Two Mile Hollow by Leah Nanako Winkler Playbill

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Chair, Professor

Department Faculty

Michelle Bach-Coulibaly

Senior Lecturer

Constance Crawford Adjunct Lecturer

Sarah dAngelo Assistant Professor, DUS

Lisa D’Amour Visiting Assistant Professor, Interim Head of Playwriting

J Dellecave Assistant Professor of the Practice

Nancy Dunbar Senior Lecturer Emerita

John Emigh Professor Emeritus

Becky Gibel Adjunct Lecturer

Spencer Golub Professor Emeritus

Renee Surprenant Fitzgerald Lecturer

Leon Hilton Assistant Professor

Avery Willis Hoffman Professor of the Practice

Julia Jarcho Associate Professor, Head of Playwriting

Melissa Kievman Artistic Producer of Writing is Live Festival, Adjunct Lecturer

Lowry Marshall Professor Emerita

Kym Moore Professor

Iván Ramos Assistant Professor

Stacey Karen Robinson Adjunct Lecturer

Patricia Seto-Weiss Assistant Professor of the Practice

Sydney Skybetter Senior Lecturer

Deborah Salem Smith Adjunct Lecturer

Julie Adams Strandberg Distinguished Senior Lecturer Emerita

Barbara Tannenbaum Distinguished Senior Lecturer

Elmo Terry-Morgan Associate Professor

Paula Vogel Professor Emerita

Richard Waterhouse Adjunct Lecturer

Patricia Ybarra Professor, DGS

Department Staff

Jo Bynum Student Affairs Manager

Ron Cesario Costume Shop Manager, Lecturer

Alexander Eizenberg Sound Designer, Audio-& Video Engineer

Alex Haynes John Street Studio Technical Director, Lecturer

Timothy Hett Technical Director, Lighting Designer, Lecturer

Alex Nurkin Academic Events and Facilities Manager

Max Ramirez Associate Technical Director

Chris Redihan Academic Department Manager

Barbara Reo Production Director, Stage Manager, Lecturer Fran Romasco Costume Shop Coordinator

Brianne Shaw Communications and Audience Services Manager

Laura Stokes Performing Arts Librarian, University Library

Brown/Trinity Program Faculty

Shura Baryshnikov

Head of Movement, DGS, Assistant Professor of the Practice

Angela Brazil Associate Professor of the Practice, Director of MFA Programs

Rachel Christopher Assistant Professor of the Practice

Grant Chapman Adjunct Lecturer, Voice & Speech

Curt Columbus Artistic Director of Trinity Rep, Professor of the Practice

Brian Mertes

Head of Directing, Professor of the Practice, Sophia Skiles Head of Acting, Associate Professor of the Practice

Brown/ Trinity Program Staff

Jeremy Chiang

Technical Director

Michael Cline Technical Supervisor

Anne Harrigan Production Manager

Sammi Haskell Program Coordinator

Jill Jann MFA Academic Coordinator

Chair
Jayna Brown

The Brown University Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies’ 2022-2023 production season is generously supported by the Kathryn and Gilbert Miller Theatre Arts Endowment, the Ben Brown Memorial Fund, the Irene Lewisohn and Alice Lewisohn Crowley Endowment, the Julie Adams Strandberg Fund for Dance at Brown, the Sue E. Perlmutter Fund for Dance, the New Plays Festival Endowment,and a bequest from the estate of TAPS Emeritus Professor James O. Barnhill.

Scenic Designer RENÉE SURPRENANT FITZGERALD Lighting Designer AUTUMN QIU '25 Properties Designer MERI MADDEN Intimacy/Movement Choreographer JACKIE DAVIS Costume Designer CHRISTINE MOK '13 PhD Sound Designer ALEX EIZENBERG Composer/Music Director GUNNAR MANCHESTER '22 MFA Fight Director MAXIME HENDRIKSE LIU '23 Stage Manager TYLER ZICKMUND '22.5
November 3 - 13, 2022
Brown University Theatre Arts & Performance Studies' Sock & Buskin present

Cast

Run Crew

Donovan Homsey '26, Xuanjie Huang '26, Thomas Madrid '26, Arnav Singhal '26, Lottie Doughty '26

Brian Mertes, Melissa Kievman, Trinity Repertory Company Sophia Skiles, Connie Crawford, Brown Arts Institute

Special Thanks
(in alphabetical order)
CHRISTOPHER DONNELLY...................Cameron Curney '24 BLYTHE DONNELLY...........................................Mia Lane '24 CHARLOTTE..................................................Angela Qian '24 JOSHUA DONNELLY............................Sanyu Rajakumar '24 MARY DONNELLY........................................Shannon Ryu '23
Production Staff Production Director............................................Barbara Reo Resident Designer/Scenic Artist............................................ Renée Surprenant Fitzgerald Communications Manager.............................Brianne Shaw Assistant Sound Designer.........................Jemima Alabi '24 Vocal Coach............................................Rachel Christopher Poster Model............................................Chetan Shukla '24 Assistant Stage Managers......................Mahnoor Elahi '26 Emma Gallant '24, Marlie Kahan '25, Sky McAllister '24, Sydney Meza '26, Calvin Ware '26, Lena Wu '26 Sock & Buskin Executive Producers...Navaiya Williams '25 Hailey Young '23 Photographer................................................Erin X Smithers Content Warning This play contains sensitive content including: • Racism • Nonconsensual kissing • Parental emotional abuse • Mentions of substance overdose • Fatphobia • Misogyny • Sexism • Incest • Masturbation • Mentions of suicide

