Special Military Operation (staged workshop)
Los Angeles Premiere
Written and Directed by Matthew McCray*
Featuring: Ron Bottitta, Chase Cargill, Russell Edge, Matthew Henerson, Dylan Jones, Betsy Moore and William Salyers
Dramaturgy: Barbara Kallir
Lighting Designer: Zachary Moore
Costume Designer: Yonit Olshan
Sound Designer: Matthew McCray
Dialects: Jennifer Greer
Stage Manager: Lauren McCuen
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
The Hour of All Things (Pandemic, Filmed-Theatre)
Los Angeles Premiere
Written by Caridad Svich
Directed by Martha Demson, Erith Jaffe-Berg*, Barbara Kallir*, Edgar Landa*, Bruce A. Lemon, Jr., Jeff Liu, Matthew McCray*, Armando Molina and Jon Lawrence Rivera
Featuring: Tony Abatemarco, Richard Azurdia, Melina Bielefelt, Hannah Priscilla Craig, Donna Simone Johnson, Bruce A. Lemon, Jr., Julianna Stephanie Ojeda and Ryun Yu
Scenic Designer: Katrina Coulourides
Lighting Designer: Kaitlin Chang
Sound Designer: Gahyae Ryu
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
The Late Wedding
Los Angeles Premiere
Written by Christopher Chen
Directed by Ashley Steed*
Featuring: Evie Abat, Andrew Bliek, Hannah Priscilla Craig*, Joshua Duran, Anneliese Euler*, Amir Levi and Siaka Massaquoi
Scenic Designer: Katrina Coulourides
Lighting Designer: Kaitlin Chang
Sound Designer: Gahyae Ryu
Costume Designer: Jenny Foldenauer
Stage Manager: Cecilia Soghikian*
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
4.48 Psychosis
Written by Sarah Kane
Directed by Matthew McCray
Featuring: Melina Bielefelt*, Ron Bottitta, Taylor Hawthorne, Dylan Jones, Jinny Ryann*, and Betsy Zajko.
Scenic & Props Designer: David Offner
Lighting Designer: Matthew Richter
Sound Designer: Daniel Gower
Costume Designer: Michael Mullen
Video Designer: Corwin Evans
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
Press release
Men on Boats
Written by Jaclyn Backhaus
Directed by Barbara Kallir
Featuring: Melissa Coleman-Reed, Shelby Corely, Taylor Hawthorne, Liz Lanier*, Cindy Lin, Tiana Randall-Quant, Thea Rodgers, Jinny Ryann*, Ashley Steed* and Elspeth Weingarten
Scenic & Props Designer: Carlo Maghirang
Lighting Designer: Allen Clark
Sound Designer: David Marling
Costume Designer: Wyndell C. Carmichael
Movement Director: Caribay Franke
Music Director: Ben Kutne
Stage Manager: Edward Khris Fernandez
Assistant Stage Manager: Jimin Kang
Dramaturge: Flor San Roman*
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
Incognito
Written by Nick Payne
Directed by Don Boughton
What makes us us? Nick Payne’s ingenious, time-traveling adventure weaves together three personal quests to get to the heart of the mind:
- a wannabe research pioneer absconds with Einstein’s brain;
- a newlywed fights to hang onto the memory of his love after a botched operation; and
- a freshly divorced neuroscientist struggles to find hope in the face of cold hard facts.
Incognito features four actors giving life to a globe-hopping cast of colorful characters. Says The New York Times, “It feels right that so few should incarnate so many, since one of Mr. Payne’s implicit points here is that we’re all siblings under the skull. That philosophy means you’re likely to identify with every one of these characters, all groping for certain knowledge and all destined to be thwarted.”
Featuring: Debba Rofheart*, Sarah Rosenberg*, Dan Via* & Alex Wells*
Director: Don Boughton
Scenic & Props Designer: Mark Kanieff
Lighting Designer: Brandon Baruch
Sound Designer: James Ferrero
Costume Designer: Alycia Matz
Stage Manager: Edward Khris Fernandez
Assistant Stage Manager: Priscilla Kwong
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
The Woman Who Went to Space as a Man
Written and Directed by Maureen Huskey
Part fact, part fever dream, this captivating new work opens with Alice B. Sheldon – better known to sci-fi aficionados as author James Tiptree, Jr. – contemplating suicide. Dodging in and out of reality, the play investigates gender, longing and creativity as self-exploration through one of the Science Fiction world’s greatest literary tricksters.
