Schedule Change at Goodman Theatre

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GOODMAN THEATRE SCHEDULES DAEL ORLANDERSMITH’S “STOOP STORIES”

IN PLACE OF “JOAN D’ARC,” SEPTEMBER 11 – OCTOBER 11

 

Today Goodman Theatre announced a change in its upcoming 2009/2010 season lineup. Artistic Director Robert Falls has canceled the previously scheduled Joan D’Arc, directed by Aida Karic, and in its place selected Stoop Stories, an explosive solo piece by Dael Orlandersmith. A Chicago premiere, Stoop Stories will run September 11 – October 11 in the Goodman’s 400-seat flexible Owen Bruner Theatre.

The decision to cancel Joan D’Arc followed its initial limited engagement at Linz 2009 European Capital of Culture.  Despite a previous workshop and extended rehearsal period at the Goodman, this highly-complex world-premiere adaptation of Friedrich Schiller’s Die Jungfrau Von Orléans (The Maid of Orléans) needed additional time for artistic development prior to the show’s scheduled Chicago opening in September. The Goodman has no immediate plans to reschedule this production.

Goodman_dael OrlandersmithStoop Stories comes to Chicago direct from its premiere at Washington, D.C.’s Studio Theatre this spring, where critics called it a “triumph” (Washington City Paper) and a “breathtaking” and “spellbinding” performance (DC Theatre Scene). Pulitzer Prize Finalist Dael Orlandersmith transforms with mesmerizing ease into an astounding range of characters, from an elderly Polish Holocaust survivor to a poetic young junkie to a teenage Puerto Rican punk to a washed-up rock ‘n’ roll star. An electrifying journey through the streets of Harlem, Orlandersmith performs a powerful, sizzling, fierce symphony of the diverse voices that make up her neighborhood. The New Yorker has described Dael’s work as “…passionate and full of insight” and The Washington Post noted, “One cup of Orlandersmith is worth a gallon of what most other monologists serve up.”

Playwright, poet and actress Dael Orlandersmith is counted among the country’s most powerful artistic voices, one of the first to transition from a spoken word artist to a nationally produced playwright. She is best known for her play Yellowman which was a finalist for the 2002 Pulitzer Prize and she received an OBIE Award for Beauty’s Daughter. Her other works include Monster, The Gimmick and My Red Hand, My Black Hand. As an actor, she has performed many of her own works, as well as in productions of Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, A Raisin in the Sun and Song for My Sisters, and can also be seen in Hal Hartley’s film Amateur.

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