IRT Program: Oedipus

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IRTLIVE.COM | 317.635.5252
SHARE YOUR REVIEW & TAG US ON SOCIAL MEDIA @IRTLIVE! STAGE DOOR 2022-2023 SEASON by Sophocles Oedipus David Daniel adapted by ONEAMERICA MAINSTAGE FEBRUARY 22 – MARCH 18
Original artwork by Kyle Ragsdale

Community Engagement That’s Built to Last

Building a better future together

The spirit of giving is strong at OneAmerica®. A community leader since our inception, we proudly support organizations, like the Indiana Repertory Theatre, that make a difference. OneAmerica is pleased to have further extended our support of the IRT. Our community commitment focuses on strategically investing in education; workforce development; community safety, wellness and success; and community vibrancy.

© 2022 OneAmerica Financial Partners, Inc. All rights reserved. C-34420 08/04/22 Life Insurance | Retirement | Employee Benefits Visit OneAmerica.com to learn more about our involvement with local nonprofits.
• UV Offset Printing • Digital Printing • Mailing • Signs • Promo Products • Publishing • Packaging • Puzzles & Games • PRINTINGPARTNERS.NET • 317-635-2282 • QUOTE@PRINTINGPARTNERS.NET FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1989 Personal Service, Professional Solutions
As a legacy supporter of IRT, OneAmerica is proud our sponsorship ranks among the longest running in theatre nationwide. We celebrate IRT as champions of imagination, innovation and inspiration, and we sincerely hope you enjoy their 2022-2023 season. —Scott Davison Chairman, President and CEO OneAmerica,2022-2023seasonsponsor ONEAMERICA | 2022-2023 SEASON SPONSOR Behind every strong performance is a multidisciplinary team. Who do you have backstage? Our highly credentialed team includes specialists in tax, financial planning, investment analysis, divorce and other areas of financial management. 600 East 96th Street, Suite 130, Indianapolis, IN 46240 P: 317.663.5600 | TF: 877.663.5601 | F: 317.663.5610 Spectrum-mgmt.com A STANDING OVATION TO ARTISTIC EXPRESSION

OUR MISSION & VISION

MISSION

Rooted in the heart of Indiana, Indiana Repertory Theatre is committed to building a vital, vibrant, and informed community through the transformational power of live theatre. The Indiana Repertory Theatre produces inclusive, top-quality, professional theatre and community programming to engage, surprise, challenge, and entertain members of the whole community.

VISION

The Indiana Repertory Theatre will welcome the whole community, becoming a place of belonging for an ever-expanding audience of all ages and backgrounds seeking meaningful and enjoyable experiences. Using theatre as a springboard for both personal reflection and community discussion, our productions and programs will inspire our neighbors to learn about themselves and others. As the largest nonprofit theatre in the state of Indiana, IRT’s goal is to help make Indiana a dynamic home of cultural expression, economic vitality, and a diverse and engaged citizenry.

AS AN INSTITUTION, WE VALUE...

SUSTAINING A PROFESSIONAL, RESPECTFUL, INCLUSIVE, & CREATIVE ATMOSPHERE

• Producing diverse plays, we strive to provide insight and celebrate human relationships through the unique vision of the playwright.

• Employing professional artists of the highest quality, we nurture an environment that allows them to grow and thrive on our stages and in our communities.

• We foster a creative environment where arts, education, corporate, civic, and cultural organizations collaborate to benefit our community

BUILDING INCLUSION, DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND ACCESS (IDEA)

• Our community thrives when diverse voices and peoples gather to make, watch, and support theatre.

• It is our responsibility as a community resource to open our doors wide, welcoming all to our high-quality, relevant art.

• We acknowledge our history of privilege as a predominantly White institution as an initial and necessary step toward effectively supporting the dismantling of systems of oppression.

• To be an anti-racist organization we must seek knowledge and understanding to identify discriminatory practices and increase cultural awareness in collaboration with, and learning directly from, BIPOC, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Intersex (LGBTQI+), functionally diverse, and other historically excluded communities.

PRUDENT STEWARDSHIP OF OUR RESOURCES

• As a public-benefit organization, we focus on community service, artistic integrity, and creating a range of ticket prices that allow all segments of our community to attend.

• Fiscal responsibility and financial security fuel our institutional sustainability.

• To ensure institutional longevity, we continue to grow our endowment fund as a resource for future development.

Due to union agreements, photography, video, and audio recording are not permitted during the performance. The videotaping of productions is a violation of United States Copyright Law and an actionable Federal Offense.

5 3 CONTENTS 3........................................Mission & Values 4..........Land & Building Acknowledgment 5.........................................................Profile 7............................................................IDEA 8.................................................Leadership 12..........................................................Staff 14....................................Board of Directors 20....................................................Oedipus 30........................................IRT—The 2000s 34.....................Company Bios for Oedipus 46..........................................Donor Listing REVIEWS! FACEBOOK/TWITTER: @irtlive EMAIL: reviews@irtlive.com CONTACT US IRTLIVE.COM TICKET OFFICE: 317.635.5252 ADMIN OFFICES: 317.635.5277 140 W. Washington Street Indianapolis, IN 46204
POLICY
of the set without actors and with proper credit to the scenic and
PHOTO
Photography
lighting designers is permitted.

ACKNOWLEDGING THE LAND

Every community owes its existence and vitality to generations from around the world who contributed their hopes, dreams, and energy to making the history that led to this moment. Some were brought here or removed from here against their will, some were drawn to leave their distant homes in hope of a better life, and some have lived on this land for more generations than can be counted. Acknowledgment of the land which the IRT now occupies is critical to building mutual respect and connection across all barriers of heritage.

We want to acknowledge that what we now call Indiana is on the ancestral lands of many indigenous peoples including the Miami, Piankashaw, Wea, Potawatomi, Kickapoo, Delaware, and Shawnee. We pay respects to their elders past and present. Please take a moment to consider the many legacies of displacement, migration, violence, and settlement that bring us together here today.

This land acknowledgment was created in collaboration with Scott Shoemaker, PhD (Miami Tribe of Oklahoma). Portions of this acknowledgment come from the U.S. Department of Arts and Culture (usdac.us).

ACKNOWLEDGING OUR BUILDING’S HISTORY

The historic Indiana Theatre was built in 1927, a time when the shameful practice of racial segregation was the standard in movie theatres and public buildings across the United States. The Indiana Theatre building was originally segregated and at some point in its history this practice ceased. Many Indiana residents and their families’ heritage stories recall being treated as less than equal citizens in this building, with some even being barred from entering. We cannot erase this history.

We honor and respect all those who have faced discrimination and harm in this building. We strive every day to make the IRT a place that welcomes all people.

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The Indiana Repertory Theatre moved to its current site on Washington Street in 1980, renovating and reopening a building that had been shuttered for nearly a decade.

INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE PROFILE

HISTORY

The Indiana Repertory Theatre was founded in 1972 by Ben Mordecai, Greg Poggi, and Ed Stern. Since then, it has grown into one of the leading regional theatres in the country, as well as one of the top-flight cultural institutions in the city and state. In 1991 Indiana’s General Assembly designated the IRT as “Theatre Laureate” of the state of Indiana. The IRT’s national reputation has been confirmed by prestigious grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Lila Wallace–Reader’s Digest Fund, the Theatre Communications Group–Pew Charitable Trusts, the Shubert Foundation, and the Kresge Foundation, and by a Joyce Award from the Joyce Foundation.

The IRT remains the largest fully professional resident not-for-profit theatre in the state, providing 100,000 live professional theatre experiences for its audience in a typical season. The Theatre regularly serves thousands of students from more than half of Indiana’s 92 counties, making the IRT one of the most youth-oriented professional theatres in the country. A staff of year-round employees creates seven productions exclusively for Indiana audiences. Actors, directors, and designers are members of professional stage unions.

The IRT’s history has been enacted in two historic downtown theatres. The Athenaeum Turners Building housed the company’s first eight seasons. Since 1980 the IRT has occupied the 1927 Indiana Theatre, which was renovated to contain three performance spaces (OneAmerica Stage, Upperstage, and Cabaret) and work spaces, reviving this historic downtown entertainment site.

To keep ticket prices and services affordable for the entire community, the IRT operates as a not-for-profit organization, deriving more than 50% of its operating income from contributions. The theatre is generously supported by foundations, corporations, and individuals, an investment which recognizes the IRT’s mission-based commitment to serving Central Indiana with top-quality theatrical fare

PROGRAMS

The OneAmerica Season includes six productions from classical to contemporary, including the INclusion Series.

Young Playwrights in Process The IRT offers Young Playwrights in Process (YPiP), a playwriting contest and workshop for Indiana middle and high school students.

Community Gathering Place Located in a beautiful historic landmark, the IRT offers a wide variety of unique and adaptable spaces for family, business, and community gatherings of all types. Please email Jacob Lang, House Manager, at jlang@irtlive.comor call 317.916.4872 for more information.

Opportunities The IRT depends on the generous donation of time and energy by volunteer ushers; please email Jacob Lang, House Manager, at jlang@irtlive.comor call 317.916.4872 to learn how you can become involved.

Meet the Artists Regularly scheduled pre-show chats and post-show discussions offer audiences unique insights into each production.

Student Matinees The IRT continues a long-time commitment to student audiences with live school-day student matinee performances of all IRT productions. These performances are augmented with educational activities and curriculum support materials.

Educational Programs Auxiliary services offered include visiting artists in the classroom, study guides, pre- and post-show discussions, and guided tours of the IRT’s facilities.

