well as modern classics utilizing quality ingredients. We take pride in carefully preparing our menu items. Our goal is to provide an enjoyable experience in a casual and inviting atmosphere. We appreciate your support and are glad to be an active part of our community. – Team Red House.
Website
News

While You Wait

With the help of our friends at Theatrely.com, Marquee Digital has you covered with exclusive content while you wait for the curtain to rise.

Theatrely News
IN THE HEIGHTS’ Daphne Rubin-Vega on the Power of Representation
Theatrely News
Quarantine Check In with Nikki Blonsky from "Hairspray"
Theatrely News
"Mixing It Up with Broadway By The Glass"
IN THE HEIGHTS’ Daphne Rubin-Vega on the Power of Representation
By: Juan A. Ramirez

Daphne Rubin-Vega has been theatre royalty since she burst onto the scene as the original Mimi in Rent. While her role in that blockbuster show secured her status as a Broadway legend, the Panamanian-born actor has continued a steady streak of diverse roles onstage and onscreen. In the upcoming film adaptation of In the Heights, based on Lin-Manuel Miranda’s breakout musical, audiences can catch up with her indomitable star power as the vivacious salon owner, Daniela.

In the Heights, which follows an ensemble of Washington Heights residents as they sweat through the hottest days of the summer, is an electrifying ode to Latinx immigration and persistence. I caught up with Rubin-Vega on Zoom to talk about her career, and why she thinks the film is a landmark for movie musicals and Latinx representation. 

“You don't know what you're missing if you've never had it,” Rubin-Vega said. “The wordless power of being in a space that looks like you—where what you look like, and your culture, are normative—speaks volumes. To render that on film, in a classic way that pays respect to the best of what filmmaking has to offer, is like finally being able to inhale a full breath of air and take up space.”

The actor, who has twice been nominated for the Tony Award, noted a difference between her own theatrical upbringing and the one her young castmates are currently experiencing.

“I was one of those children who grew up in spaces that didn't look like me, and I was told that I was very privileged to be in those spaces—and I was,” she said. “But the consequence of that experience was feeling othered, like I was lucky to be there and that I didn’t have anything to bring to the table, but rather that I was there to absorb what was there.”

“Carnaval del Barrio,” a rousing anthem of Latin-American pride led by Daniela, sees the entire neighborhood wave their national flags. Rubin-Vega said the scene proved “transcendently beautiful” only after seeing the final cut of the film.

“When we shot that scene, there were only a few kinds of flags, and being a Panamanian I wanted to see Panama's flag,” she said. “I was told not to worry about it because they were going to CGI it in later. Cut to when I first saw the film and I saw not only Panama, but all the flags represented, it gave me a physical experience of being seen. It sounds very tropey, but it has a cellular response in your system where you feel a little less crazy and a little more belonging in the world.”

Daniela, a community leader due to her ownership of a busy, gossipy salon, flexes her matriarchal power throughout the film.

“One of my favorite lines of Daniela's is, ‘We survived slave ships, Taíno genocide, conquistadores and dictators.’ That spirit of, ‘What do you mean you can't deal with the heat, or this adversity right now?’——that's her,” she said. “It was a great moment of recognizing the power of representation.”

Though director Jon M. Chu is not Latinx, Rubin-Vega said his “generosity of spirit” and “fully-blossomed” artistry made him fit in with the mostly Latinx cast and crew.

“Everyone involved was brought in because they were experts in a specific field,” the actor said. “There was enough attention and reverence and resources implemented to find those people. I mean, these people are ridiculously talented, and that elevates the atmosphere on another level; it's quite remarkable.”

Rubin-Vega calls herself an uncredited “secret weapon” of the musical’s original Broadway production: she voiced the radio announcer at the top of the show who warns the Heights inhabitants of the coming heat wave. She said she was happy to help Miranda on his Broadway debut, knowing his popularity would soon explode.

“When I think of Lin as a young cuz, it's because I've watched him come into this community and change it so dramatically,” Rubin-Vega said. “When I came into the New York theatre community, I was a part of something bigger that changed the face of Broadway. When you saw Lin coming, you recognized that——in addition to the fact that he's Latino.”

Like Miranda, Rubin-Vega’s mere presence demands recognition. Despite a career of playing roles as profoundly off-beat as Magenta in The Rocky Horror Show, and Stella in a multiracial Broadway revival of A Streetcar Named Desire, she said she does not seek out roles for their political significance.

“I was once asked why I chose such politically-charged roles,” she said. “I wondered what they meant by that, but I think that by dint of the fact that I inhabit a role, the role is perceived differently. When I play a role, it brings attention, or lack thereof, to what it is to be an actor in this body. I'm happy to bring that element into my work.”

In the Heights is released in theatres and streaming exclusively on HBO Max on June 10.

Follow Juan A. at @itsNumberJuan.

Quarantine Check In with Nikki Blonsky from "Hairspray"
By: Kobi Kassal

We recently caught up with Nikki Blonsky, who is, of course, most well known as Tracy Turnblad from the hit 2007 film Hairspray. We chatted about how she is spending her days during quarantine, her now famous Cameo videos, dream roles, and so much more.

