November 7 - 30, 2008
Director: Laurie Freed
Producer: Rich Ley
Evening Performances:
Nov. 7, 8, 14, 15, 21, 22, 28 and 29 at 8
Sunday Matinees:
Nov. 16 and 30 at 2

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Silver Spring Stage presents the humorous and
thought-provoking Third, by Wendy Wasserstein,
directed by Laurie Freed and produced by Richard Ley, where a feminist
college professor accuses a jock student of plagiarism, deals with
stereotypes and politics, to search for identity. Third
will perform weekends November 7 to November 30.
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 November 16
and November 30 at 2:00 PM. Tickets can be purchased at www.ssstage.org.
Information is also available by calling (301) 593-6036.
Wendy Wasserstein, the Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winning playwright,
culminated a lifetime of writing in her last play Third.
She opened doors to theatre audiences to see woman from a woman's
perspective -- strong and vulnerable, conscientious and flawed,
uncommon and universal -- seeking to make their imprint in the world.
From the college students embarking on life in Uncommon Women
and Others through her most famous heroine Heidi in The
Heidi Chronicles, the charismatic sisters of The Sisters
Rosensweig to Laurie from Third who learns
that the one certainty in life is uncertainty, she wrote vividly
for a generation of women. Her plays, filled with genuine humor
and believable characters, were more than just entertaining, she
imbued them with politics and relevancy. She was the first woman
playwright to win a Tony Award for Best Play (The Heidi Chronicles).
In Third, she reflects our current political scene
of Blue States and Red States. Yet, as in all her writing, she looks
beyond simple categorizations to the people within them. She wrote,
"I started thinking about politics of the theatre, which often
involves an attack on the right wing. And I thought it would be
interesting to look inward, to look at liberals, and to say that
whatever state we're in, we're not in this state because there are
bad guys and we're the good guys. One thing is that it's not clear
who are the good guys and who are the bad guys." Shortly after
the opening of Third in 2005, Wasserstein lost
her battle with Lymphoma and died at the age of 55. Her last heroine
Laurie and the characters that surround her are a fitting tribute
to a graceful and gracious life. They both dare us to confront the
easy way and make our lives more complex and richer for our pursuits.
Audiences will treasure this uncommon woman and play.
Laurie Jameson (Michelle Trout) is a 50-something college professor
of English literature with a history of political activism, who
adds feminist interpretation to classic works. At home she takes
care of her ailing father Jack (Bill Brannigan), which is eased
by her visits from her college student daughter Emily (Dani Nolan).
Her life is then unhinged by encountering a smart male student Woodson
Bull III (Ryan Manning), known as "Third". He represents
all she has spent a life time challenging, a power structure supported,
"red state" man. Yet, when he turns in a well-written,
thoughtful piece on "King Lear", she is convinced he plagiarized
the paper. Also, unsettling her life is her best friend Nancy (Amy
Purves) who is fighting cancer. She turns to her best friend Nancy
for support; Nancy doesn't give her the easy out and makes her face
her action. Through wit-laced dialogue and honest soul searching,
Wasserstein in Third gives us another indelible
portrait of a modern woman facing fears, acknowledging when wrong,
and shaping her own identity -- experiences and emotions we can
all relate.
The production team includes Rachel M. Loose (Stage Manager), Andrew
S. Greenleaf (Set Design), Don Slater (Light Design), Kevin Garrett
(Sound Design), Brandon Mitchell (Costume Design) and Nancy Eynon
Lark (Props/Set Dressing Design).
The Stage's 2008-2009 "Find Yourself" season continues
with 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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