Classes From creative dramatics to audition workshops to Shakespeare seminars, the IRT offers a wide array of personal learning opportunities for all ages, including our Summer Youth Workshops. Call 317.916.4842 for further information.

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EQUITY IS JUSTICE. EQUITY IS ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY. EQUITY BENEFITS US ALL. 317.634.2423 CICF.org BECOME AN EQUITY PARTNER Learn more at CICF.org/equity JOIN THE MOVEMENT TO BUILD A STRONGER COMMUNITY FOR ALL

INCLUSION, DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND ACCESS (IDEA)

INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE: WELCOMING THE WHOLE COMMUNITY

We strive to celebrate and serve the diverse people and cultures that make up our whole community. The IRT is committed to creating and maintaining an antiracist theatre that is inclusive, safe, respectful, and accessible.

Whether you have been coming for years or are here for the first time—welcome to your Theatre!

VALUES

• Our community thrives when diverse voices and peoples gather to make, watch, and support theatre.

• It is our responsibility as a community resource to open our doors wide, welcoming all to our high-quality, relevant art.

• We must acknowledge our history of privilege as a Predominantly White Institution in order to effectively support dismantling systems of oppression.

• In order to be an antiracist and inclusive organization we must seek knowledge and understanding to identify discriminatory practices and increase cultural awareness in collaboration with, and learning directly from, BIPOC, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Intersex (LGBTQI+), functionally diverse, and other historically excluded communities.

COMMITMENTS

• We will represent and engage the diverse people, cultures, and communities of central Indiana.

• We will employ more people of color, with a goal of 40% of all new hires being BIPOC, and foster an inclusive culture of artists, staff, board, and vendors.

• We will continue and deepen our Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access (IDEA) training for all board and staff.

• We will be accessible to all audiences inviting those who have been unheard or unseen in the past, including functionally diverse people, BIPOC, LGBTQI+, and under-resourced communities.

If you would like to read more about our Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access (IDEA) work, go to irtlive.com/about/idea.

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KatieBradley,AndrewMay,andGavinLaweranceintheIRT’s2020productionofAgathaChristie’s Murder on the Orient Express.PhotobyZachRosing.

LEADERSHIP: JANET ALLEN

Creating world-class professional theatre for Central Indiana audiences of all ages has remained a career-long passion for Janet Allen. After nearly 40 years of service, Janet will retire at the end of this, IRT’s 50th anniversary season, with gratitude for all the artists, audiences, administrators, and artisans who have delighted her over the years.

During Janet’s tenure, the IRT has significantly diversified its services to both adults and children, and solidified its reputation as a top-flight regional theatre dedicated to diverse programming and production quality. Janet’s passion for nurturing playwrights has led to a fruitful relationship with James Still, the IRT’s playwright-in-residence for 25 years, and the creation of the Indiana Series—plays that examine Hoosier and Midwestern place-making. Her work has brought the theatre prestigious grants from the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Joyce Foundation, and the Doris Duke Foundation, as well as numerous grants from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Among the memorable productions Janet has directed on the IRT’s stages are TheGlassMenagerie(1999), Ah!Wilderness (2002), TheDrawerBoy(2004), James Still’s TheHouseThat JackBuilt(2012 & 2021), ToKillaMockingbird(2016), Looking OverthePresident’sShoulder(2008 & 2017), TheDiaryofAnne Frank(2011 & 2018), and Cyrano(2021). This season she directed AChristmasCarol

MARGOT LACY ECCLES WAS A LEADING PHILANTHROPIC SUPPORTER OF THE ARTS AND HUMANITIES. THE INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE CHERISHES ITS HISTORY WITH MRS. ECCLES AS A SUBSCRIBER, BOARD MEMBER, DONOR, AND CHAMPION OF OUR ORGANIZATION IN BOTH ITS EDUCATIONAL AND ARTISTIC LEADERSHIP. IN RECOGNITION OF MRS. ECCLES’S LEGACY AS BENEFACTOR AND ADVISOR, THE INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE IS PROUD TO HAVE NAMED ITS ARTISTIC DIRECTOR POSITION THE MARGOT LACY ECCLES ARTISTIC DIRECTOR.

Janet’s leadership skills and community service have been recognized by the Network of Women in Business–IBJ’s “Influential Women in Business” Award, a Distinguished Hoosier Award conferred by Governor Frank O’Bannon, Girls Inc.’s Touchstone Award for Arts Leadership, and the Indiana Commission on Women’s Torchbearer Award. She is a proud alum of the Stanley K. Lacy Leadership Program (Class XIX) and a 2013-2014 Indy Arts Council Creative Renewal Arts Fellow. She is a member of two honorary gatherings in the America Theatre: the College of Fellows of the American Theatre, and the National Theatre Conference. In 2017 she was named an Indiana Living Legend by the Indiana Historical Society. In August 2022, she was honored with a May Wright Sewall Leadership Award by the Indianapolis Propylaeum.

Janet is a member of the Indianapolis Woman’s Club, the Gathering, and Congregation Beth-El Zedeck. She lives with her husband, Joel Grynheim, and a lovely canine mutt, in a downtown house built in 1855. They enjoy following the adventures of their three adult children and their grandchild, who are thriving on various continents.

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DavidAlanAndersonandBrianAnthonyWilsonintheIRT’s2022productionof The Reclamation of Madison Hemings.PhotobyZachRosing.

LEADERSHIP: SUZANNE SWEENEY Managing Director

Suzanne is a 24-year veteran of the IRT and is proud to work alongside her mentor and friend, Janet Allen, as co-CEO of the Theatre. Suzanne oversees all of the administrative functions of the organization, including marketing, fundraising, ticket office, house management, finance, human resources, information technology, and building operations.

During her tenure, the Theatre has secured a long-term lease for the building with the City of Indianapolis and renovated the Upperstage Lobby and restrooms. In June 2020 the Theatre surpassed its $18.5 million goal for its Front and Center campaign, raising $20 million.

Suzanne was elected Treasurer of the League of Resident Theatres, a nationwide association of regional theatres, and she serves as a member of their board of directors. In 2021 and 2016, she was honored to serve as a panelist for Shakespeare in American Communities in cooperation with Arts Midwest.

Suzanne is active in the community, having been the treasurer of Irish Fest for nine years, a member of the board of directors and treasurer of the Day Nursery Association (now Early Learning Indiana) for three years, and a past treasurer of IndyFringe.

Suzanne is a graduate of the College of William & Mary (undergraduate) and Indiana University (M.B.A.). She started her career as a CPA; prior to coming to Indianapolis, she worked in finance for more than 10 years, living in such varied locales as Washington, DC; Dallas, Texas; Frankfurt, Germany; Honolulu, Hawaii; and even working for three months in Auckland, New Zealand (where, yes, she went bungee jumping). She is a proud alum of the Stanley K. Lacy Leadership Program (Class XXXI). Suzanne lives in the Old Northside with her 19-year-old son, Jackson, and their foxhound rescue dog, Gertie, and spends some of her downtime in Palatine, Illinois, with her partner, Todd Wiencek.

AllisonBuckintheIRT’s2022productionof The Paper Dreams of Harry Chin.PhotobyZachRosing. 9

LEADERSHIP: JAMES STILL

Playwright-in-Residence

During his 25 years as playwright-in-residence, IRT audiences have seen all three plays in James’s “Jack Plays” trilogy (The HouseThatJackBuilt,Appoggiatura,and Miranda), as well as LookingOverthePresident’sShoulder;AndThenTheyCame forMe:RememberingtheWorldofAnneFrank;AmberWaves; TheLittleChoo-ChooThatThinksSheCan;April4,1968:Before WeForgotHowtoDream;ILovetoEat:CookingwithJames Beard;TheVelveteenRabbit;TheHeavensAreHunginBlack; InterpretingWilliam;IronKisses;TheGentlemanfromIndiana; SearchingforEden;HeHeldMeGrand,and TheSecretHistory oftheFuture.James has directed many productions at the IRT, including AChristmasCarol,TwelveAngryMen,ADoll’sHouse Part2,TheOriginalist,Dial“M”forMurder,TheMysteryofIrma Vep,Red,OtherDesertCities,GodofCarnage,Becky’sNewCar, RabbitHole,and Doubt. This season he directs Oedipus.

James is a member of the National Theatre Conference in New York, and a Kennedy Center inductee of the College of Fellows of the American Theatre. Other honors include the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Award for drama for TheJack Plays, the Todd McNerney New Play Prize from the Spoleto Festival, the William Inge Festival’s Otis Guernsey New Voices Award, and the Orlin Corey Medallion from the Children’s Theatre Foundation of America. His plays have been nominated four times for the Pulitzer Prize, and have been developed at Robert Redford’s Sundance, the New Harmony Project, Eugene

O’Neill Playwrights Conference, Seven Devils Playwrights Conference, Colorado New Play Summit, the Lark, Launch Pad at UC–Santa Barbara, Telluride Playwright’s Festival, New Visions/New Voices, and Fresh Ink. Three of his plays have received the Distinguished Play Award from the American Alliance for Theatre & Education. James’s work has been produced throughout the United States, Canada, China, Japan, Europe, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.

Current projects include his new plays TheCratchits (inAmerica),PlaysaboutLonging,(A)NewWorld,Dinosaur(s),JoyWavestoYoufromaDistance,and new plays commissioned by Prison Performing Arts (St. Louis) and American Blues (Chicago).