Featuring: Kamar Elliott, Liesel Euler*, James Ferrero, Emma Zakes Green, Betsy Moore*, Nathan Nonhof, Robert Paterno, Paula Rebelo, Megan Rippey, Ashley Steed*, Alex Wells*
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
Plunge
Written by Tom Jacobson
Directed by Matthew McCray
Dark secrets bubble to the surface as two strangers — one a priest, the other a noted art historian — share a surreal confession at LA’s “exclusive” Bimini Baths. Years before, a boy drowned under mysterious circumstances. But whose crime was it, really?
Featuring: Gary Patent*, Dan Via*
Director: Matthew McCray*
Set: Michael Fitzgerald
Art Direction: Aiden Fiorito
Lighting: Alexander Le Valliant Freer
Sound: David Marling
Video: Matthew McCray
Costumes: Michael Mullen
Stage Manager: Daphne Kinard
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
Of Government
Written by Agnes Borinsky
Directed by Theo Motzenbacker
Need to refill your cup? Join Ms. Marjorie Blain and friends for an evening of songs, tasty snacks, and a DIY pageant celebrating the often overlooked “feminine” labor that binds our communities together.
Featuring: Christine Avila, Melina Bielefelt*, Liesel Euler*, Lauren Flans, Olivia Fox, Hazel Lozano*, Jessica Salans, K. Butterfly Smith, Brenda Varda
* member, Son of Semele Ensemble
The Ridiculous Darkness
Written by Wolfram Lotz
Directed by Matthew McCray*
Deep in the rainforests of Afghanistan, two soldiers on a top-secret mission collide with Somali pirates, a horndog missionary, a depressed parrot and more, egged on by a playwright struggling to tell a story that may not even be his to tell. Wolfram Lotz casts a timely, absurdist eye on cultural and economic colonialism in this send-up of the classic Heart of Darkness and its hallucinatory 1979 film adaptation, Apocalypse Now.
German playwright Wolfram Lotz takes these well-known reference points and deploys comic inventiveness to probe the echoes of colonial attitudes in an allegedly post-colonial world.
Scenic Design by Michael Fitzgerald
Costume Design by Vicki Anne Hales
Sound Design by John Ruml
Lighting Design by Azra King-Abadi
Video Design by Hsuan-Kuang Hsieh
Stage Managed by Beth Scorzato
Cast
Taylor Hawthorne, Sarah Rosenberg*, Ashley Steed*, Dan Via* & Alex Wells*
* = member of Son of Semele Ensemble
Archipelago
Written by Caridad Svich
Directed by Barbara Kallir*
Lyrical and dreamlike, Archipelago follows two lovers across time and continents, through chance encounters and missed connections. She lives detached from her own history; his casts a shadow wherever he goes. Theirs is the story of our globalized world, crystallized in Caridad Svich‘s humane insights and haunting prose.
Playwright Caridad Svich received a 2012 OBIE Award for Lifetime Achievement in the theatre, a 2012 Edgerton Foundation New Play Award for Guapa, and the 2011 American Theatre Critics Association Primus Prize for her play The House of the Spirits, based on the Isabel Allende novel. She has won the National Latino Playwriting Award (sponsored by Arizona Theatre Company) twice, including in the year 2013 for her play Spark. She has been short-listed for the PEN Award in Drama four times, including in the year 2012 for her play Magnificent Waste. Her works in English and Spanish have been seen at venues across the US and abroad.
Scenic Design by Meg Cunningham
Costume Design by Lena Sands
Sound Design by John Nobori
Lighting Design by Alexander Le Vaillant Freer
Video Design by Kate Pagsolingan
Choreographed by Giovanni Ortega
Stage Managed by Flor San Roman
Cast
Sarah Rosenberg* and Michael Lopez*
* = member of Son of Semele Ensemble
The Offending Gesture
Written by Mac Wellman
Directed by Edgar Landa*
In The Offending Gesture, panicky minions scramble to shield a volatile, thin-skinned despot from a perceived slight. What may not be so funny in real life becomes an absurdist vaudeville in the hands of form-busting playwright Mac Wellman, inspired by actual events: In 1941, the German Foreign Office investigated reports of a Finnish dog, Jackie, trained by his owner to salute at the sound of Hitler’s name. Onstage, the actors play cats playing dogs playing humans, watched over by a Greek chorus of singing Mooncats (i.e., cats living on the moon, natch).
