Pitt Repertory Theatre Launches 2011-12 Season With Musical Thriller Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
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PITTSBURGH—The Pitt Repertory Theatre is partnering with the University of Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Nov. 3-13 in one of the most ambitious plays ever presented by Pitt Rep—Stephen Sondheim’s adaptation of the macabre musical thriller Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
The production will take place in the Charity Randall Theater in Pitt’s Stephen Foster Memorial, Forbes Avenue and Bigelow Boulevard, Oakland. Performances will be at 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays. For more information, call 412-624-0933 or visit www.play.pitt.edu/mainstage/sweeney. The play kicks off Pitt Rep’s 2011-12 season, which is titled Bodies of Evidence.
Sweeney Todd marks the first collaboration between Pitt Rep and the University’s Department of Music. The production involves more than 50 actors, set designers, and technicians and more than 60 Pitt musicians, who will provide the musical accompaniment to the dramatic story of a deranged barber who cuts his customers’ throats and then serves them as meat pies baked by his accomplice, Mrs. Lovett.
Sweeney Todd will star Richard Teaster, director of the Pitt Men’s Glee Club, in the title role; local actor and Pitt teaching artist-in-residence Theo Allyn as Mrs. Lovett; and Pitt teaching artist-in-residence Andy Nagraj as Judge Turpin. A dozen undergraduate students round out the cast, whose members have been getting intensive training in dance and vocals, as well as physical workouts with a fight choreographer.
While not technically an opera, Sweeney Todd places operatic demands on the singer-actors.
“There’s going to be a lot of give and take between the musicians and actors,” says director and theatre arts faculty member Lisa Jackson-Schebetta, who first met with orchestra director Roger Zahab about the project in the summer of 2010.
Zahab says there is underscoring throughout Sweeney Todd, but the biggest challenge for his musicians will be responding to what is happening on stage.
“The orchestra is a very important part of the drama,” says Zahab. “It is another character.” Whereas a film score is fixed, Zahab explains that actors in a live on-stage play strive to keep performances fresh every time. He calls it “the soul of live theater.” And the musical score, he says, is the “ocean of sound in which the characters swim.”
“It takes a ton of people to create this world . . . and it’s very exciting,” says Jackson-Schebetta.
Information on the other plays in Pitt Rep’s season follows.
World premiere of The Gammage Project
Feb. 9-19, 2012
Henry Heymann Theatre, Stephen Foster Memorial
Written by: Attilio Favorini
Directed by: Mark Clayton Southers
On Oct. 12, 1995, Johnny Gammage, cousin of former Pittsburgh Steeler Ray Seals, was stopped by a Brentwood, Pa., police officer. Seven minutes later, Gammage was dead. This original docudrama goes beyond issues of Black and White to expose the failures of public policy that still trouble the city of Pittsburgh.
Harvest
March 29-April 7, 2012
Henry Heymann Theatre, Stephen Foster Memorial
Written by: Manjula Padmanabhan
Directed by: Anjalee Deshpande Hutchinson
In near-future Mumbai, India, a family struggles to survive in a world in which the economy has deteriorated beyond repair and the only way to survive is to sell yourself, piece by piece. Harvest, a dark speculative satire, explores the human experience in a world in which life can be packaged, bought, and sold. Just don’t ask yourself how much life really costs.
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