James also works in television and film and has been nominated for five Emmys and a Television Critics Association Award; he has twice been a finalist for the Humanitas Prize. He wrote the short film ACityofStoriescommissioned by the New Harmony Project and recently featured in the Heartland Film Festival’s Indy Shorts. James was a producer and head writer for the TLC series PAZ, the head writer for Maurice Sendak’s LittleBear, and writer for the Bill Cosby series LittleBill.He wrote TheLittleBearMovieand TheMiffy Movieas well as the feature film TheVelocityofGary. James grew up in Kansas and lives in Los Angeles.

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IN 2017, SARAH & JOHN LECHLEITER CREATED THE JAMES STILL PLAYWRIGHT-IN-RESIDENCE FUND, PROVIDING SUPPORT FOR THE PLAYWRIGHT-IN-RESIDENCE AS WELL AS THE CREATION OF NEW WORK FOR THE IRT.
RobJohansen,QuintinGildon,andJenniferJohansenintheIRT’s2021productionof A Christmas
Carol directedbyJamesStill.PhotobyZachRosing.

LEADERSHIP:

Ben is a director, educator, and community engagement specialist whose passion for multigenerational theatre has influenced his work across the country. In all of his myriad roles, Ben is guided by the belief that access to high-quality theatre helps build creative, empathetic people and healthy communities.

Ben is thrilled to be in his sixth season at Indiana Repertory Theatre, where he has directed Fahrenheit 451, The Book Club Play, Tuesdays with Morrie, This Wonderful Life, A Christmas Carol, The Little Choo-Choo That Thinks She Can, Elephant & Piggie’s “We Are in a Play!,” and The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse. This season he directs Clue. As associate artistic director, Ben manages casting both locally and nationally, helps guide education and community programming, and connects IRT to new artists and ideas. Dedicated to eradicating systems of oppression, he is an advocate for creating and maintaining an anti-racist culture that breaks down historical barriers of access to the theatre. Along with Sarah Bellamy, IRT’s Equity Consultant, he guides IRT’s work to develop thoughtful, sustainable Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access initiatives.

Ben is the recipient of a Theatre Communications Group Leadership University Award funded by the Andrew

W. Mellon Foundation. The award supported his artistic mentorship at the Children’s Theatre Company in Minneapolis, the nation’s largest theatre for young audiences. Prior to his role at CTC, Ben spent five years in California’s Bay Area, dividing his time between Berkeley Repertory Theatre and the Bay Area Children’s Theatre. In his native Minnesota, Ben was honored to serve on the education staff of Penumbra Theatre Company, the nation’s leading African American theatre, where he helped to expand their education and outreach offerings. His proudest accomplishments during his four years with the company include growing the nationally recognized Summer Institute for Activist Artists into a three-year multidisciplinary social justice theatre training program, developing a multigenerational quilting circle, and helping to create and facilitate a racial equity training program through the company’s RACE workshop series.

Ben holds a degree in theatre arts from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. He grew up on a small rural farm and fell in love with theatre at the age of eleven. He continues to create for his favorite audience: his five nieces and nephews.

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AmirAbdullahandHenryWoroniczintheIRT’s2022productionof Fahrenheit 451
directedbyBenjaminHanna.PhotobyZachRosing.

INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF

Eric Wilburn

Kathryn Burke

Assistant Ticket Office Manager

Janet Allen

Margot Lacy Eccles Artistic Director

Suzanne Sweeney

Managing Director

Ariana Fisher

Office Administrator

Malia Argüello

Production Manager

Benjamin Hanna

Associate Artistic Director

Hillary Martin Company Manager

Richard J Roberts

Resident Dramaturg

Jane Robison General Manager

James Still Playwright-in-Residence

Erica Anderson Lead Draper

Emily Candelario-Rosa

First Hand

Guy Clark

Costume Director

Heather Hirvela Draper

Niamh Langfitt

Costumer/First Hand

Rebecca Reyes

Wardrobe Supervisor

Brady Clark

Development Systems

Eric J. Olson

Institutional Giving Manager

Kay Swank-Herzog

Individual Giving Manager

Jennifer Turner

Director of Development

Anna E. Barnett

Education Coordinator

Lead Electrician

Beth A. Nuzum

Master Electrician

Kevin Shannon

Electrician

Jeffrey Bledsoe Director of Finance

Jen Carpenter Payroll & Benefits Specialist

Karen Chapman Business Manager

Devon Ginn

Director of Inclusion & Community Partnerships

Kerry Barmann

Associate Director of Marketing

Geneva Denney-Moore

Design & Communications Specialist

Danielle M. Dove

Director of Marketing & Sales

Megan Ebbeskotte

Audience Development Manager

Noelani Langille

Graphic Designer

Claire Dana Charge Scenic Artist

Jim Schumacher

Scenic Artist

Jacki Walburn Scenic Artist

Dameon Cooper Building Manager

Housekeeping

Roger Cunningham

Tonika Miller

Carlton Foster

Jacob Lang

House Manager

Courtney Plummer

Ticket Office Manager

Jay Hemphill

Customer Service Representative

Molly Wible Sweets

Tessitura Administrator

Madelaine Foster

Assistant Properties Shop Manager

Rachelle Martin

Properties Shop Manager

Carpenters

WonJun Brendon Choi

Samantha-Rae Oliver

Chris Fretts

Technical Director

Nick Kilgore

Automation Carpenter

Faith Seltzer

Stage Operations Supervisor

David Sherrill

Master Carpenter

Brittany Hayth

Lead Audio Engineer

Todd Mack Reischman

Resident Sound Designer

Kieran Shay

Audio Video Engineer

Stage Managers

Nathan Garrison

Erin Robson-Smith

Matt Shives

Assistant Stage Managers

Becky Roeber

Isaiah Moore

Production Assistants

Isabella Garza

Andrea Haskett

Corey Hollinger

Doug Sims

Group Sales & Teleservices Manager

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INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF

Tara Parchman

Robin Reid

John Simmons

Crowe Horwath

External Auditors

Faegre Drinker

Legal Counsel

Assistant House Managers

Grace Branam

Stacy Brown

Preston Dildine

Dieter Finn

Christine Gordon

Marilyn Hatcher

Lexi Hudson

Sarah James

Marissa Klingler

Claire Martin

Alicia McClendon

Jeff Pigeon

Phoebe Rodgers

Kathy Sax

Karen Sipes

Sam Stucky

Katy Thompson

Bartender

Tina Weaver

Customer Service Representatives

Ashlee Lancaster

Chelsea Senibaldi

Cara Wilson

Lee Edmundson

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Kate Abbruzzese, Susan Lynskey, and Gina Daniels in the IRT’s 2022 production of Steel Magnolias. Photo by Zach Rosing.

Welcome to the Indiana Repertory Theatre’s 50th Anniversary Season!

From its first eight seasons at the historic Athenaeum through the last four decades in the beautiful Indiana Theatre, the IRT has been an important part of the cultural fabric of Indianapolis.

The last two years have been among the most challenging in our history, as they have been for everyone. We are very excited to welcome you in person for our 50-year celebration! Great theatre sparks conversations, thoughtful questions, and ideas that reflect on and enlighten our lives, workplaces, and communities. Whether you’ve been part of the IRT family for years or are a first-time visitor, we are glad you are with us.

I am very grateful for the hard work, dedication, and adaptability of our staff, continuing to bring theatre to our audience in these extraordinary times. We are blessed with amazing leadership and talent. I also want to give a special thank you to all our patrons and partners for their loyal and tireless support, ensuring the IRT’s future for generations to come.

On behalf of the Board of Directors, I thank you for joining us for this golden anniversary season—one which will inspire and entertain.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

OFFICERS

CHAIR

Mark Shaffer

KPMG LLP

VICE CHAIR & CHAIR ELECT

Andrew Michie

OneAmerica Financial Partners, Inc.

MEMBERS

Tammara D. Avant

American Electric Power

Kathryn Beiser

Eli Lilly & Company

Michael P. Dinius

TREASURER

Joy Kleinmaier

American Specialty Health

SECRETARY

Jill Lacy

The Lacy Foundation

IMMEDIATE PAST CHAIR

Nadine Givens*

PNC Wealth Management

Noble Consulting Services, Inc.

Laurie Dippold

KAR Auction Services, Inc.

Dan Emerson*

Indianapolis Colts

Troy D. Farmer FORVIS

Tom Froehle*

Faegre Drinker

Ashley Garry Viatris Inc.

Ron Gifford

RDG Strategies LLC

Ricardo L. Guimarães

Indiana University

Kelley School of Business

Julian Harrell

Faegre Drinker

BOARD EMERITUS

Robert Anker*

Rollin Dick

Berkley Duck*

Dale Duncan*

James W. Freeman

Mike Harrington

Eli Lilly & Company, Retired

Michael N. Heaton

Katz Sapper & Miller, Retired

Holt Hedrick

Calumet Specialty Products Partners, L.P.

Brenda Horn

Ice Miller LLP, Retired

Rebecca Hutton

Leadership Indianapolis

Lauren James

Mitch Daniels

Leadership Foundation

Elisha Modisett Kemp

Corteva Agriscience

Alan Mills

Barnes & Thornburg LLP

Michael Moriarty

Frost Brown Todd, Retired

Brian Payne

Central Indiana

Community Foundation

Peter Racher

Plews Shadley

Racher & Braun LLP

Peter N. Reist

Oxford Financial Group, Ltd.

