THEATER FOR THE NEW CITY TO PRESENT DOUBLE-BILL
OF PLAYS BY MARIO FRATTI
American premieres for "Three Sisters
and a Priest" and "Suicide Club."
WHERE AND WHEN:
October 4 to 21, 2012
Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave.
(at E. 10th Street)
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 PM;
Sundays at 3:00 PM
$12 general admission, $10 seniors and
students
Box office (212) 254-1109, http://www.theaterforthenewcity.net
Runs 1:35
In 1999, Pope John Paul II stated in a
public meeting, "Forget the popular notion of actual physical places--fluffy
clouds above, an inky inferno below. Think of hell as a state of mind,
a self-willed exile from God." This inspired playwright Mario Fratti
to write a play in which three elderly, wealthy sisters are fascinated
and confused by the Holy Father's words and summon a priest to clarify
them. It is an ambush. He does not realize it. Theater for the New City
will present the play, "Three Sisters and a Priest," October
4 to 21 in a double bill with "Suicide Club," a tragicomedy by
Fratti in which, under false pretenses, a mother has joined a support group
for survivors of family suicides. A visit by a fellow club member on the
woman and her son leads to an unpredictable and surprising conclusion.
Both plays are American premieres. The evening will be directed by Stephan
Morrow.
"Suicide Club" emphasizes that
people are almost never what they seem. The play reveals the insecurities
that lead people to lie and the emotional chicanery with which they do
it. There is a thin vein of jocularity in its cynical conclusion and its
characters embody the deep emotional reality and dis-ease that makes Fratti's
plays distinctively provocative. Fratti has a great sense of humor, even
when he deals with the existential questions of religion, death and the
meaning of life.
Mario Fratti (http://www.mariofratti.com),
a prolific drama critic and a playwright, was born in Italy but has been
living in New York since 1963. He had a long run on Broadway with the musical
"Nine" (adaptation of his play "Six Passionate Women"
- Life of Fellini - film "8 1/2"). His best known full-length
plays include "Cage," "Victim," Eleonora Duse,"
White Widow," "Che Guevara," Pinochet-Chile '73," "Refrigerators,"
"Birthday," "Academy," "Sister," "Terrorist,"
"Lovers" and "Iraq." His plays have been performed
in 19 languages. His most recent play, "Obama 44," will open
at the Goldoni Theatre in Venice, Italy in April, 2013. A collection, "Unpredictable
Plays," containing 28 works by Mario Fratti, has been published by
New York Theatre Experience. (ISBN 978-0-9794852-0-6, info@nyte.org, 212-217-9627)
It's an interesting historical footnote
that Fratti was instrumental in arranging TNC's first international production,
"Chile '73," at the Parma International Theater Festival. He
also instigated a theater exchange between Theater for the New City and
La Piccola Brigata of L'Aquila--his home town--in the 1988-1989 theater
season. The L'Aquila theater company performed a realistic play by a local
author at TNC and Crystal Field, Artistic Director of TNC, took over her
vaudeville musical, "One Director Against His Cast," with a TNC
company. About 20 years later, the 2009 Abruzzi earthquake shattered that
quaint medieval walled city, including the apartment near the town square
where Fratti, an expatriate, had sentimentally maintained an Italian residence.
He was active in relief efforts for the town and now treasures his remaining
ties to it. Theater for the New City also conducted its own fundraising
effort for earthquake relief in L'Aquila.
Fratti's recent TNC productions include
"Trio" (2010) and "Quartet" (2011); both directed by
Stephan Morrow. The first play Morrow ever acted in as an adult was a Fratti
play, "The Cage," at Manhattan Theater Club, followed closely
after by "Her Voice," which was part of an evening of one-acts
by Fratti at The Quaigh Theater.
Most recently, Morrow has also helmed "Triangle
- The Shirtwaist Triangle Factory Fire" by J. Gilhooley at 59E59St
Theaters, "Wall St. Fandango" by Murray Schisgal at The Actor’s
Studio and TNC, and "Dogmouth" by John Steppling at TNC. In 2007
he acted in and directed Norman Mailer’s play, "The Deer Park,"
and was then invited to co-direct a film of the play with Mr. Mailer and
act in it. Morrow was mentored in the Playwright Directing Unit of the
Actor’s Studio by Elia Kazan.
"Three Sisters and a Priest"
will be acted by Deborah Offner, Carol Tammer and Mark Ethan. "Suicide
Club" will be acted by Maria Deasy, Connor Moore and Cheryl Freeman.
The plays will have set design by Mark
Marcante and lighting design by Alexander Bartenieff. Utilizing the long
width of TNC's Cino Theater, the production design will have a kitchen
scene for "Suicide Club" side-by-side with a marble-columned,
divan-furnished living room for "Three Sisters and a Priest."
The action will shift from the first set to the second after a brief intermission.
Music will be operatic overtures to set the tone of each play; works by
Puccini and Verdi are being considered. "The plays breathe in the
presence of these," explains director Stephan Morrow, who will do
the sound design.