Mac Wellman is an Obie award-winning playwright, author and poet, known for the experimental nature of his work, telling American Theatre, “Plays are not about plots. They are about moments. And moments are about epiphanies when something wakes you up.” Wellman is Distinguished Professor of Play Writing at Brooklyn College and a recipient of NEA, Guggenheim and Foundation of Contemporary Arts fellowships.
Scenic Design by Meg Cunningham
Costume Design by Stephanie Petagno
Sound Design by Becca Kessin
Composer/Music Direction by Brenda Varda*
Lighting Design by Barbara Kallir*
Assistant Directed by Maria Pasquarelli
Stage Managed by Lyndsay Lucas
Cast
Rachel Appelbaum, Melina Bielefelt*, Anastasia Coon, Kyla Ledes, Flor San Roman*, Erin Scerbak, Ashley Steed and Kate Williams Grabau
* = member of Son of Semele Ensemble
Off-Broadway premiere produced by The Tank (Rosalind Grush and Rania Jumaily, Artistic Directors), directed by Meghan Finn, at The Connelly Theater as part of The Tank’s Flint & Tinder Series in association with 3-Legged Dog on January 5, 2016.
That Pretty Pretty; or, The Rape Play
Written by Sheila Callaghan
Directed by Marya Mazor
Agnes and Valerie are half-sister strippers on a rampage, screwing and killing their way through every hotel room across America. Or are they? Reality shifts with the arrival of Desert Storm vet Rodney and his best friend, a wannabe screenwriter named Owen, whose ambitions and fantasies begin to warp the sisters’ story. Special appearance by an aerobicizing Jane Fonda.
That Pretty Pretty; or, The Rape Play is a raucous and raunchy subversion of our culture’s distorted — often downright violent — representations of women. Son of Semele presented Callaghan’s Roadkill Confidential in 2012, and her work has enjoyed hit productions at several LA theaters over the past 24 months.
Scenic Design by Aubree Lynn
Costume Design by Lena Sands
Sound Design by John Zalewski
Lighting Design by Josh Epsein
Fight Direction & Violence by Edgar Landa
Technical Direction by Shen Heckel
Stage Managed by Christina Bryan
Cast
Will Bradley*, Betsy Moore, Cindy Nguyen, Tope Oni and Paula Rebelo
* = member of Actors’ Equity Association
Love and Information
Written by Caryl Churchill
Directed by Matthew McCray
Caryl Churchill is one of the most intellectually restless, formally inventive playwrights working today. Her tour-de-force Love and Information has created what The Guardian calls an “exhilarating theatrical kaleidoscope,” comprised of 50+ short scenes and more than 100 characters, exploring the challenges of human connection in the Information Age.
Scenic Design by Drew Foster
Video Design by Keith Skretch
Lighting Design by Chu-hsuan Chang
Costume Design by Jenny Foldenauer
Sound Design by Jeff Polunas
Technical Direction by Michael Harvey
Assistant Scenic Design by Carlo Maghirang
Stage Managed by Lyndsay Lucas
Ensemble Cast
Richard Azurdia*, Darren Bailey, Melina Bielefelt*, Daniel Getzoff, Michael Evens Lopez*, Betsy Moore, Cindy Nguyen, Sarah Rosenberg, Ashley Steed, Dan Via*, Alexander Wells*
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
If You Can Get To Buffalo
Written by Trish Harnetiaux
Directed by Edgar Landa◊
The year is 1993: A befuddled Charlie Rose is our guide as intrepid online pioneers discover freedom — and looming dangers — on the virtual frontier. Their playground is one of the first-ever social networks, LambdaMoo, in which users frolic and mingle in a fantastical mansion made entirely of text. The only rule in this collective Utopia is that there are no rules… until a sinister puppetmaster named Mr. Bungle crosses a virtual line.