Susan O. Ringo

Community Volunteer

Myra C. Selby

Ice Miller LLP

Darshan Shah

BioCrossroads

Shelly Smith

Ernst & Young LLP

Sue Smith

Community Volunteer

Amy Waggoner Salesforce

L. Alan Whaley

Ice Miller LLP, Retired

Michael Lee Gradison* (in memoriam)

Margie Herald (in memoriam)

David Klapper

David Kleiman*

Sarah Lechleiter

E. Kirk McKinney Jr. (in memoriam)

Richard O. Morris* (in memoriam)

Jane Schlegel*

Wayne Schmidt

Jerry Semler*

Jack Shaw*

William E. Smith III*

Eugene R. Tempel*

David Whitman*

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Shakespeare’s Will
UP NEXT: AN IMAGINATIVE MODERN PORTRAIT
BUY NOW! | IRTLIVE.COM | 317.635.5252 a forgotten woman Her husband is the most famous man in literary history. She has been cloaked in silence and invisibility. Now Anne Hathaway tells her side of the story, full of love and loss, secrets and sacrifices. Inspired by what little we know about Anne, this witty and imaginative play creates a surprisingly modern portrait of a proudly imperfect wife and mother: a liberated woman living on her own defiant terms. MARCH 15 – APRIL 16 Where your home floors take center stage. 3857 E 82nd Street, Indianapolis, IN 46240
Original artwork by Kyle Ragsdale
For 30 years we have been helping companies navigate their technology needs—so they can focus on their business. Proud to support Indianapolis and the Arts. sim2k.com • (317) 251-7920

Legacy giving is a simple and impactful way to ensure the live professional theatre you cherish lives on. Making a gift through your financial or estate plans can be very simple— as easy as changing your life insurance or retirement beneficiaries to include the IRT.

THEATRE THAT LIVES ON! CREATE YOUR LEGACY AT THE IRT
part of Ovation Society!
made sure to establish a planned gift for the IRT, because we want our grandkids and future generations to experience the same love of world-class theatre we have.” Gene & Mary Tempel, long time IRT supporters For more information on how you can be part of the Ovation Society, Contact Jennifer Turner, Director of Development at jturner@irtlive.com or 317.916.4835
Become
“We
RonE.Rains,PriscillaLindsay,and HelenJooLeeintheIRT’s2022productionof Sense & Sensibility.
a legacy gift to the IRT will give you benefits you can enjoy now, as well as make a lasting impact on the IRT and the community it serves.
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Oedipus David Daniel adapted

SCENIC DESIGNER: Carey Wong

by Sophocles

by

ONEAMERICA MAINSTAGE

FEBRUARY 22 – MARCH 184

Director _______________________________ JAMES STILL

Scenic Designer__________________________ CAREY WONG

Costume Designer___________________ SARA RYUNG CLEMENT

Lighting Designer_________________________ MICHELLE HABECK

Original Music and Sound Design______________ LINDSAY JONES

Movement__________________________ MARIEL GREENLEE

Dramaturg_________________________ RICHARD J ROBERTS

Stage Manager_______________________ NATHAN GARRISON

Casting____________________________ CLAIRE SIMON CSA

LIGHTING DESIGNER: MIchelle Habeck

SEASON 2022-2023

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Oedipus_____________ DAVID ALAN ANDERSON

Priest__________________ OLIVIA D. DAWSON

Creon______________________ TRIEU TRAN

Tiresias_____________________ LISA WOLPE

Jocasta_________________ MARY BETH FISHER

Corinthian_______________ RYAN ARTZBERGER

Shepherd____________________ JAN LUCAS

One from Within____________ SOLA THOMPSON Musician/Chorus________________ JED FEDER

Ancient Thebes

APPROXIMATE RUN TIME: 1 hour and 40 minutes.

David Daniel’s adaptation of Oedipus premiered at American Players Theatre in 2021

Fight Choreographer: Leraldo Anzaldua

Music Director: Jed Feder

Dance Captain: Sola Thompson

Fight Captain: Lisa Wolpe

Assistant Scenic Designer: Charlotte Emrys

Assistant Lighting Designer: Arie Jamieson

Understudies: for Oedipus: Ryan Artzberger; for Jocasta: Jan Lucas

Swings: Jean Arnold, Scott Van Wye

Actors and stage managers are members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. The director is a member of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, a national theatrical labor union. Scenic, costume, lighting, and sound designers are represented by United Scenic Artists Local 829, IATSE.

Photography and recording are forbidden in the Theatre. The videotaping of this production is a violation of United States Copyright Law and an actionable Federal Offense.

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JANET ALLEN Margot Lacy Eccles Artistic Director SUZANNE SWEENEY Managing Director OriginalartworkbyKyleRagsdale

Oedipus Rex by Sophocles is widely considered the finest of all Greek tragedies. Like Shakespeare, however, Sophocles did not create his story. The myth of Oedipus originated in the Theban Cycle, a lost epic of Ancient Greek literature that predated the Iliad and the Odyssey. Just as these two sagas tell the story of Troy, the Theban cycle tells the story of the Greek city of Thebes.

The mythic Oedipus is raised in Corinth as the son of King Polybus and Queen Merope. When the Oracle at Delphi tells Oedipus that he is fated to kill his father and marry his mother, he leaves Corinth to escape such a terrible prophecy.

Arriving in Thebes, Oedipus discovers a city terrorized by the Sphynx. The Greek Sphynx has the head of a woman, the body of a lion, and the wings of a bird; it is a demon of destruction and bad luck. The Sphinx has commandeered the gate of Thebes, challenging anyone who tries to enter or leave the city to answer a riddle: “What walks on four feet in the morning, two feet at mid-day, and three feet at night?” Those who cannot answer the riddle—and not one person has yet answered it—are eaten by the Sphynx. Oedipus, however, figures out the answer: Humans. As infants, they crawl on all fours; as adults, they walk upright on two feet: in old age, they walk with canes. In some versions of

the legend, Oedipus kills the Sphynx; in other versions, the Sphynx throws itself off a cliff or eats itself.

Oedipus is rewarded for rescuing Thebes by marrying Queen Jocasta, recent widow of King Laius. Together, Oedipus and Jocasta have two sons and two daughters. King Oedipus is much loved by the populace. But after several years, a plague strikes the city, bringing disease to people, livestock, and crops. Oedipus sends his wife Jocasta’s brother Creon to Delphi to consult the Oracle for help. This is where the play OedipusRexbegins.

Creon returns with the Oracle’s pronouncement: the murderer of King Laius must be found and brought to justice. Oedipus curses the killer and vows to find him and exile him. Creon suggests consulting Tiresias, a highly respected seer, who warns Oedipus to stop the search. In a heated argument, Tiresias accuses Oedipus himself of the crime. Oedipus charges Creon and Tiresias with conspiring against him. Queen Jocasta tries to stop the fight between her brother and her husband. The circle of witnesses expands to include a man from Corinth, who arrives with fateful news about King Polybus, and a shepherd who hides a terrible secret. In the end, Oedipus’s curse is fulfilled, to the horror of all who see.

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Both pages: Costume renderings by Sara Ryung Clement.

South African social rights activist and Archbishop Desmond Tutu explained the philosophy of ubuntuas, “My humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human together.” It manifests the idea that humans cannot exist in isolation. We depend on connection, community, and caring. We add to and aid our communities. We march, we fill sand bags, we raise money, we help rebuild, we pitch in, we volunteer, we go to funeral services, we hug each other, we make casseroles…. In times of tragedy, we have a desperate need to do for each other. The poet, soldier, and clergyman John Donne wrote, “No man is an island entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main.”

Some of you reading this have been coming to IRT for years. You’ve given your time, donated your money, dragged your friends…. IRT is because of who you are.

For many artists, IRT was their first job. It has been a part of divorce, marriage, birth, death, family, retirement … and through it all, IRT has helped shape the lives of the people who are a part of it. They are because IRT is.

You and we are bound together by this place.

Oedipus and his Thebes are bound together. Their journey and suffering is shared. And like us all in times of need and pain, they, like us, will get through it together.

There is so much in this play. There is a murder mystery, a love story between a leader and his people, a treatise on hubris, a debate of divine morality, a tug of war between Fate and Free Will, an invitation to Sunday tea with Nihilism, and so much more. The production you are about to see is our contribution to that conversation.

I would like to add, as an adapter, that there were and are so many voices that have shaped my own. Langston Hughes, Christopher Logue, Maya Angelou, Anne Carson, Seamus Heaney, Ellen McLaughlin, Oscar Wilde, Madeline Miller, Stephen Vincent Benet, my mother, my father, fellow vets (all storytellers in their own wonderful ways), and thousands of writers and poets on line and in schools, churches, poetry cafes, and prisons whose written and spoken words have filled my ears and soul for decades.

I am because they were.

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The place of Oedipus in literature is something like that of the Mona Lisa in art. Everyone knows the story, the first detective story of Western literature; everyone who has read or seen it is drawn into its enigmas and moral dilemmas. It presents a kind of nightmare vision of a world suddenly turned upside down.… It is a story that, as Aristotle says in the Poetics, makes one shudder withhorrorandfeelpityjustonhearingit.InSophocles’s hands, however, this ancient tale becomes a profound meditation on the questions of guilt and responsibility, the order (or disorder) or our world, and the nature of man. The play stands with the Book of Job, Hamlet, and King Lear as one of Western literature’s most searching examinations of the problem of suffering.

—Charles Segal, Oedipus Tyrannus: Tragic Heroism and the Limits of Knowledge

“A nightmare vision of a world….” Aren’t we living that sufficiently in today’s “upside down” world? A fair question—but one that moves right into the heart of the belief we hold that art can lift and expand our daily lives through metaphor. While none of us aspires to live like Oedipus, his story gives us great insight into the breadth of human capacity for the unrelenting search for truth, and into the zealous desire of a good leader to protect their community from harm.