“Well good morning Quarantine, that is how I am holding up.” I spoke with Nikki on the phone just after she had finished baking three dozen muffins. “Whole wheat banana nut, peanut butter and blueberry, cranberry walnut, oh, I really went in," she joked. “Of course, always using whole wheat and coconut oil, trying to be as healthy as possible.”  

As for quarantine, it’s been a ton of Guy’s Grocery Games and Top Chef, but she notes that is nothing new for her. Her latest project to keep her busy during these past few months of lockdown is Nikki Nights, a nightly “talk show” via Instagram live with some of her favorite celebrity friends. From Ricki Lake to Rose McGowan to Shoshana Bean, Ms. Blonsky logs on every night and chats up a storm with her delectable charm. Nikki Nights is slated to turn to podcast format soon, so watch out for that.  

It has been almost fourteen years since production began on New Line Cinema’s adaption of Hairspray. While she couldn't recall when she last watched the movie in full, Blonsky mentioned how she will always throw it on if it's playing, just to see what scene they are at.

We reminisced about her favorite memory of filming. “Every day was a new memory... it was just a non-stop adventure. It was a dream, literally. The first day filming "Good Morning Baltimore" on top of that garbage truck, it was the most magical experience of my life.” As for who she is still close with that that all-star cast, she mentioned how she made some of the best friends. “I saw Brittany Snow this summer, I know she just got married and I am so excited for her. I also spoke to Elijah Kelly a few weeks back; he’s supposed to call me back. Sir, I am waiting,” chuckled Blonsky. It is actually her movie mother who she is closest with... John Travolta. “We probably talk once a month or so. Not a holiday or birthday goes by that is not acknowledged. So, to that I say to my friends, if John Travolta has the time to text me back, so can you!”

While Nikki has kept busy with recurring roles on television and movies throughout the years, there are always dream roles that she would love to tackle. The one that came to mind was a movie adaption of Carmen, the famous Georges Bizet opera. And for musicals, Blonsky would love to take on Fanny Brice in the inevitable Funny Girl film. “I am a huge Barbra Streisand, Bette Midler, Liza Minnelli fanatic, and Cher is just always leading the pack.”

And when she is not acting, Blonsky passes the time in her other profession... hunting ghosts. Yes, you read that correctly, it's right there in her Twitter bio: Actress, Singer, Dancer, Public Speaker, Paranormal Investigator. “Why yes, I am a paranormal investigator. Would you believe it? My late uncle was very into science fiction and that is certainly something he passed along to me,” she noted. Partnering with Chad Lindberg of The Fast and The Furious fame, the duo have gone on to explore Lake Shawnee, an abandoned amusement park in West Virginia, as well as Eastern State Penitentiary in Philly. “We have communicated via flashlights, my microphone was fully drained, lots of wild things went on,” remembered Blonsky. All I am saying is as soon as quarantine ends, I need a Nikki Blonsky paranormal television show, you hear that @SyFy?

While I had her on the phone, I had to bring up her wildly popular Cameos that have been floating around the internet for the past year or so. If you are unfamiliar, Cameo is a platform where you can hire celebrities to film any kind of greeting for you. Just this week alone I have seen Ms. Blonsky’s videos on Twitter, YouTube, as well TikTok. One young fan asked Nikki to create a get well soon video for his friend who fell off his bike while listening to “The Nicest Kids In Town,” “I have received a ton of prom-posals and even quite a few wedding proposals. Cameo has brought me so much closer to my fans, I love doing them and I promise to sing in every single one”, she said. As of our phone call, Ms. Blonsky has completed 3,078 Cameos in the past year and a half.

And for Boston, Blonsky hopes to come visit her 28 second cousins who live in the area once it is safe to do so. If one thing is clear, Nikki certainly hasn’t let quarantine keep her down.

*This article originally appeared on Theatre Talk Boston.

Mixing It Up with Broadway By The Glass
By: Zach Reiser

Have you ever been to a Broadway show and tried their signature cocktail in the bar in the lobby? Theatrely recently had a virtual drink with Kellyann Coyle and Brian Sedita, who took those drinks and are teaching you how to make them on their Instagram, Broadway By The Glass.

Theatrely: What were you both up to before the pandemic started?

Brian Sedita: In the theater industry, at least, I have a podcast called “Pitch to Stage” on the Broadway Podcast Network. And then after quarantine started, I also co-created another show with Michael Kushner called “My Broadway Memory” which is also on the Broadway Podcast Network, which I'm still co-creator of, but have stepped down in terms of my commitment to producing and all that kind of stuff, because quarantine was one thing, and then after that life went back to normal a little bit for me. I don't work in the theater industry anymore.

Kellyann Coyle: For me, pre-pandemic, I'm an actor in the city, dancer first! I did a couple of tours and some regional stuff. I'm also a bartender, my bar has since closed until April. So this passion project has pulled literally the two things that I love doing that I can't do during quarantine together. So it's been so great. And we both just love theater so much. So it's like it's such a fun passion project for us.

T: How did you two meet?

BS: So we actually grew up together! We went to preschool through graduating high school together and have stayed best friends since.