Journalist Julian Dibbell documented this early case of “rape in cyberspace” in The New Yorker, and his article provides the jumping-off point for Harnetiaux’s funny, fanciful and thought-provoking play.
Scenic Design by Meg Cunningham
Video Design by Matthew McCray◊
Lighting Design by Barbara Kallir◊
Costume Design by Hunter Wells
Sound Design by Becca Kessin
Stage Managed by Lyndsay Lucas◊
Ensemble Cast
Melina Bielefelt◊*, Chase Cargill, Betsy Moore◊, Cindy Nguyen◊, Sarah Rosenberg◊, Caitlin Teeley◊,Bart Petty, Tim Venable*, Alex Wells◊*
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
The Life and Sort of Death of Eric Argyle
Written by Ross Dungan
Directed by Matthew McCray
Eric Argyle — newly deceased — wasn’t expecting a Q&A session, but a mysterious tribunal is asking some pretty tough questions about his life choices. Meanwhile, back among the living, a stressed-out cellist is sorting through a surprise delivery of 5,307 envelopes, each containing a single typewritten page. In Ross Dungan’s ingeniously twisty play, these events set up a race against time with life (or death?) consequences.
Set by Sarah Krainin
Lights by Jeremy Pivnick
Costumes by Lynne Marie Martens
Sound by Noelle Riad Sammour
Video by Matthew McCray º
Stage Management by Ashley Regan º
Production Management by Alex Wells º
Assistant Direction and Dramaturgy by Ashley Steed º
Cast:
Melina Bielefelt º*, Don Boughton º*, Craig Fleming *, Bruce A. Lemon, Jr., Sarah Rosenberg º, Rick Steadman *, Dan Via º*, Inga Wilson º*
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
Woman Parts: “Lamentations of the Pelvis” by Sibyl O’Malley, and “Sex & God” by Linda McLean
“Lamentations” Directed by Becca Wolff
“Sex & God” Directed by Barbara Kallir ◊
“Woman Parts” is a double-bill of potent and provocative one-acts by female playwrights, directed by women. In Sex & God, the interwoven voices of four Scottish women create a haunting symphony of the 20th Century as they confront — and transcend — the limits of their times. Lamentations of the Pelvis sets a group of women on a funny and phantasmagoric quest for companionship, security and a life beyond gender. Together these plays celebrate the resilience and transformative potential of women, embracing the struggles of the past and imagining the possibilities of the future.
Set by Meg Cunningham
Lights by Matt Richter
Costumes by Jenny Foldenauer and Amanda Lee
Sound by Rebecca Kessin
Puppets by DanRae Wilson
Music by Andrew Ingkavet
Shadow Puppets by Inga Wilson ◊
Movement by Alex Knox
Stage Management by Ashley Regan ◊
Assistant Stage Management by Flor San Roman
Cast:
Hilletje Bashew ◊, Stephanie Berlanga, Melina Bielefelt *◊, Laura Carson ◊, John Grady, Joelle Mendoza ◊, Betsy Moore, Sarah Rosenberg ◊, Marianne Thompson, Alec Tomkiw and Briana Venskus *
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
Our Class
Written by Tadeusz Slobozianek
In a version by Ryan Craig
Directed by Matthew McCray ◊
Inspired by the Jedwabne pogrom, a hotly contested, tragic, historic event in Poland in 1941, Our Class chronicles the lives of 10 classmates as they grow up in tumultuous times. From 1925 to the new millennium, the lives of 5 Catholic and 5 Jewish classmates take dramatic and unexpected turns as their town is shaped by invasion and war. Our Class is an uncompromising examination of wartime mob mentality coupled with the driving forces of religious and national identity.
