What Then
by Rinne Groff
directed by Hal Brooks
January 7 - 28, 2006
at The Ohio Theatre
Show Credits | Photos | Dramaturgical Research
Clubbed Thumb presents
Rinne Groff's
What Then, in which a woman becomes an architect and builds a dream home, but only in her dreams.
Hal Brooks, fresh from the long-running and critically acclaimed off-Broadway hit
Thom Pain, directs.
Credits
With
Andrew Dolan, Meg MacCary, Piter Marek, and Merritt Wever
Set by
Jo Winiarski
Costumes by
Kirche Leigh Zeile
Lights by
Kirk Bookman
Sound by
Jill BC Du Boff
Props by
Pete Sarafin
Music by
Joe Popp
Music Supervised by
Mike Errico
Stage Manager
Jessica Pecharsky
Assistant Stage Manager
Donald Butchko
Graphic Design by
Joshua Dickens
Publicity by
Publicity Outfitters
Sign Language Interpreted Performance Sunday, January 22
Performance Coordinator
Mara Stephens
Program Producer
Maria Striar
Interpreted by
Aaron Airgood, Darren Fudenske, Lewis Merkin, Maria Micioni, Jackie Roth, and Anne Tomasetti
Supported by the Jerome Hill Centennial and in recognition of the valuable cultural contributions of artists to society. This event is made possible with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency, and The Greenwall Foundation.
Research
In our own research into the topics that arise in What Then we found many helpful and interesting links on the World Wide Web.
- "It doesn't happen in my waking hours. It happens in my sleep."
- "The water is toxic."
- "I am actually trying right now to explore my options."
- "Now that the Lake's drying up, we've got to do something to keep the dust down. It's like in my country, but in my country it's too late: the Lake's already destroyed."
- "What if you could take a sip? It's clean like before."
- "Because they say the Lake won't be there very much longer."
- "Then you know about fishermen with nothing to catch. My poor granddad stares all day at the boats rusting on the dust where a lake used to be."
- "Almost Uzbekistan?"
- "Those factories can't be built unless agreements are reached about how to marshal resources."
- "Gardens are a constant affirmation of life."