February 22 - March 16, 2008
Director: Craig Allen Mummey
Evening Performances:
February 22, 23, 29, March 1, 7, 8, 14 and
15 at 8
Sunday Matinees:
March 2 and 16 at 2

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"... an outstanding show. ... This
is another one that sticks with you."
"The Cripple of Inishmaan raises
lots of questions, the biggest being who is the cripple of Inishmaan?
I think you’ll discover that the answer isn’t the obvious
answer. ... There were twists and turns. You weren’t quite
sure what was real. The people were not flat characters, they were
very well rounded. You thought you had them pegged and then something
would come out of the blue and surprise you.." --- ShowBizRadio,
February 26, 2008 Read/Listen
to the Review
Silver Spring Stage presents the community theatre
premiere of The Cripple of Inishmaan by Martin
McDonagh, directed by Craig Allen Mummey and produced by Nancy Jaquish
and Richard Ley. Eccentric, dark funny Irish characters on a remote
island pursue escape, romance and ever entertaining gossip. The
Cripple of Inishmaan will run weekends February 22 to March
16, 2008.
Silver Spring Stage is located in the Woodmoor Shopping Center,
lower level (next to the CVS) at Colesville Road and University
Boulevard. Ticket prices range from $13 to $18. Performances are
Friday and Saturday at 8:00 PM and Sunday matinees on March 2 and
March 16 at 2:00 PM. Information is also available by calling (301)
593-6036.
At 37 years old, Martin McDonagh has taken the theatre world by
storm. Over the span of eight years, four of his plays have received
best play nominations from the Tony Awards. His first The Beauty
Queen of Leenane won four. In 2006, he won an Oscar for Best
Live Action Short Film for Six Shooter, a film he wrote
and directed. Born in London, but spending time in County Galway,
he captured the language, rhythm, idiosyncrasy, mythology, and dark
humor of the Western Irish. Many critics have dubbed him the heir
of J.M. Synge and Sean O’Casey. Yet, it’s not playwrights
that stirred him, but filmmakers like Scorcese and Tarantino and
musicians Nirvana and The Pogues. He said, “Not knowing the
limitations of the form helps you break them.” The
Cripple of Inishmaan, his second play, is the first of
the Aran Islands trilogy (the other plays are The Lieutenant
of Inishmore and unpublished The Banshees of Inisheer).
Inspired by the filming of the documentary Man of Aran
in 1934 by Robert Flaherty, McDonagh depicts the colorful characters
of coastal Ireland enduring their daily hardships and routines.
Yet, as Flaherty, invented some of the documentary’s scenes,
McDonagh tells his own story of how people invent their own tales
to either escape their existence of casual cruelty or embrace it
with humor and resilience. McDonagh’s writing illuminates
this engaging and endearing personalities, linked by isolation and
despair, overcoming both through exhilarating and surprising storytelling.
Set on a remote island off the west coast of Ireland in 1934, young
Cripple Billy (Ryan Manning), living with his “aunties”
Kate (Jean Aviles) and Eileen (Jane MacFarlane), learns that a Hollywood
director is making a movie on a nearby island. Kate and Eileen took
in the disabled Billy after his parents drowned. Two other young
people on the island, Helen (Charlene Smith), whom Billy harbors
a crush, and her brother Bartley (Joshua Pantner) also want to be
in the film. Billy convinces Babbybobby (John Stange) to give him
a ride in his boat to the neighboring island. Billy’s departure
and the film provide ripe material for the resident island gossip
JohnnyPateenMike (David Dubov). A doctor (Brian Turley) and the
aged Mammy (Jane Squier Bruns) add to the indelible island characters.
How the story unfolds from here will be to the delight of audiences.
The production team includes Brenda Ryan (Assistant Director/Stage
Manager), Kevin P. Garrett (Sound Design), Linda Bartash (Set Design/Costume
Design), Andrew Scharwath (Light Design), and Sonya Okin (Properties).
The Stage's 40th anniversary season continues with Communicating
Doors (Apr. 11-May 4); Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean,
Jimmy Dean (May 30-June 22); and Deathtrap (July 11-Aug. 3). Silver
Spring Stage is grateful for support from the Arts and Humanities
Council of Montgomery County and the Maryland State Arts Council.
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