T: When did you two decide to start Broadway by the Glass?

BS: So I'm also a bartender in New Jersey. Honestly, it's so funny, because I had been thinking about doing something like this for a while. And then, I know Kelly was thinking about doing the same thing, and at that point I really didn't have a lot of time to commit to it. But I was like, "you know what? If you want to go ahead without me I will not be offended." And it just ended up working out that when we were going to start this time freed up in some areas of my life so I was able to commit a lot more time to it.

KC: It was literally like the next day, wasn't it? Because I was ready to go and then you were like, "I have time now." And I'm like, "yeah!"

BS: And what I've loved most about this collaboration so far is that Kelly and I haven't really worked together in an artistic or professional sense since high school. So this has been a really great way to connect even more than we normally would have over the past couple of years.

T: Walk me through your process a little bit, how do you get from picking a show to formulating a drink?

KC: Hmmm, well, I feel like when we started out, we were picking random shows and we were like, "OK, so, what's something we could do from Frozen, like maybe an iced drink?" And then I guess we got a little more specific with Christmas. We did a 12 Days of Christmas countdown, and Brian made a full on list of all Christmas shows and Christmas songs. Then we went in and listened to it and tried to get inspiration from it, like if they mention a liquor or what the vibe is. I feel like that's the one thing that we really try to do is get the vibe of the show. So like when you think of super smoky and like dark, that's what you expect when you hear Hadestown.

BS: And I mean, if you're twenty one and above, you might love alcohol. And if you're a Broadway fan, like merging those two things is just lots of fun. How many times do you get drunk and sing show tunes? So this is like the perfect marriage of those two things. And it's creative to like sit down and like craft a cocktail! Like it's not just your normal margarita for Escape to Margaritaville. We're trying to come up with things like where we can introduce people to different kinds of liqueurs and spirits so that it'll also expand people's vocabulary and liquor cabinets.

KC: A little educational! And we're starting to do hopefully every Friday a little history on either a cocktail or explaining a liquor or liqueur and doing like a little education segment on IGTV.

BS: Like, there's so much that we could do with this and so much that we've discussed how we can build and grow as a brand. So every show you go to has a really cool cocktail list and you're excited to go to the bar and look at what they came up with for the shows. So our dream for this would be to create custom opening night cocktails for opening nights on Broadway or around the country and doing cocktail workshops and leading cocktail parties and stuff like that, and maybe getting our cocktails on those Broadway show menus. I think the moment that I first was inspired to do something like this was two years ago. I went to the opening night of Be More Chill and they had and at the after party they had a Squip-tini and it was this Mountain Dew and vodka, and it was smoking because it had dry ice in it. And it was this really cool cocktail that like maybe didn't taste great because Mountain Dew doesn't taste great. But it was so specific to the show and it was that perfect marriage of those two things that I was talking about with alcohol and a Broadway show. And then there's such missed opportunities, like I remember going to the Alice By Heart opening and they didn't do anything with a teacup, like you'd think like a tea cocktail, like Earl Gray Gin. Or there's so many tea inspired cocktails now. And they didn't do anything like that.

T: What's been your favorite drink that you've posted so far?

KC: Oh, my God, lemme see. I loved the "You Go, Glen Coco" and it was a candy cane martini. And I was super excited about it. And I was trying to get inspiration from recipes online. Everyone was going the white chocolate route, which I don't love. So I went in the complete opposite direction and went a little fruity with it. And it literally tasted like a melted down candy cane that you get when you're a kid where it's sweet and minty, but not like in your face, and the garnish was really cute. I put icing around the edge and dipped it in crushed candy cane and it just was so pretty. And it did really well on the page.

BS: My favorite was also from our Christmas series. And it was "She Loves Christmas" and we used the "12 Days of Christmas" from She Loves Me as the backtrack to it. And we went to the nine days of Christmas and that's what day we did it on. It's a vodka elderflower liqueur, which is my absolute favorite liqueur, Aperol, lemon juice and simple syrup. And it's something that honestly, I've made for so many of my friends when they come over to my house now that they're like, "you need to bottle this!" And it's delicious and it's sweet and sour and it's good and it hits hard.

T: Is there anything on the horizon that we can look forward to seeing?

BS: We're partnering with some Broadway box subscriptions to get our cocktails in their boxes like little postcards with cocktails and a mocktail. And then you'll scan like a QR code to exclusive videos with us doing a workshop on that cocktail. So a little more than our social media might give you. You have an exclusive link. And then we're going to be releasing some merchandise in the spring. There's many references to liquor throughout the Broadway musical theater canon. So we're going through that and picking out our favorite things to design and hopefully by March we'll have that up and running. So we're kind of trying to build that brand so that by the time Broadway comes back, we can really hop on. There's so much content out there because there's so many artists that are looking for something meaningful to do during this time. Yeah, there's so much exploding, and hopefully there's so many things that we want to take outside of this time of quarantine back to like normal times. I mean, theatre is all about connecting, and honestly, for us, when you go out to a bar and connect with people over a drink, it's the same kind of connection that you can have at the theater.

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