Directors Note

Leah Nanako Winkler's Two Mile Hollow is, on the one hand, a wild parody of the type of play often revered in the American canon—realistic plays about rich white people, with rich white problems, indulging their rich white pain over the course of a single night. But the white people in Two Mile Hollow are not played by white actors; the play's aggressive, self-aware comedy works only when embodied by actors of color. And this is no small ask to make. Two Mile Hollow covers an impressive range of theatrical genres, demanding a particular irreverence and precision from its performers to shape and land its unpredictable tonal shifts. What results, though, is something rarely seen on the American stage: carte blanche for actors of color to just have fun.

On the other hand, there is Charlotte—the play's one character of color. Winkler expressly requires the actor playing Charlotte to be Asian American, which raises several complex questions regarding Charlotte's positionality: What does survival look like for the Asian American woman in predominantly white institutions? How does the Asian American body benefit from a proximity to whiteness? Above all, what is it to take space and make space in a world that was never built for you? In interrogating these questions, Charlotte's storyline holds the key to transforming Two Mile Hollow from outrageous parody to incisive satire.

Seeing Two Mile Hollow produced as part of the Sock & Buskin season has brought me particular joy. As an undergraduate, I had very limited opportunities to get involved with campus theatre, which is why I am so moved now to witness five undergraduates of color tackle challenging, unapologetic roles written with their identities in mind. Thank you for joining us to share in the work of these young artists—the next generation of the American theatre.

About The Playwright

Leah Nanako Winkler is an award-winning playwright and TV Writer from Kamakura, Japan and Lexington Kentucky. Her plays include God Said This (Winner: 2018 Yale Drama Series, World Premiere: Humana Festival, Off Broadway: Primary Stages), Two Mile Hollow (Kilroys List, Simultaneous world premiere w/ Artists At Play in La, Mixed Blood/Theater Mu in Minneapolis, First Floor Theater in Chicago and Ferocious Lotus in SF), Kentucky (Kilroys List/ World premiere: Ensemble Studio Theater/ Page 73.) Linus and Murray (EST/Marathon 2017) , Double Suicide at Ueno Park (Est/Marthon 2014) Hot Asian Doctor Husband (Theater Mu/Mixed Blood) and Nevada-Tan (Audible commission). Accolades and fellowships: Mark O’Donnell Prize from The Actors Fund and Playwrights Horizons, Audible’s Emerging Playwrights Fund, Jerome New York Fellow at the Lark, 2020 Steinberg Playwright Award and Peabody.

Please take a moment to note the fire exits. There is an exit at each corner of the theatre. Use of recording devices, cameras, and cell phones is not permitted. As a courtesy to patrons and performers, please silence all electronic devices. The video taping or other video or audio recording of this production by any individual not expressly directed to do so by Brown University is strictly prohibited. All or portions of Brown University events and their participants may be captured by photography or video and used for news or Brown promotional purposes.

Sock & Buskin

Sock & Buskin (S&B) is the board that selects and produces the mainstage theatre season for the Brown University Theatre. It is a partnership between undergraduate students, faculty, and staff.

Then...

Founded in 1901 by Thomas Crosby, a professor in the Brown University Department of English, Sock & Buskin has maintained an unbroken string of performance seasons since being established.

Originally founded as an all-male organization, Sock & Buskin became a co-educational group in 1927 when it merged with an all-female theatre troupe from nearby Pembroke College.

Now...

Sock & Buskin is comprised of 13 students and a number of faculty and staff members. The student board meets twice a week during the academic year. In addition to conducting production business, the board discusses 1-3 plays or projects each week for consideration in the following year’s season.

Discussions are open to the public. Discussion notes for each play, as well as a meeting and reading schedule (and lots more information) can be found at sockandbuskin. org.

