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Directed by    Trisha Pancio Armour

Monday, November 17
7:00pm
Reynolds Middle School

Cast
EugeneAlex Gagne-Hawes
LaurieLydia Clowney
StanleyAndrew Stoltenberg
NoraJenni Fleming
BlancheJane Unger
KateChrisse Roccaro
JackJim Loy

Winner of the 1983 New York Drama Critics Award! The first of Neil Simon's autobiographical trilogy, Brighton Beach Memoirs is a portrait of the author as a Brooklyn teenager in 1937 living with his family in crowded, lower-middle-class circumstances. The play captures a few days in the life of a struggling Jewish household that includes Eugene's hard-working father, his sharp-tongued mother, his older and vastly more experienced brother, his widowed aunt and her two young daughters.



Director Trisha Pancio Armour

An emerging professional, Trisha has directed and assisted on a number of Portland area productions including Assitant Directing / Stage Managing The Rep's production of Born Yesterday and directing Twelve Angry Men for Mt Hood Rep's 2002-2003 staged reading series. Other favorite projects include Under Milkwood for Ironclad Productions (Director), Nickel and Dimed for Artists Repertory Theatre (Assistant Director), Honey in the Horn for Artists Repertory Theatre (Assistant Director) and La Vida es Sueno at the Reed College Thesis Studio (Director/Producer). Upcoming projects include Carpetbagger's Children for Portland Civic Theatre Guild (Director). In addition to her creative work,Trisha is the Audience Services Manager for Artists Repertory Theatre. She also manages the love, care, and feeding of Jack, (and Jack's daddy John).

"Brighton Beach is a play about a family like any other- probably better than most. They are a loving, bright, resourceful, frugal bunch. And, like millions of Americans today, they live exactly one paycheck from disaster. They also, much like today, are a family living with the ever present threat of impending catastrophe. It looms in the world at large in the shape of World War 2. In their own family, catastrophe takes the shape of a group of youngsters whose dreams and ideals, though laudable, manage to get their whole family into trouble. It's also very funny. And its this combination of family humor and poignant context that made this play beloved in its time, and worth re-exploring in ours. I hope you enjoy hearing it as much as we've enjoyed bringing it to life."

About The Playwright

Neil Simon is acknowledged by many as the world’s most successful playwright. He has had dozens of plays and nearly as many major motion pictures produced. He has been showered with more Academy and Tony nominations than any other writer, and is the only playwright to have four Broadway productions running simultaneously.

Marvin Neil Simon was born in the Bronx on July 4, 1927, and grew up in Washington Heights at the northern tip of Manhattan. After a brief stint in the military, he took a clerical job with Warner Brothers in New York. During this period he and his brother Danny began writing sketches for Broadway comedy revues such as Catch a Star (1955) and New Faces of 1956. He was soon noticed by the radio and newly-emerging television industry. He and his brother were brought on board the writing teams for programs such as The Phil Silvers Show and Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows.

Simon received several Emmy Award nominations for his television writing. In the 1960's he changed his focus to the broadway stage and was rewarded with an unparalleled string of hits beginning with Come Blow Your Horn. During the 1966-67 season, Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple, Sweet Charity and The Star Spangled Girl were all running simultaneously.

The early 1970's saw a lull in Simon's career following the death of his wife of 20 years, Joan Baim. Some time later, he met the actress Marsha Mason, and they were married. His 1977 play, Chapter Two, dramatizes the grief of a newly remarried man trying to start over after his wife has died. Chapter Two was considered by many critics to be one of his finest works to date.

Throughout his long career, Simon has drawn extensively on his own life and experience. Many of his works take place in the working-class New York neighborhoods he knew so well as a child. With his autobiographical trilogy, Brighton Beach Memoirs (1983), Biloxi Blues (1985), and Broadway Bound (1986), Simon created a touching portrait of an individual, his family, and the world around them. With these plays, Simon found his greatest critical acclaim, and for his 1991 follow-up, Lost in Yonkers, Simon was awarded a Pulitzer Prize.

Sources:
PBS' American Masters Series
Moonstruck Drama Bookstore
Biography.com
The Unofficial Neil Simon Homepage


JOIN US IN OUR "PLAY READING" HOME!

Thanks to the generosity of Reynolds School District, Mt. Hood Rep. play readings will be performed in the intimate 150 seat
Reynolds Middle School Theatre
201st and Halsey---Fairview



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