So why Oedipus now? A perfect storm of good reasons. First, I found a translation that opens the play to American audiences. For many years I have searched for a translation/adaptation that would meet us where we are (rather than hoping that we are all as encyclopedic about Greek divinity as the Ancient Greeks were). About a year ago I finally found David Daniel’s extremely sleek and actable version that makes the story spring to life in thrilling ways. Then we were able to secure David Alan Anderson to play the lead and James Still to direct, and to draw around them a remarkably accomplished group of actors and designers willing to walk undaunted in the labyrinth where this play lives in Western culture.

Even when one has great circumstances like these, the Greek plays require some crazy carpe diem to take

them on. They are the Mount Everest of our Western theatrical literature, the most primal, the oldest, the most elemental, the greatest challenge—and therefore the most daunting to take on. I happen to have a large dose of that this year, in my last season before retirement, so carpe diem it is!

Oedipus has tremendous resonance to our troubled time: its inciting incident is a plague that has taken over the city. Oedipus, the King, vows to the populace to lift the plague by whatever means necessary— without knowing that this vow dooms him. The play is a study in leadership, and since we live in a country so riven by opposing views of what constitutes good leadership, this is a particularly timely debate. While Sophocles would have laughed to think that Oedipus would ever become a role model—characters, after all, are metaphors, not real people—Oedipus has become an endlessly exciting psyche to dissect. His motives both as a man and a leader have inspired constantly evolving definitions of humanity by philosophers, artists, and eventually, of course, psychoanalysts. (Freud and Nietzsche are the ones who really made Oedipus a household name). Plays call to us as artists at various moments in time, and Oedipus calls both artists and audiences to gain huge perspective about humanity’s soaring hopes and harrowing failings. The play shows us how humanity can strive for truth—and how it can fall when that truth is revealed.

Philosopher Joseph Campbell writes in his book The Power of Myth (based on the PBS series) something that rings hugely true about Oedipus:

Mythology is not a lie, mythology is poetry. It is metaphorical.Ithasbeenwellsaidthatmythologyisthe penultimate truth—penultimate because the ultimate cannot be put into words. It is beyond words. Beyond images,beyondtheboundingrimoftheBuddhistWheel of Becoming. Mythology pitches the mind beyond that rim,towhatcanbeknownbutnottold.

Sophocles’s story was so familiar to its original audience that they knew its ending and its every twist

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and turn even before the play began. Yet they flocked to see this story staged over and over, in many plays by many different writers. What were they seeking? The same things we seek in our quest for art that resonates and expands our hearts and minds. We all want answers, or at least shreds of answers, to the ultimate question: What is it to be human? What can we glean from standing with Oedipus as he wrestles with his own humanity, with his own quest for truth? We at the IRT hope you find in this production some new shreds of answers as you consider your own humanity. How can we live through our own triumphs and tragedies, and emerge enlightened, and more at peace with our striving souls?

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David Little in Oedipus at the Holy Place by Robert Montgomery, produced at the IRT in 1981.
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Costume renderings by Sara Ryung Clement.

Something to know about me: I like old things. I like old souls, old cars, old music, old photographs, old scars…. Ironically, I don’t like a lot of old plays, but it turns out I may love ancient ones. Oedipus is ancient. Sophocles may have been the Tony Kushner or Arthur Miller of the 5th century BCE, but the plays he wrote vibrate and shimmer with a different kind of currency than contemporary plays.

Working on our production, I’ve wrestled with some of the same things I suspect you might wrestle with as well. The nagging anxiety that pulses under the surface of the play is laid bare by the tension between fate and free will. At first that might seem like a dusty, irrelevant thesis crammed somewhere between a required college lecture and our ancestors’ lack of sophistication. But in my own wrestling with the play, I’ve discovered that the ways that fate and free will are emotionally at war with one another in Oedipus aren’t that far from our modern-day struggles with conflicting extremes.

On the one hand, it seems very American to believe in free will and self-determination: that idea that if we work hard enough, or do the “right” things at the right time, that we will be amply rewarded with generous agency. But that quintessential belief that we are the architects of our future is often pitted against the old adage related to fate: “everything happens for a reason”—which is a spin on “it’s out of my hands” or “what will be will be.…”

Some have said that Greek tragedies are about people who learn too late. For me, Oedipus is about a knot that ties various extremes together, and the terror and suffering that result from not knowing when to leave that knot alone. It’s tempting to wonder what was coursing through Sophocles’s mind when Oedipus came provocatively pouring out. Did he have any idea that his play would survive more than 2,500 years? There’s something profound (and disturbing) about something imagined so long ago that is still needed and still worthy of witnesses like you and me.

One thing I can offer as context, that might help you open your own hearts and lens to this ancient play: there is a

difference between identifying with a character and investing in that character. As contemporary audiences, we’re conditioned by mystery stories that are logically solved by applying cause-and-effect: TV mysteries that have been reduced to familiar formulas, legal procedurals that have just enough psychological shadows that we’re able to put ourselves in the shoes of outsiders and monsters. We have names and diagnoses that help us justify the worst of humanity.

Sophocles pitched something similar but with a very different form—something new to those first audiences in Ancient Greece, who must have cheered and recoiled as characters on an outdoor stage wrestled with their gods and monsters. It’s too easy to simply dismiss Oedipus (the character) as the last one to figure out what may seem perfectly obvious to all of us. It’s too easy for us to feel superior.

Instead, I urge you to watch/listen/feel the story of Oedipus, as it unfolds with unrelenting directness. Imagine you’re on the inside of someone’s head, where reason is on a collision course with hubris, where logic utterly fails to cooperate when we need it most. It seems deeply human to deny the obvious until it’s no longer deniable—until you’re left with the despair that comes with the tragic knowing that the monster you’re pursuing is actually yourself.

The play asks us to invest in Oedipus and to watch his life unspool right in front of us in uninterrupted time. Oedipus is unable to undo the curse placed on him as an infant. He’s unable to stop the story—and neither are we. Even if we’ve figured out the ending long before he does, the point is that we witness how power and heroism can quickly crumble. Put another way: it might take a long time to rise to power and sustain that power, but it takes surprisingly little time—time we never get back—for that same power to turn tragic.

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Highly educated, he was elected to several political offices during his life in Athens, including treasurer, executive official, and commissioner. Several anecdotes from his contemporaries indicate that he was a homosexual. Sophocles wrote more than 120 plays for the annual Athens dramatic festival. He competed in 30 festivals, winning

24, and placing second in the other six. Only seven of his plays have survived, of which the most famous are Oedipus Rex—often considered the greatest example of tragedy— and Antigone. Sophocles created characters of greater depth than previous playwrights. He increased the number of actors in a play from two to three—each playing multiple roles—thus reducing the importance of the chorus and increasing opportunities for conflict and plot development.

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The ruins of the Theatre of Dionysus in Athens, where OedipusRex was first performed c. 429 BCE.

The golden age of Greek theatre occurred between 500 and 400 BCE, when Athens was considered the intellectual and cultural center of the world. This is the same century as when the Parthenon was built.

Athens was a democracy, and its citizens viewed justice in terms of chaos and balance. This democratic structure was essential to the development of theatre: drama is the process of chaos restored to balance. The subject of the ancient Greek plays is the role of the individual in society. The emphasis is on character: seeking to know oneself through action. Freedom is the ability to think clearly, to see one’s place in the natural order. We are defined by what we have in common. These ideas form the core of tragedy and the tragic hero.

In ancient Greece, there were very close ties between theatre and religion. This relationship can be seen in the location of Greece’s most important theatre on the side of the Acropolis, in the very shadow of the most sacred site in Athens. Hymn-singing worshippers of Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and fertility, began to organize choral competitions. According to legend, Thespis was the first person to step out from the chorus and sing solo, thus becoming the first actor. It is from his name that we get the term thespian.

Greek theatre was presented in four week-long sociopolitical-religious festivals held every year. Plays were performed in competition, with a panel of judges from the common people. The winning poet was honored for his victory and treated as a civic hero. The Greek poetplaywright wore many hats: writer, composer, producer, director, choreographer, and sometimes even actor.

The Greek chorus, descended from the Dionysian choral competitions, was a group of a dozen performers who portrayed the community in the play: groups of citizens, civic leaders, jurors in a trial. They posed questions and addressed prayers to the gods, dancing and speaking rhythmically. The individual characters of the play were all performed by just three actors, changing costumes and masks to create each new character.

Every city in Greece had a stone amphitheatre built into a hollow space on the side of a hill. At the center of the

amphitheatre, surrounded by rings of stone benches on three sides, was a large flat circular space where the chorus performed. This dancing place was known as the orchestra. On the open side of this space was a structure called the skene, where the actors could change costumes and masks. The skene was also used within the action of the play: it might serve as an entrance to a house or a temple, or the roof might be used for the entrance of a god. The space where the audience sat was called the theatron, which meant “the seeing place.” This is the origin of our word theatre.

Although the skene represents the beginnings of scenery, scholars debate whether or not the Greeks attempted to create illusions of different locations. Battle scenes and deaths always occurred offstage; they were described by the characters and largely left to the audience’s imagination. The vista of town and countryside beyond the skene was important, integrating the individual with the community and the community with nature, illustrating the natural order of things.

Although more than a thousand plays were written during the Greek golden age, only 44 plays by four or five playwrights have survived. The most famous of these is Oedipus Rex (Oedipus the King) by Sophocles, who created the tragic hero as we know him, and who developed the concept of the tragic flaw.