Set by Sarah Krainin
Lights by Anna Cecilia Martin
Costumes by Jenny Foldenauer
Sound by Cricket Myers
Stage Management by Paige Fodor
Production Management by Matthew McCray ◊
Assistant Direction by Diana Payne ◊
Dramaturgy by Barbara Kallir ◊
Cast:
Melina Bielefelt*◊, Sharyn Gabriel◊, Matt Kirkwood*, Michael Nehring*◊, Gary Patent*, Gavin Peretti, Sarah Rosenberg◊, Kiff Scholl, Dan Via*◊, Alexander Wells*◊
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
Civilization (all you can eat)
Written by Jason Grote
Directed by Don Boughton ◊
Choreographed by Ken Roht
Set by Birgitte Moos
Lights by Brandon Baruch
Costumes by Jamie Westfall
Sound by Dennis Yen
Props by Paula Rebelo ◊
Stage Managed by Ashley Regan ◊
Production Management by Matthew McCray ◊
Cast:
Laura Carson ◊, Mary Quick, Sarah Rosenberg ◊, Peter James Smith, Inger Tudor *, Dan Via ◊*, Alex Wells ◊*
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
Roadkill Confidential
Written by Sheila Callaghan
Directed by Barbara Kallir ◊
Artist Trevor Pratt has gained fame by creating brutal works of art. When those around her begin to die an FBI agent is called in to investigate, but will his infatuation with the brutality of her work derail his investigation or give him the edge he needs to solve the case?
Set by Adam Hunter and Barbara Kallir ◊
Video by Adam Flemming
Video by Adam Flemming
Sound by Joseph ‘Sloe’ Slawinski
Lighting by Ian Garrett
Ccostumes by Vicki Anne Hales-Daly
Roadkill Artwork by Travis Novak
Movement by Melina Bielefelt
Stage Management by Flor San Roman
Assistant Direction by Diana Payne
Cast (in alpha):
Melina Bielefelt*◊, Daniel Getzoff*◊, Melissa Randel*◊, Alex Smith◊ and Alexander Wells*◊
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
Wallowa: The Vanishing of Maude LeRay
Written by Oliver Mayer, in collaboration with The Company
Conceived and Directed by Don Boughton º
Wallowa revisits a true story surrounding a 76-year old woman who, in 2007, went missing in the Wallowa Mountains, one of the densest and most dangerous forests in the Americas. After searching extensively throughout the region, search and rescue teams found no trace of her and officials called off the mission. The Wallowa mountain range was the home and sacred lands of Chief Joseph’s band of the Nez Perce Tribe, the flashpoint of the last great battle between the U.S. government and an Indian nation.
Set by Sarah Krainin
Lights by Barbara Kallir º
Costumes by Daniella Langford
Sound by Bob Blackburn
Video by Matthew McCray º
Music by Gabriel Liebeskind º, Matthew McCray º, and Alexander Wright º
Choreography by Sharyn Gabriel º
Dramaturgy by Bryan Davidson º
Stage Management by Kyle Roberts & Flor San Roman º
Cast:
Sarah Boughton º*, Sharyn Gabriel º, *Daniel Getzoff º, Gabriel Liebeskind º, Gina Manziello º, Matthew McCray º*, Alex Smith º, Dee Sudik, Diana Payne º, Alexander Wells º*, Jonathan CK Williams º* and Alexander Wright*
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
º = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
The City
Written by Martin Crimp
Directed by Matthew McCray ◊
The City is an elliptical play exploring the uncertainty of modern life through three characters trying to make sense of a surreal and collapsing world. Clair, a dispirited translator, will not write stories of her own. Her characters feel lifeless just like the piano playing of her neighbor Jenny, a nurse whose husband is away fighting in a mysterious and secret war. Clair’s husband Christopher fears he will soon lose his job and his ability to make sense of things is deteriorating as quickly as his marriage. But, nothing is as it seems. Truth is stranger than fiction in this austere play about the abruptly shifting landscape of contemporary life.
Set by Nick Benacerraf
Lights by Jeremy Pivnick
Costumes by Gwyneth ConawayBennison
Sound by John Zalewski
Stage Management by Ashley Regan ◊
Cast:
Melina Bielefelt *◊, Elise Ramacciotti, Sarah Rosenberg and Dan Via*◊
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
What The Moon Saw, or “I Only Appear To Be Dead”
Written by Stephanie Fleischmann
Directed by Matthew McCray ◊
Inspired by Hans Christian Andersen’s tales and set in post 9/11 New York, What the Moon Saw or “I Only Appear to Be Dead” is an idiosyncratic response to 9/11—a compendium of short linked plays includes gritty contemporary urban riffs on five fairytales by Hans Christian Andersen, including “The Little Matchgirl,” “The Steadfast Tin Soldier,” “The Snow Queen,” and “The Nightingale”, and, woven through the piece, “What the Moon Saw.”
