| SEASONS
PAST 2004-2005 Season |
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| The Well of the Saints by John Millington Synge. October-November 2004 Directed by Carmel O'Reilly Cast: Nate Connors, Michael Dell'Orto, Beth Gotha, Tim Hoover, Caryn Andrea Lindsey, Billy Meleady, Therese Plaehn, Kate Reilly and Derry Woodhouse Design: J. Michael Griggs, Karen Perlow, Molly Trainer and Dewey Dellay ![]() The Well of the Saints is a rich and complex tragic-comedic study of the conflict between imagination and reality. Two married blind beggars get a chance to finally see the world – and each other – when a wandering holy man gives them their sight. ![]()
"Súgán Theatre works a miracle... note-perfect production... casts a hypnotic spell" – The Boston Herald (read complete review) "this simple and compelling production.. provides an extremely rare opportunity to see this strange, beautiful play... the Súgán production has a wonderful sound, and that’s the key to a successful Well of the Saints... You get the sense that the company caught the spirit of the piece. And what a piece it is — lyrical, magically elusive, and neglected for a century" – The Boston Phoenix (read complete review) "superb 'Saints' proves love is blind... filled with laughter, tears and thought-provoking moments. Beth Gotha and Billy Meleady are delightful as Mary and Martin Doul... impeccable direction... Carmel O'Reilly brings this 100-year old tale to life with a fresh perspective" – Boston Metro "Waters run deep in The Well of the Saints... a parable with a variety of thought-provoking meanings" – The Standard Times (read complete review) "superb black comedy... The Well of the Saints is such a diabolically lyrical farce that it makes you want to Synge" – WBUR (read complete review) "a short, charming and timeless fable... strong and endearing performances" – Edge Boston (read complete review) February 2005 Directed by Carmel O'Reilly New England premiere Cast: Stacy Fischer, Nigel Gore, Aidan Parkinson and Jackson Royal. Design: J. Michael Griggs, John Malinowski, Molly Trainer and Rick Brenner Winner, 2005 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Production, Small Resident Company ![]() Three lost souls occupy a city church for a night – Harry, an English-born Jew and an ex-circus strongman; Francisco, an Irishman and Harry’s best friend; and the waif-like Maudie. Betrayed by his best friend and wife and grieving over the death of his daughter, Harry talks to the sanctuary lamp to assuage his pain, his guilt and his murderous intentions… First staged by the Abbey Theatre in 1975, where it provoked the most vocal disturbances in the Abbey since Sean O'Casey's The Plough and the Stars in 1926, The Sanctuary Lamp questions religious faith and consolation.
![]() "Súgán
Theatre
Company's lovely
new production of Tom Murphy's finely etched The Sanctuary Lamp ....Carmel O'Reilly
and set designer J. Michael
Griggs make brilliant use of
the new Roberts Studio Theatre at the
Boston Center for the Arts... John Malinowski's lighting is a
work of art in itself.... O'Reilly has found three actors who get to
the heart and soul of Murphy's writing... audiences need to be
attentive to the
subtleties and silences that complement the gorgeous arias Murphy gives
his characters" –
Boston Globe (read complete
review) "Playwright Tom Murphy's trenchant gift for
taking on Ireland's sacred cows comes to rich fruition in this
carefully layered play... Murphy's
imagery is as rich and evocative as the warm, red glow of the lamp that
remains long after the play is over" – Boston Herald (read complete
review) "Súgán illuminates The Sanctuary
Lamp... shadowy, eruptive staging ... Murphy’s long night’s
journey for spiritual refugees grows increasingly compelling in the
second act... it’s when Parkinson takes over, with his biting if
ominous tale of
a circus performance gone awry, that The Sanctuary Lamp truly
shines" – Boston Phoenix (read complete
review) "three
lost
souls find solace in the compelling Sanctuary
Lamp... expect to leave the theatre questioning your own
beliefs" – Metro "His characters set forth their problems with a complexity that makes most contemporary drama seem banal. Murphy is not afraid to let them go on at length and to take on big questions emotionally... As Harry says at the very end of the play, "You know." But what can only be decided by viewing this extraordinary work" – On the Aisle (read complete review) "worth seeing for Murphy's incisive and honest probing of questions of morality and redemption in a time when faith is dead; for the offhandedly simple magnificence of the language he couches his catechism in; for two of the best performances I've seen this season by actors in Boston's smaller theaters, and for the skillful, knowledgeable direction of Carmel O'Reilly" – Patriot Ledger (read complete review)Gagarin Way by Gregory
Burke Nomination, 2006 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Production, Small Resident Company
Gary
wants to make the ultimate political statement. Eddie
has always been interested in violence. Frank
is a symbol of multinational
capitalism. And Tom? Tom just came back for his hat.
Existentialism,
the crisis
of masculinity, globalization and anarchy are on the agenda in this
black
comedy hailed among the best of 2001 by the Daily Telegraph, the
Guardian,
the Observer, and the Mail on Sunday.
"hilarious... Gagarin
Way
packs a punch. But the blow is tempered
by Gregory Burke’s wide-ranging and wicked sense of humor… crackles
with
foreboding even as it sparkles with wit” – Terry Byrne, Boston Herald (read complete
review) “The
Pythonesque laughs keep coming in this startling Súgán
production but so does the Pinteresque menace. There are bits of Joe
Orton as
well” – Ed Siegel, Boston Globe (read complete
review) "funny… Burke has a way of combining blundering and menace, violent shorthand and intellectual pretension, that makes for absurdist comedy" – Carolyn Clay, Boston Phoenix (read complete review) "..dances along the thin line of entertainment and horror in a very well-acted production of a riveting play about using political radicalism as an excuse for mindless violence... what makes Gagarin Way compelling is the antic absurdity of Burke's dialogue" – Bill Marx, WBUR (hear and read complete review) “once
in awhile a gifted new playwright shakes up the theater by launching a
work of
jolting force... explosively compelling” – Jules
Becker, South End News
“gut-wrenching
comedy…a wild 90 minute ride, full of Pythonesque laughter until the
reality of
the situation turns ghastly” – Will Stackman, Aisle Say (read complete
review) "You won’t find a better play in
town or better acting" – Beverly Creasey, Theater Mirror (read complete review) "some great
performances" – Jennifer Bubriski, EdgeBoston (read complete
review)
All of
this
season's performances took place at the Boston
Center for the Arts, 527 Tremont Street, Boston. About Us | Current Season | Contributors | Directions | Helping Out | New & Noteworthy | Reaching Us | Seasons Past | TicketInfo| The Papers Say | Home |
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