Oedipusis a prime example of irony: the disjunction between what seems to be true and what isn’t true. Even though we meet Oedipus as a powerful king, his tragic fate is sealed long before the play begins. In many ways, Oedipus is structured like a mystery play—a whodunit. Throughout the play, Oedipus ignores the clues that point to himself and continues his pursuit of the truth.

The Ancient Greeks used theatre as a tool to teach moral lessons. Most plays—ancient and modern—tend to accept society as the norm and highlight the individual who falls outside that norm. Comedy teaches through poking fun at those who don’t follow social rules. Tragedy instructs by dramatizing how the hero handles crises. Oedipus warns us that we cannot escape our destiny. Today, as we debate issues of nature vs. nurture or genetics vs. environment, the play’s discussion of fate vs. free will continues to resonate.

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For the 2002-2003 season opener, the Theatre announced it would stage James Still’s He Held Me Grand, the product of the playwright-in-residence’s Millennium Project. “For all of us here, it’s the long-awaited event,” Janet Allen told a reporter. Still had been working since 1998 on the play, which was based on hundreds of oral histories he collected in both Indiana and Pennsylvania, as it became a collaboration with Philadelphia-based People’s Light and Theatre Company. Still said it was “by far the most ambitious play I’ve ever written.”

Managing director Brian Payne resigned from the IRT in late 2000. When search committee chair Michael Maine had announced Payne’s hiring in 1993, he said, “The thing that impressed everyone the most was his genuinely boundless energy and commitment to making this the theatre we want it to be. And he expresses it in a way that we all found utterly charming.” Payne enjoyed a complementary—and productive—relationship with artistic director Janet Allen. “Janet and I developed a true partnership and were completely in sync,” he observed. “I wanted some artistic influence, she was clearly attuned to the budget, and we shared a commitment to community building—it all made for an ideal team.” Upon leaving the IRT, Payne would remain in the city to lead the Central Indiana Community Foundation.

Frequent IRT costume designer Tracy Dorman: “My first show at IRT was a production of August Wilson’s Jitney in 2003, directed by Timothy Douglas, and I will never forget how the shop built the entire 1970s show, mostly menswear. It was beautiful and meaningful because we created a world onstage that felt exactly right for that show, and it was as beautifully produced as any of the nineteenth century period shows that I’ve done at IRT. As a freelancer, I feel the greatest gift is being able to establish an artistic home where you feel like your vision can be fulfilled. IRT has always provided that for me, and I’m thankful for it.”

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Priscilla Lindsay & Wiley Moore in He Held Me Grand, 2002. MichaelW.Hall,ChuckPatterson,&ShaneTaylorin Jitney,2003. Brian Payne

EXCERPTS FROM FIVE DECADES OF WONDER: INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE

In 2008 a major economic downturn, soon to be labeled the Great Recession, presented new challenges. “It didn’t feel like a crisis,” Steven Stolen recalled. “We found ways to do things rather than reasons not to do things.” The Theatre created a budget-conscious series, Going Solo. For four seasons, the oneactor plays showcased the works of local artists while helping to keep costs in check. The Theatre experimented with presenting them in rolling repertory and invited audience members to attend all three, even in a single day.

In 2006 IRT’s board hired Steven Stolen, the first managing director in the Theatre’s history to come from the Indianapolis community. An experienced development and arts management professional, as well as a talented musician, Stolen quickly set some priorities. He expanded the development department, deepened donor engagement, refocused efforts to secure corporate sponsorships, and negotiated a more favorable lease agreement with the city. With funding from Lilly Endowment and oversight by IRT’s general manager, Jane Robison, he spearheaded a project to renovate the street-level ticket office to “reveal this great place” and make the Theatre more accessible. Every initiative was designed to ensure financial stability while remaining true to artistic integrity.

Joel Markus was a stage manager at the IRT from 1997 to 2002, then left to take on comparable roles at other regional theatres. In 2006, Janet Allen called him with a new opportunity, this time as production manager, a post he held until 2011. For Markus, it was like a homecoming. He and his wife, Lisa, had met during his first tenure, when she was a member of the audience, and they later married on the IRT stage. All his IRT years afforded him the chance to learn, he said. One of the most enduring lessons, especially applicable to the production manager position, was IRT general manager Jane Robison’s declaration: “Every dollar is a real dollar.” In short, don’t waste a single one.

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Milicent Wright in Pretty Fire from the first Going Solo series, 2009. Steven Stolen with Sylvia McNair, star of the IRT’s production of A Little Night Music The Grapes of Wrath (2005) had a cast of 22 playing more than 60 characters.

Take a Bow

Faegre Drinker is proud to support the actors and staff who bring the Indiana Repertory Theatre to life. We are thrilled to be celebrating their 50th season of theatre and wish them success in their upcoming programming.

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A SEASON of celebration

50th Season Book

50th Season Puzzle

PURCHASE IN GRAND LOBBY OR TICKET OFFICE Explore the history of the IRT in this beautifully curated book written by Donna L. Reynolds. Take a piece (or 1000!) of the IRT home with this puzzle featuring covers of our programs over the years!

THE COMPANY

DAVID ALAN ANDERSON | OEDIPUS

IRT audiences have seen David in TheReclamationofMadisonHemings,LookingOver the President’sShoulder,Fences,JuliusCaesar,TheWhippingMan,RadioGolf,TheMountaintop,A ChristmasCarol, and many others. Regional: the Shaw Festival; Lyric Opera of Chicago, Writers Theatre; Court Theatre; the Guthrie Theater; CenterStage; Denver Theatre Center; Actors Theatre of Louisville; Asolo Repertory; the Idaho, Pennsylvania, and Lake Tahoe Shakespeare festivals; Penumbra Theatre, where he is a company member; and many more. TV: TheChi,Shameless, ChicagoPD. He is a recipient of The Lunt-Fontanne Fellowship at Ten Chimneys, where he worked with Alan Alda. He received a Creative Renewal Fellowship from the Arts Council of Indianapolis, and was honored by the Circle City Links and the Center for Leadership Development.

RYAN ARTZBERGER | CORINTHIAN

Ryan’s IRT credits include A Christmas Carol, Cyrano, Tuesdays with Morrie, The Diary of Anne Frank, Noises Off, Romeo and Juliet, The Three Musketeers, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Crucible, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, God of Carnage, Rabbit Hole, Iron Kisses, Death of a Salesman, and many more. Ryan is the executive artistic director of the Indianapolis Shakespeare Company, where he has directed Hamlet and As You Like It and acted in eight shows. At the Phoenix Theatre he performed in How to Use a Knife. Regional credits include the Shakespeare Theatre Company in DC, the Studio Theatre, Shakespeare Santa Cruz, the Goodman Theatre, Berkeley Rep, the Lookingglass, and Great Lakes. Ryan graduated from Ohio University and Juilliard. “Love to Marita, Will, and Clara.”

OLIVIA D. DAWSON | PRIEST

Olivia is thrilled to make her IRT debut with Oedipus. She has worked regionally with the Louisville Orchestra, Steppenwolf Theatre, Portland Center Stage, Atlanta Shakespeare Company, Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, Madison Repertory Theatre, Theatre Lila, Forward Theatre, Horizon Theatre, the Robey Theatre, and the Barter Theatre, to name a few. Film/TV: Honk for Jesus, Dopesick, Chicago Med, Empire, and Wolfpack (recurring) among others. Olivia was part of the inaugural cohort of the 2020 Arts and Social Justice Fellowship at Emory University and a Spring 2021 Fellow with the Hambidge Center.

JED FEDER | MUSICIAN & CHORUS

IRT debut. Jed is an actor, musician, and composer based in New York. Recent credits include Uri Savir in TimeLine/Broadway in Chicago’s Oslo, Kassim in the First National Tour of Disney’s Aladdin, and drums for the new Off-Broadway musical Trevor, now on Disney+. Other credits include Chicago Shakespeare, Arena Stage, Marriott Theatre, Asolo Rep, Drury Lane Oakbrook, Writers Theatre, and Chicago Children’s Theatre. Jed is the co-creator of the radio-play musical podcast Yellowfin Grouper P.I.—season 1 out now. Proud Northwestern University alum and member of both Actors’ Equity and the American Federation of Musicians. “Thanks to Lindsay Jones, his team at the Mine, my fiancée Tiffany, friends, and family.” @jed_underscore

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MARY BETH FISHER | JOCASTA

Mary Beth has appeared at the IRT in Miranda, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Heavens Are Hung in Black, and Arcadia Her Chicago credits include Steppenwolf, Court, and many others. Her recent performance in Rebecca Gilman’s Swing State at the Goodman Theatre was named one of the Top Ten Performances in Chicago Theatre 2022 by the Chicago Tribune In New York, she has appeared at Playwrights’ Horizons, Manhattan Theatre Club, the Roundabout, and Westside Arts. She has numerous TV and film credits. Mary Beth has received two Joseph Jefferson Awards, the L.A. Drama Critics Circle Award, and the Sarah Siddons Award, as well as Lucille Lortel, Drama Desk, and Bay Area Critics’ nominations. She was an inaugural LuntFontanne Fellow and a Beinecke Fellow at Yale University.

JAN LUCAS | SHEPHERD

Jan has previously been seen on the IRT stage in TheHouseThatJackBuilt,YouCan’tTake It With You,FindingHome,TheMousetrap,ToKillaMockingbird,AChristmasCarol,TheGentlemanfrom Indiana,InherittheWind,HeHeldMeGrand,SisterCarrie,DinnerwithFriends, and Amber Waves (2000). She has been seen at the Phoenix Theatre in the one-woman show ApplesinWinter, as well as in Alabaster,Winston’sBigDay,ThePill, and PurePrine, and in MaryJane for Summit Performance. Other regional credits include the Goodman, Steppenwolf, and Remy Bumpo in Chicago. Jan is the author of the book MyBeautifulLeukemia.

