GLOUCESTER STAGE PRESENTS SAM SHEPARD’S “TRUE WEST!”

Robert Walsh, Artistic Director   Jeff Zinn, Managing Director

SAM SHEPARD’S

 

MODERN AMERICAN CLASSIC

 

TRUE WEST

 

OPENS AT GLOUCESTER STAGE

 

Gloucester Stage Company continues its 39th season of professional theater with Sam Shepard’s modern American classic, True West from August 17 through September 8 at Gloucester Stage Company, 267 East Main Street, Gloucester, MA. Directed by Joe Short, True West explores the explosive conflict between two brothers: Austin, the successful family man; and Lee, the nomadic drifter and petty thief. Set in the kitchen of their mother’s home 40 miles east of Los Angeles, these sons of a desert-dwelling alcoholic and a suburban wanderer clash over a film script. Austin, the achiever, is working on a screenplay he has sold to producer Sal Kimmer when his brother Lee drops in. Lee pitches his own idea for a movie to Kimmer, who then wants Austin to junk his bleak, modern love story and write Lee’s trashy Western tale. The conflict between the brothers creates a heated situation in which their roles as successful family man and nomadic drifter are somehow reversed, and each man finds himself admitting that he had somehow always wished he were in the other’s shoes. The cast features GSC veterans Nael Nacer as Lee; Mark Cohen as film producer Sal Kimmer and Marya Lowry as Mom and GSC newcomer Alexander Platt as Austin.

 

True West had its world premiere on July 10, 1980 at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco, where Mr. Shepard was the resident playwright. The world premiere was directed by Robert Woodruff and featured Peter Coyote (Austin) and Jim Haynie (Lee). On December 23, 1980, it opened at Joseph Papp’s Public Theater in New York City, starring Tommy Lee Jones (Austin) and Peter Boyle (Lee). In 1982, it was revived at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago featuring then-unknown actors Gary Sinise (who also directed the production) and John Malkovich. The Steppenwolf production transferred to the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York where it enjoyed a run of 762 performances. After Sinise and Malkovich left the production, the leads roles were played by a variety of well-known actors including Jim Belushi, Erik Estrada, Gary Cole, Dennis Quaid and Randy Quaid. On March 2, 2000, a Broadway revival of True West opened at the Circle on the Square Theatre featuring Philip Seymour Hoffman and John C. Reilly, who alternated playing the lead roles. This critically acclaimed production earned Tony Award nominations for best actor (for both Hoffman and Reilly), best director, and best play.

 

American author, actor, director, and playwright Sam Shepard published over forty plays in his lifetime. Winner of eleven Obie awards (the most received by any writer or director), and of the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for Buried Child, Sam Shepard ranks as one of America’s most celebrated dramatists.. Sam Shepard had his first New York plays, Cowboys and The Rock Garden, produced by Theatre Genesis in 1963. For several seasons, he worked with Off-Off-Broadway theatre groups including La MaMa and Caffe Cino. Eleven of his plays have won Obie Awards including Chicago and Icarus’s Mother (1965); Red Cross and La Turista (1966); Forensic and the Navigators and Melodrama Play  (1967); The Tooth Of Crime (1972); Action (1974); and Curse of the Starving Class (1976). Mr. Shepard was awarded a Pulitzer Prize as well as an Obie Award for his play Buried Child (1979). Fool for Love (1982) received the Obie for Best Play as well as for Direction. A Lie of the Mind (1985) won the 1986 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award and the 1986 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding New Play. A revival of Buried Child under the direction of Gary Sinise opened on Broadway in April 1996 and was nominated for a Tony Award. Kicking A Dead Horse(2007) and Ages of the Moon (2009) both received their world premieres at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. Kicking A Dead Horse transferred to The Public Theater in New York and to the Almeida Theatre in London, and Ages of the Moon received its US premiere at Atlantic Theater Company. Mr. Shepard wrote the screenplays for Zabriskie Point; Wim Wenders’ Paris, Texas; and Robert Altman’s Fool for Love, a film version of his play of the same title. As an actor he has appeared in the films Days of Heaven, Resurrection, Raggedy Man, The Right Stuff, Frances, Country, Fool for Love, Crimes of the Heart, Baby Boom, Steel Magnolias, Bright Angel, Defenseless, Voyager, Thunderheart, The Pelican Brief, Safe Passage and Hamlet. In 1986, Mr. Shepard was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1992, he received the Gold Medal for Drama from the Academy, and in 1994, he was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame. After his death in 2017 Mr. Shepard’s plays have remained a prominent part of the theater community.

Nael Nacer returns to GSC to play Lee after performing in 2017’s Bank Job and 2015’s The Flick for which he received the IRNE Award for Best Actor. New England area credits include: A Doll’s HouseBedroom FarceCome Back, Little ShebaAwake and Sing!Our Town and The Seagull with the Huntington Theatre Company; Constellations, Distracted, Sila with Central Square Theater; Calendar Girls at Greater Boston Theatre Company; 45 Plays for 45 PresidentsIt’s a Wonderful Life: a Live Radio Play at Merrimack Repertory Theatre; Shear Madness at Charles Playhouse; Mr. Burns, a Post-ElectricPlayIntimate Apparel for which he received Elliot Norton Award for Best Actor, The Temperamentals, and Animal Crackers at Lyric Stage Company;  A Number, Pattern of LifeLungsThe Kite Runner with New Repertory Theatre; A Future Perfect and Tribes at SpeakEasy Stage Company;  Rhinoceros,Windowmen and Gary at Boston Playwrights’ Theatre;  The Aliens, Love Person, 1001 and The Last Days of Judas Iscariot with Company One. His next project is the title role in Macbeth at Actors’ Shakespeare Project this October. Mr. Nacer is a monologue coach for My College Audition.

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