Sock & Buskin Board Members

Hailey Young '23, Josie Miller '24, Madeleine Adriance ' 23.5, Ari Cleveland '25, Navaiya Williams '25, Faith Hardy '23, Ellie Leibner '24, Teniayo-Ola Macaulay '25, Tabitha Grandolfo '25, Ryan Jones '24, Lydia Riess '24, Marielle Buxbaum '24

Department Staff

PRODUCTION DIRECTOR: Barbara Reo

TECHNICAL DIRECTOR/ LIGHTING DESIGNER: Tim Hett

ASSOCIATE TECHNICAL DIRECTOR: Max Ramirez

SOUND DESIGNER / ENGINEER / A/V COORDINATOR: Alex Eizenberg

ASSISTANT PRODUCTION MANAGER: Jessie Jing '22

JOHN STREET STUDIO TECHNICAL DIRECTOR: Alex Haynes

JOHN STREET STUDIO ASSISTANTS: Noah Medina '23.5 Josephine Miller '24, Cleo Petty '23.5, Navaiya Williams '25

COSTUME SHOP MANAGER: Ron Cesario

COSTUME SHOP COORDINATOR: Fran Romasco

COSTUME SHOP ASSISTANTS: Abigail Bachenberg '23 Evangeline Bilger '23, SeungHee Lee '23, Ines Sawiris '24 Kayla Walford '26, Charlotte Knutsen '26

DEPARTMENT MANAGER: Chris Redihan STUDENT AFFAIRS MANAGER: Jo Bynum

EVENTS AND FACILITIES MANAGER: Alex Nurkin

CUSTODIAN: Achim C Tah COMMUNICATIONS & AUDIENCE SERVICES MANAGER: Brianne Shaw

MARKETING ASSISTANT: Aizhaneya Carter '23 MFA

FRONT OF HOUSE AND ASSISTANTS: Alex Pelsor '24, Owen Ryan '23, Jania Vandevoorde '25

James O. Barnhill ,Professor Emeritus

James Orris Barnhill, born on May 23, 1922 and died October 16, 2021. Born in Sumner, Mississippi, a son of the late Reverend James A. and Louise (Sullivan) Barnhill, and brother of the late Joseph M. Barnhill. He was a Providence resident for over 60 years. He was educated at Mississippi College, Yale University (B.A. 1947), and New York University (M.A. 1949) before returning to Yale for School of Drama (M.F.A. 1954). He taught for one year at Dubuque University in Iowa and started as an Instructor at Brown University in Providence in 1954, where he became an Assistant Professor of English in 1958 and Professor in 1975. He was appointed Professor of Theater Arts in 1978 and was one of the founding members of Brown’s Theatre, Speech, and Dance Depart ment, serving as its first Chairperson and facilitating the founding of the Rites and Reason Theatre of the Africana Studies Department. He remained active with the Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies after his retirement in 1987.

He was instrumental in setting up Brown’s joint programs with Tougaloo College in Jackson, MS and taught there in 1979-1980 and 1984-1985. He was also a Fulbright Professor of English at Calicut University, Baroda, Gujarat, India in 1983-84, taught at RI School of Design 1986-1994, and taught at the University of the Punjab in Lahore, Pakistan from 1995 to 1997.

During WWII, he was in the US Navy in the Pacific Theatre and was the Executive Officer of a landing craft participating in the Okinawa campaign and in the Occupation of Japan.

In Providence, he was one of the founders of Trinity Square Repertory Theatre, working for 3 seasons with the company and serving in a variety of positions, including stage manager and actor. During his time at Brown, he directed over 200 plays and at RISD he started a cabaret with Visiting Professor Szymon Bojko and Agnieszka Taborska from Poland.

At Brown, Barnhill had many students who became well-known actors and theatre practitioners, including James Naughton, Kate Burton, Aunjanue Ellis, Jobeth Williams, Laura Linney, John Lee Beatty, Richard Foreman, and many others.

Don B. Wilmeth, Professor Emeritus Don B. Wilmeth (Ph.D., U. of Illinois, 1964), born in Houston, Texas, in 1939, was an Asa Messer Professor Emeritus and Emeritus Professor of Theatre and of English, Brown University, retiring in 2003 after thirty-six years there, sixteen as chair of the theatre department. He was the author, editor, coeditor, or series editor of over four dozen books, including the award-winning three-volume Cambridge History of American Theatre, which has been issued in a paperback edition. In 2007 he completed a new edition of the Cambridge Guide to American Theatre.In addition to Brown, he taught at Smith College, Tufts University, and Trinity University (Texas), and was a distinguished speaker at various universities and profes sional meetings, including the Universities of Indiana, Washington, and Wisconsin, and the Mid-American Theatre Conference where he served as respondent. He is considered a pioneer in the serious study of American popular entertainment and an established authority on the history of American theatre and drama. A former president of the American Soci ety for Theatre Research and dean emeritus of the College of Fellows of the American Theatre, Don Wilmeth served as vice president of the International Shaw Society, hosting an international Bernard Shaw conference at Brown, June 2006. He was the recipient of career and research recognitions from the New England Theatre Conference, the Association for Theatre in Higher Education, the Society for Theatre Research (UK), the American Society for Theatre Research, and the Theatre Library Associa tion. ATHE also honored him for his work as an editor. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Mr. Wilmeth was an actor and director, and an ardent collector of theatre and entertainment ephem era and memorabilia, as well as books on the history of the theatre (over 5,000). He was a proud member of the local (Keene) Hourglass Readers. He mounted exhibits drawn from his collection at Franklin Pierce University as well as one at the Cheshire County (NH) Historical Society. During the Brown University commencement in 2008 he received the William Williams Award, the most presti gious honor given by the Brown University Library.

In Memoriam:

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