SOLA THOMPSON | ONE FROM WITHIN

Sola is excited to make her IRT debut. Regional credits include 1919 at Steppenwolf, The Mountaintop at American Players Theatre, Eclipsed at Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, Stew at Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, and Hearts like Fists and Harry and the Thief at Know Theatre Cincinnati. Television: Chicago Med. Education: M.F.A., the Theatre School at DePaul University.

TRIEU TRAN | CREON

Trieu appeared in The Chinese Lady at the IRT and with Artists at Play at the Greenway Court Theatre. Recent work: Alan Strang in Equus (LADCC Nomination) with George Takei at East West Players; the title role in Oedipus the King (Portland); The Legacy Codes (Dean Goodman Award) with TheatreWorks. Other stage favorites: Rashomon, As You Like It, The Merchant of Venice, Henry IV Part 1, Richard III Film: Tropic Thunder, Trade of Innocents, Desolate, How High, Hancock. TV: Monsterland, Altered Carbon, The Newsroom, Intruders, Men at Work, Quickdraw. Trieu’s solo play Uncle Ho to Uncle Sam was co-written with Robert Egan, developed at Ojai Playwrights Conference, and premiered at Seattle ACT, with runs at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, Shakespeare Orange County, and PlayMakers Rep.

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Oedipus

THE COMPANY

LISA WOLPE | TIRESIAS

Lisa was the Producing Artistic Director of the all-female, multi-cultural Los Angeles Women’s Shakespeare Company from 1993 to 2016. She worked with over a thousand women and girls, and became a leader in the movement for gender parity and diversity in the arts. She directed and played leading roles in many iconic all-female productions (Hamlet, Richard III, Angelo, Leontes, Romeo, Shylock, Iago). Her hit solo, Shakespeare and the Alchemy of Gender, directed by Laurie Woolery, has toured internationally. Other credits include PlayMakers Rep, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Utah Shakespeare Festival, TheaterWorks, Great River Shakespeare Festival, Orlando Shakespeare Theater, Berkeley Repertory Company, Shakespeare & Co, Company of Women, California Shakespeare Festival, Colorado Shakespeare, Sedona Shakespeare, Shakespeare & Company, and Prague Shakespeare Company. Lisa has lectured at more than thirty universities.

DAVID DANIEL | ADAPTOR

David is a Core Company member and Education Director at American Players Theatre, where he has been bouncing on their boards (often literally) in plays for more than twenty years. He has had the honor of playing with audiences in wonderful theatre companies around the country. As a writer, he has written or adapted TheOdyssey,Steinbeck,ATrojanWoman,Agamemnonand Clytemnestra, and MeandDebry, as well as the one-act comedy collection The Shuffle of Life. He lives in Spring Green, Wisconsin, with his wife Paula and their sons Declan, Nico, and Isaac. David is a proud veteran of the US Army. “Share the arts with a vet!”

JAMES STILL | DIRECTOR

This is James’s 25th season as the IRT’s playwright-in-residence; the company most recently produced his play The House That Jack Built. James has directed many productions at the IRT, including a Christmas Carol, Twelve Angry Men, A Doll’s House Part 2, The Originalist, Dial “M” for Murder, The Mystery of Irma Vep, Red, Other Desert Cities, God of Carnage, Mary’s Wedding, Becky’s New Car, Rabbit Hole, Doubt, Bad Dates, Old Wicked Songs, Plaza Suite, The Immigrant, and Dinner with Friends, as well as his own I Love to Eat, Amber Waves (2000), and Looking Over the President’s Shoulder (2001). (complete bio on page 10)

CAREY WONG | SCENIC DESIGNER

Carey’s theatre credits include the Seattle Repertory Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Portland Center Stage, Arizona Theatre Company, Center Stage Baltimore, Syracuse Stage, Alliance Theatre, Seattle Children’s Theatre, Village Theatre, Mixed Blood, Prince Music Theater, Hey City Theater, and Spain’s Nearco Producciones. He has been Resident Designer for Portland Opera, Opera Memphis, and Wildwood Park. Opera credits include Seattle Opera, Spoleto Festival USA, New York’s Valhalla Wagnerfest, Pittsburgh Opera, and the Beijing and Macao music festivals. Carey was exhibition designer for the Portland Chinatown Museum’s permanent exhibit, Beyond the Gate, where a retrospective of his design work appeared last year. He is a graduate of Yale College and attended the Yale School of Drama.

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SARA RYUNG CLEMENT | COSTUME DESIGNER

Sara’s Off-Broadway credits include Golden Shield (Manhattan Theatre Club), Somebody’s Daughter (Second Stage Uptown), and Fruiting Bodies (Ma-Yi Theater Company). Regional: Guthrie Theater, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, South Coast Repertory, Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Geffen Playhouse, Milwaukee Repertory, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Folger Theatre, Pasadena Playhouse, Seattle Rep, Mixed Blood Theatre, TheatreWorks Silicon Valley, Baltimore Center Stage, Boston Court, Perseverance Theatre, East West Players, Cornerstone Theater Company, A Noise Within, Yale Repertory Theatre, and others. Set design faculty at UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television. Recipient of the Donald and Zorca Oenslager Fellowship in Design. M.F.A., Yale School of Drama; A.B., Princeton University. sararyungclement.com

MICHELLE HABECK | LIGHTING DESIGNER

At the IRT, Michelle has designed Fahrenheit 451, Twelve Angry Men, A Doll’s House Part 2, Looking Over the President’s Shoulder, Dial “M” for Murder, The Mousetrap, Amber Waves (2000), and An Almost Holy Picture. Broadway: slide artist for Thoroughly Modern Millie; associate/assistant lighting design for The Boy from Oz, Movin’ Out, Thoroughly Modern Millie, and King Hedley II Off Broadway: Fifty Words for MCC Theatre. Regional; Guthrie, Steppenwolf, Goodman, Alliance, Seattle Children’s Theatre, Minneapolis Children’s Theatre, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, Arizona Theatre Company, Penumbra, Lookingglass, others. Opera: Austin Opera; associate for Julie Taymor’s Grendel. Michelle was awarded the NEA/TCG Career Development Grant for Design. She leads the lighting program in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of Texas at Austin.

LINDSAY JONES | COMPOSER & SOUND DESIGNER

IRT: Dial “M” for Murder, The Mystery of Irma Vep, Good People, Agnes of God. Broadway: Slave Play (Tony nominations for Best Score and Best Sound Design of a Play), The Nap, Bronx Bombers, and A Time to Kill. Off-Broadway: Privacy (Public), Bootycandy (Playwrights Horizons), Feeding the Dragon (Primary Stages), and many others. Regional: Guthrie, Center Stage, American Conservatory Theater, Hartford Stage, Alliance Theatre, Goodman, Arena, Old Globe, Chicago Shakespeare, Steppenwolf, many others. International: Stratford Festival (Canada), Royal Shakespeare Company (England), many others. Audio dramas: Marvel, Audible, Next Chapter Podcasts, and the award-winning “The Imagine Neighborhood.” Film/ TV scoring: HBO Films’ A Note of Triumph (2006 Academy Award for Best Documentary, Short Subject), over 30 other films. He is co-chair of Theatrical Sound Designers and Composers Association (TSDCA) lindsayjones.com

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Oedipus

THE COMPANY

MARIEL GREENLEE | MOVEMENT

IRT: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time; A Christmas Carol; Bridge & Tunnel; Romeo and Juliet; The Three Musketeers; April 4, 1968; This Wonderful Life. Mariel was a dancer with Dance Kaleidoscope for 15 years; she teaches ballet and modern dance locally. She has set dance works for Dance Kaleidoscope, Indianapolis Ballet, Phoenix Rising Dance Company, and Relevations. Theater credits: Pittsburgh Public Theater, Phoenix Theatre, Summer Stock Stage, Marian University, Zach Rosing Productions, Park Tudor High School. Mariel received the Individual Artist Grant from the Indiana Arts Commission in 2007. In 2010 she was awarded a Creative Renewal Arts Fellowship from the Arts Council of Indianapolis. She was a 2021 On-Ramp cohort with the Indiana Arts Commission. B.A. in dance from Point Park University.

RICHARD J ROBERTS | DRAMATURG

This is Richard’s 33rd season with the IRT, and his 25th as resident dramaturg. He has also been a dramaturg for the New Harmony Project, Write Now, and the Hotchner Playwriting Festival. He has directed IRT productions of A Christmas Carol (four times), Bridge&Tunnel,TheNight Watcher,Neat,PrettyFire,TheCay,TheGiver,ThePowerofOne, and TwelfthNight. Other directing credits include Actors Theatre of Indiana (where he recently directed Violet), the Phoenix Theatre, Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra, Edyvean Repertory Theatre, Indianapolis Civic Theatre, Butler University, University of Indianapolis, Marion University, and Anderson University. Richard studied music at DePauw University and theatre at Indiana University and has been awarded a Creative Renewal Arts Fellowship from the Indy Arts Council.

NATHAN GARRISON | STAGE MANAGER

This is Nathan’s 27th season at the IRT. He has also worked with Center Stage in Baltimore, Utah Shakespeare Festival, and Brown County Playhouse; and he is a company member with the Indianapolis Shakespeare Company.

