Silver Spring Stage: Dinner with Friends
Dinner with Friends
by Donald Margulies
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Dinner with Friends by Donald Margulies Sept. 26 - Oct. 19, 2008

Director: Craig Allen Mummey

Evening Performances:
Sept. 26, 27, Oct. 3, 4, 10, 11, 17 and 18 at 8
Sunday Matinees:
Oct. 5 and 19 at 2


Silver Spring Stage presents the Pulitzer Prize winning Dinner with Friends, by Donald Margulies, a play on the nature of marriage and friendship explored with clever wit and poignant drama, directed by Craig Allen Mummey. Dinner with Friends will run weekends September 26 to October 19.

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 October 5 and October 19 at 2:00 PM. Tickets can be purchased at www.ssstage.org. Information is also available by calling (301) 593-6036.

Dinner with Friends opens as an apparently simple story of one couple’s breakup and its effect on their closest friends, but it grows into a perceptive and surprising exploration of the nature of marriage and friendship itself. The play began as a commissioned work for the Actors Theatre of Louisville in 1998 and landed Off Broadway in 1999. In 2000, it won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, along with the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Off-Broadway Play, the Outer Critics Circle Award, among others. HBO presented a film version in 2001. Donald Margulies, the Brooklyn born playwright who teaches writing at Yale University, wrote that Dinner with Friends like all his plays “reflect observations I'm having at that time in my life ... All around us, relationships are changing, marriages are breaking up. It's those notions of impermanence, the yearning for something else that I'm tapping into.” Margulies exposes the vulnerability adults experience as they and their relationships mature, the difficult choices they make or resist making, one’s sense of self within a relationship, and the trust and truths in friendships and marriage. Food plays a prominent role (or stand-in for relationships) in the play because of one couple’s profession, how food brings people together, the sensory memories it evokes and its inherent temporal nature. Dinner with Friends mixes all these ingredients into a delicious morsel of theatre that will delight your palate.

Gabe (Doug Krehbiel) and Karen (Leta Hall), a happily married couple who are international food writers, have been friends with Tom (Andrew S. Greenleaf) and Beth (Andrea Spitz Greenleaf), another married couple, for many years. In fact, it was Gabe and Karen who fixed up their friends in the first place. While having dinner at Gabe and Karen's home one night, Beth tearfully reveals that she is getting a divorce from Tom, who has been unfaithful. Tom, who had been away on business, finds out that Beth has told their friends about the looming divorce, and hastens to Gabe and Karen's home. Tom and Beth had planned to tell their friends about their breakup together, but Tom now believes that Beth has unfairly presented herself as the wronged party, and feels he must present his own side of the story. The play offers more revelations about the couples at different ages and stages of their lives, and the effects of Tom and Beth's breakup on Gabe and Karen, who first feel compelled to choose sides, and then begin to question the strength of their own seemingly tranquil marriage. Throughout, Margulies enchants audiences with his hilarious insights and powerful questions on the state of relationships that will intrigue and engage audiences.

The production team includes Jason Matthew Farrell (Assistant Director/Stage Manager), David Steigerwald (Sound Design), Andrew S. Greenleaf (Set Design), Don & Jessie Slater (Light Design), and Mary Dalto (Props/Set Dressing Design).

The Stage's 2008-2009 “Find Yourself” season continues with Wendy Wasserstein’s last play Third (Nov. 7-30), holiday show A Little Princess ( Dec. 12-21), Shaw’s satire Arms and the Man (Jan. 9-Feb. 1), drama of 1950’s McCarthy era A Bad Friend (Feb. 20-Mar. 15), provocative expose on the 10th anniversary of the school massacre columbinus (Apr. 3-26), comic romp As Bees in Honey Drown (May 15-Jun. 7), and classic Agatha Christie suspense The Mousetrap (Jun. 26-July 26).

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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All programs at Silver Spring Stage are made possible by support from the Arts and Humanities Council of Montgomery County, the Maryland State Arts Council and the Combined Federal Campaign.
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