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SEASON AT A GLANCE

Portland Center Stage
128 Northwest 11th Avenue
Portland, OR 97209
2011-2012 Season's Playbills
Previous Season's Playbills
Sunset Boulevard
An Illiad
A Christmas Story
Santaland Diaries
The Imaginary Invalid
Futura
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Opus
The Real Americans
September 6 – November 6, 2011(Ellyn Bye Studio)
circulation: 15,000 Ad due: 8/23
"Imagine a society with no beer," a veteran back from Iraq tells Dan Hoyle in Wisconsin. "I'd start blowing up stuff too." Frequently described as an actor/journalist, Dan Hoyle has focused his form of "theater journalism" in this new piece on a months-long road trip to some of the not-on-the-coasts parts of the U.S. The idea, he says, was to get outside the "latte liberal bubble," find out what people in rural America are thinking and savor some small-town cafe pie. Beneath the masterful humor that Hoyle brings to the piece—as he takes on the personas of the many people he encountered—a rich texture of human connections asserts itself. It surfaces in stories of unemployment and in the frenetic form of a Dominican from New York he meets on the road; it gathers heart-wrenching impact in a Vietnam vet's reflections on the kids coming back from Iraq and one of his San Francisco friends' concern for her sister in Alabama. The San Francisco Chronicle wrote that The Real Americans should be seen in and outside every liberal bubble in this country, and that Hoyle “displays a gift for mime and vocal mimicry that recalls solo artists John Leguizamo, Sarah Jones or Lily Tomlin.”
Oklahoma
September 20 To October 30, 2011 (Main Stage)
circulation: 20,000 Ad due: 9/8
"Things are changing. The country is changing. Gotta change with it." Those words express familiar sentiments often heard these days, but are spoken in this case not by a politician of 2010, but by Curly, the cowboy who takes the notion of change and wrestles it to the ground in Oklahoma! Part charming love story, part stirring retelling of American history, and many parts beloved songs, stunning dance, and often darkly shaded humor, Oklahoma is the show that made its own history. This first collaboration by what became the legendary team of Rodgers and Hammerstein was a milestone in the development of American musical theater for its fusion of song, story and dance. It also created box office history, setting new records in its day, and is an enduring hit today, with new productions in New York and Washington DC once again breaking records in recent history.
A Christmas Story
November 22 to December 24, 2010 (Main Stage)
circulation: 20,000 Ad due: 11/9
“Wacky and wistful, and fresh as a fir.” – San Jose Mercury News The only thing little Ralph Parker hopes to find under the tree is a Daisy Brand Red Ryder BB rifle. He doesn’t simply want it - he’s consumed with an aching desire for it. Looming in the way, however, are alleyway bullies, major awards, freezing flagpoles, unsympathetic authorities and a certain horrifying Macy’s Santa. Based upon the classic motion picture, this play is a holiday treat everyone can enjoy—that is, until someone shoots their eye out.
The Santaland Diaries
by David Sedaris
November 30, 2010 to January 2, 2011
(Ellyn Bye Studio)
circulation: 10,000 Ad due: 11/16
Based on the true chronicles of David Sedaris’ experience as Crumpet the Elf in Macy’s Santaland display, this cult classic riffs on a few of Sedaris’ truly odd encounters with his fellow man during the height of the holiday crunch. NPR humorist and best-selling author of When You Are Engulfed in Flames, Me Talk Pretty One Day and Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, David Sedaris has become one of America’s pre-eminent humor writers.
World premiere! The North Plan
January 10 – February 5, 2012 (Main Stage)
circulation: 15,000 Ad due: 12/22
After a ruthless cabal seizes power in Washington, Carlton Berg, a bureaucrat for the State Department, runs off with the new regime’s top secret Enemies List. Unfortunately for Carlton, the chase has come to an end in a police station in the Ozark town of Lodus. With a pair of DHS agents on the way, Carlton’s last chance is in the people around him: an unsympathetic police chief, an ambivalent administrative assistant, and fellow prisoner Tanya Shepke, motor-mouthed recidivist and alcohol enthusiast, who appears to have an attention-deficit disorder and thinks Skynyrd should be on the new money. Let the revolution begin. The North Plan was an audience favorite at JAW 2009.