Set by Sarah Krainin
Lights by Dan Weingarten
Costumes by Ariel Boroff
Sound & Original Music by Daniel Corral
Custom Props & Rigging by John Burton
Props by Kristen Carmi ◊
Musical Direction by Matthew McCray ◊
Stage Management by Benoit Guerin
Cast:
Maria Ashna, Melina Bielefelt*◊, Allie Costa, Whitton Frank, Leah Harmon, Erith Jaffe-Berg◊, Edgar Landa*◊, Brandon McCluskey, Michael Nehring*◊, Marissa Pistone and Alex Smith
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
On Emotion
Written by Mick Gordon and Paul Broks
Directed by Matthew McCray ◊
Stephen is a cognitive behavioral therapist who is developing a lecture on human emotion. He’s secretly attracted to Anna, his patient who is suffering from a deep sense of loss. As Stephen’s daughter Lucy falls unexpectedly for an older man and Stephen struggles with his shameful feelings for his patient, his autistic son Mark begins to demonstrate increasingly concerning behavior that becomes the catalyst for an unexpected event.
Set by Sarah Krainin
Lights by Ian Garrett
Costumes by Laura Wong ◊
Puppets by Moira Lael McDonald
Sound by Joseph “Sloe” Slawinski
Carpentry by David Mauer
Stage Management by Ivan Acosta
Cast:
Melina Bielefelt *◊, Sami Klein, Michael Nehring *◊, Sarah Rosenberg ◊ and Alex Smith ◊
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
Slaughter City
Written by Naomi Wallace
Directed by Barbara Kallir ◊
Set in a rural meat factory where management is trying to break the union, Slaughter City explores the struggle to remain human in a mechanized, profit-driven culture. The play examines the interpersonal relationships between labor and management, as it focuses on the lives of four workers struggling to earn a living under hellish conditions. Roach and Maggot are childhood best friends, who have worked in the slaughterhouse their entire adult lives. Brandon is a smooth-talking kid who is quickly working his way up the factory ladder, and Cod is a relative new-comer, a non-union worker whom the others resent for crossing their pickets.
Set by Sarah Krainin
Lighting by Barbara Kallir ◊ and Jonathan Williams ◊
Sound by Joseph “Sloe“ Slawinski
Costumes by Laura Wong ◊
Carcasses by Janne Larsen
Music by Andrew Ingkavet
Props by Noelle Leiblic
Fight Direction by Edgar Landa ◊
Musical Direction by Matthew McCray ◊
Stage Managed by Flor San Roman ◊
Artwork by Sue Coe
Technical Direction by David Mauer
Production Management and Publicity by Ashley Steed
Costume Assistance by Regine Linhares
Cast:
Sarah Boughton *◊, Elizabeth Clemmons ◊, Christopher Emerson, Brent Jennings *, Noelle Messier *, Christina Ogunade, Bart Petty *, Alexander Wells *◊
* = courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association
◊ = Son of Semele Ensemble Member
Older Productions
The Designated Mourner (2009)
TRAGEDY: A Tragedy by Will Eno (2008)
Melancholy Play by Sarah Ruhl (2008)
365 Days / 365 Plays by Suzan-Lori Parks (2007)
Iphigenia… A Rave Fable by Caridad Svich (2006)
King Cat Calico Finally Flies Free! by Aaron Henne (2006)
Preludes & Fugues by John Glore (2005)
Hyperbole: Epiphany (2005)
The Mysteries by Anon (2005)
Wilhelm Reich In Hell by Robert Anton Wilson (2004)
The Tower by Matthew Maguire (2004)
A Human Interest Story (or, The Gory Details and All) by Carlos Murillo (2004)
Film is Evil: Radio is Good by Richard Foreman
Animal Farm adapted by Peter Hall
Back Story by Joan Ackermann and Others
Somewhere, Someone Said by Kristen Brennan, Scott Christian, Graham Dodge and Pamela Ezell
The American Plan by Richard Greenberg
Peer Gynt, Part One by Henrik Ibsen
Lava/Breath: Lava by Richard Foreman and Breath by Samuel Beckett
Earthlings by Matthew McCray