World premiere! Shakespeare’s
Amazing Cymbeline
January 31 – April 8, 2012 (Ellyn Bye Studio)
circulation: 15,000 Ad due: 1/19
Based on legends about early Celtic kings, Cymbeline is one of Shakespeare’s most fantastical creations—familiar Shakespearean themes of jealousy and innocence wronged are joined with divine intervention from the gods. A lovely princess, an evil queen, a misguided king and a thoroughly rotten clown inhabit this fairy tale-like story of life, and love, renewed. One of Shakespeare’s charming romances, this production of Cymbeline marks two firsts—our first production of the Bard in the Ellyn Bye Studio, and the first production of this fresh adaptation (calling for five actors and a pianist) by Artistic Director Chris Coleman.
Red
February 21 – March 18, 2012 (Main Stage)
circulation: 15,0300 Ad due: 2/1
An intense bio-drama of the renowned modern artist (and Oregon-raised) Mark Rothko, Red earned critical laurels in its New York run last season. Set in the 1950s, when Rothko was commissioned to create a series of large pieces of art for the new Four Seasons Restaurant, Red tackles big questions about art—what it takes to create it, and where it belongs in our world. But perhaps more importantly, the play invites us to experience a legendary artist through the lens of the assistant brought on to help him with a project Rothko is not so sure he can accept completing. The New York Times described it as “a portrait of an angry and brilliant mind that asks you to feel the shape and texture of thoughts…as much as any stage work I can think of, Red captures the dynamic relationship between an artist and his creations.” PCS and the Portland Art Museum are working together to celebrate Rothko during the run of this production.
World premiere! Anna Karenina
April 3 – 29, 2012 (Main Stage)
circulation: 15,000 Ad due: 3/22
Tolstoy’s classic story of love and marriage in Imperial Russia comes to our Main Stage in a new adaptation by Kevin McKeon, adaptor of Snow Falling on Cedars. This tragic love story has been called by some the greatest novel ever written—it certainly has one of the most famous first lines: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” When Anna’s husband refuses to release her from their marriage to pursue her love for Count Vronsky, the wheels are set in motion for the ultimate sacrifice. Anna Karenina isn't concerned with observing the minutiae of social etiquette, like Jane Austen, nor with righting social injustices, like Dickens. It's about uncontrollable passions, and emotional and sexual betrayal, set against one of the most romantic periods of world history.
Black Pearl Sings!
April 24 – June 17, 2012 (Ellyn Bye Studio)
circulation: 20,000 Ad due: 4/12
In 1935 Texas, Susannah, an academic and song collector for the Library of Congress, visits a high-security prison where she meets Pearl, an African-American woman imprisoned for murder who longs to leave prison and find her lost daughter. Hoping to record the treasure trove of spirituals and folk songs that only Pearl knows—and make her reputation on the discoveries—Susannah bargains for Pearl’s parole and arranges for several public performances. The two women soon find themselves walking a delicate line between exposure and exploitation. Featuring beautiful a cappella renditions of little-known African-American folk songs, Black Pearl Sings! chronicles a powerful story about being a woman in a man’s world, being black in a white world, and fighting for one’s soul in a world where anyone can be a commodity.
World premiere! Universal Mind
May 22 – June 24, 2012 (Main Stage)
circulation: 15,000 Ad due: 5/9
A world premiere “live theatrical event” showcasing two of the most brilliant and controversial artists of the second half of the 20th century. Poet Ginsburg’s work was a source of inspiration to Jim Morrison, storied lead singer of The Doors. This theatrical representation of how the incendiary voice of the Beats in the 1950s influenced the music of the man who invited us to light my fire in the 1960s promises to take us all on a trip to one of the most unbounded and mind-expanding times in our culture’s history. Adding to the excitement of the artistic team for this new work – Debra Brown, who has been the principal choreographer for Cirque du Soleil since 1987.