CLAIRE SIMON CSA | CASTING

Based in Chicago, Claire Simon CSA has worked with the IRT for the past 23 years on casting more than 40 productions, including Murder on the Orient Express, Twelve Angry Men, You Can’t Take It With You, Holmes and Watson, Noises Off, Appoggiatura, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, and many more. Other regional credits include Syracuse Stage, Asolo Theatre, Lyric Opera, Milwaukee Rep, and the Tony Award–winning Million Dollar Quartet. TV credits include Empire, Easy, Sense8, Chicago Fire, Chicago PD, Crisis, Betrayal, Detroit 1-8-7, and Boss. Film credits include Divergent, Contagion, Unexpected, Man of Steel, and Save the Last Dance. Claire has won Artios Awards for casting the pilot of Empire and for Season 1 of Fox’s Prison Break.

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Through its community outreach efforts, the Navient Community Fund supports organizations and programs that address the root causes which limit financial success for all Americans. The Navient Community Fund is proud to support the Indiana Repertory Theatre as the Education Partner for the 2022-2023 Season.

Navient is a leading provider of asset management and business processing solutions to education, healthcare, and government clients at the federal, state, and local levels. Millions of Americans rely on financial support to further their education and improve their lives. We work hard each day to help our customers navigate financial challenges and achieve their goals.

We at Navient have a deep appreciation for the arts and for the hard work, passion, and emotion that go into them, as well as the positive influences the arts have on individuals and their communities. Our employees in central Indiana are proud to support our community through amazing programs like those offered by IRT.

Enjoy the show.

39

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ANSWERING THE WORLD’S MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION: WHAT’S FOR DINNER?
™ ® Trademarks of Corteva Agriscience and its affiliated companies. © 2021 Corteva. INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE Inclusive environment | Taught by theatre professionals Introduction & Intermediate camps | Mini Camps for ages 5-7 Financial aid | And much more!
LET YOUR OLD CAR GO THE EXTRA MILE! DONATE IT TO THE IRT! We will happily take it off your hands, sell it at auction, and the proceeds benefit the Theatre. And YOU can qualify for a tax deduction for your generous donation! FOR MORE INFO CONTACT Kay Swank-Herzog, Individual Giving Manager: kswankherzog@irtlive.com | 317.916.4830 WE ALSO ACCEPT: Boats | Farm Equipment | Lawn Mowers Motorcycles | Motor Homes | And More!

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Celebrating our 50th season of engaging, inspiring, and entertaining ALL of Indiana!

PLEASE CONSIDER BECOMING A REPERTORY SOCIETY MEMBER!

When you are part of the Repertory Society you are amongst our most generous supporters. Donors giving $1,500 or more each season will join this exclusive group and gain access to a wide variety of benefits that provide special access to our art and artists.

CONTINUING OUR MISSION WOULD NOT BE POSSIBLE WITHOUT YOU.

REPERTORY SOCIETY BENEFITS INCLUDE:

Invitation to Exclusive Special Events, Unlimited Access to Our Exclusive Donor Lounges, Discounts on Single Tickets Purchased, and MUCH MORE!

FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO JOIN THE REPERTORY SOCIETY Contact Kay Swank-Herzog, Individual Giving Manager: kswankherzog@irtlive.com | 317.916.4830
TELL YOUR STORY
9/25/2022 YOU COULD WIN $1,000 CASH! If you’re an Indiana student in grades 6-12, we want to hear from you! Whether you’re a seasoned playwright or you’ve never seen a live production, we know you have a story to tell. Maybe it’s about you, or someone you know. Maybe it’s about somewhere that doesn’t even exist yet. But its there. And we want to help you bring it to life. All submissions, workshop, and events will take place virtually so we can continue to connect students across the state. To learn more visit irtlive.com/ypip or contact Anna Barnett, Education Coordinator at 317.916.4841 or education@irtlive.com Contact Doug Sims to book your ad space today. dsims@irtlive.com | 317.925.0826
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THE SUPPORTING CAST

INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE DONORS

Ticket revenue covers just half of what it costs to produce world-class professional theatre at the Indiana Repertory Theatre. The IRT gratefully acknowledges the remarkable support we receive from our generous and committed donors whose contributions ensure that the show does go on!

Bob & Toni Bader

David & Jackie Barrett

Scott & Lorraine Davison

The Michael Dinius & Jeannie

Regan-Dinius Family Fund, a fund of the Indianapolis Foundation

Nancy & Berkley Duck

Dan & Ginny Emerson

David & Ann Frick

Tom & Jenny Froehle

Susan & Charlie Golden

Mike & Judy Harrington

Sarah & John Lechleiter

Bill & Susie Macias

David & Leslie Morgan

Jackie Nytes & Patrick O’Brien

Sue & Bill Ringo

Mary Frances Rubly & Jerry Hummer

Wayne & Susan Schmidt

Cheryl Gruber Waldman

David P. Whitman & Donna L. Reynolds

Craig & Betsy Dykstra

Drs. Cherryl & Shelly Friedman

Dr. and Mrs. Gregory Gaich

Derek & Elizabeth Hammond

Ann Hinson

Bill & Nancy Hunt

Phil & Colleen Kenney

Steve & Bev Koepper

John & Laura Ludwig

David & Robin Miner

Mr. & Mrs. Kimball Morris

Carl Nelson & Loui Lord Nelson

Mr. Stephen Owen Sr. & Dr. Cheryl Torok Owen

Jill Panetta & Leo Bianchi

Joan Perelman

Dr. Christine & Mike Phillips

Noel & Mary Phillips*

Drs. Eric Schultze & Marcia Kolvitz

Marguerite K. Shepard, M.D.

The Michael L. Smith and Susan L. Smith Family Fund, a fund of Hamilton County Community Foundation

Catherine M. Turner*

John & Kathy Vahle

Lainie Veenstra

James & Linda Wesley

Dr. Christian Wolf & Elaine Holden Charitable Fund

Kathy & Gene Gentili

Charles Goad & James Kincannon

Donald & Teri Hecht

Tom & Nora Hiatt

Brenda Horn

Pegg & Mike Kennedy

David Kleiman & Susan Jacobs

John & Susan Kline

Kevin Krulewitch & Rosanne Ammirati*

Jill & Peter Lacy

Kathryn Maeglin

Bob & Dale Nagy

Rob & Sara Norris

N. Clay & Amy McConkey Robbins

Tim & Karen Seiler

Jerry & Rosie Semler

Mark & Gerri Shaffer

Joe & Jill Tanner

Gene & Mary Tempel

Jeff & Benita Thomasson

Lynne & Alex Timmermans

Carol Weiss

Bob & Dana Wilson

Don Anderson

Kathryn Beiser & Mick Domagala

Susie & Joel Blum

Dave & Nancy Breitweiser

Gary Denney & Louise Bakker

Rollie & Cheri Dick

A.J. Allen

Dan Bradburn & Jane Robison

Dick & Brenda Freije

Janet Allen & Joel Grynheim

Anonymous (2)

Trudy W. Banta

Sarah C. Barney

Daniel & Rita Blay

Thomas & Victoria Broadie

Amy Burke

David & Judith Chadwick

Steve & Kim Chatham

ANNUAL CAMPAIGN GIFTS $1,500+ | JULY 1, 2022 - JANUARY 12, 2023
46

Alan & Linda Cohen Family Foundation

Don & Dolly Craft

Daniel & Catherine Cunningham

Frank & Norah Deane

Dr. Gregory Dedinsky & Dr. Cherri Hobgood

Fred W. Dennerline

Laurie Dippold*

Paul & Glenda Drew

Craig & Marsha Dunkin

Troy D. Farmer

Drs. Richard & Rebecca Feldman

Joan M. FitzGibbon

Mary L. Forster, M.D.

Brian & Lorene Furrer

Future Keys Foundation

Ashley & Andrea Garry

Garth & Christine Gathers

Robert & Christy Gauss

Mr. Jim Gawne*

Dorothea & Philip Genetos

Robert Giannini

Ron & Kathy Gifford

Bruce Glor

Marta Gross & Richard M. Barnes

Walter & Janet Gross

Bill & Phyllis Groth

Chad & Kelli Grothen

Ricardo & Beatriz Guimarães

Mary & Gary Gustafson

Emily F. (Cramer) Hancock*

Jeffrey Harrison

Michael N. Heaton

The Hedges-Dillman Family

Holt Hedrick

Kurt & Charlene Heinzman

William & Patricia Hirsch

Richard & Elizabeth Holmes

Randy & Becky Horton

Drs. Meredith & Kathleen Hull

Rebecca Hutton

The Indianapolis Fellows Fund, a fund of The Indianapolis Foundation

Colette Irwin-Knott & Gary Knott

Lauren James

Patrick & Barbara James

Tom & Kathy Jenkins

Daniel T. Jensen & Steven Follis

Mrs. Janet Johnson

Denny & Judi Jones

Elisha & Reed Kemp

Max Kime

Joy Kleinmaier

Dr. Michael & Molly Kraus

Kurt & Judy Kroenke

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Ed & Ann Ledford

Dan & Martha Lehman

Joe & Deborah Loughrey

Barbara MacDougall

Marlene & Bob Marchesani

Kellie McCarthy

Sharon R. Merriman

Andrew & Amy Michie

Douglas and Detra Mills Giving Fund

Lawren Mills & Brad Rateike*

Dr. David H. Moore & Dr. Kris Beckwith

Michael D. Moriarty

Linda & Don Neel

Tammie L. Nelson & David McCaskill

The Blake Lee and Carolyn Lytle

Neubauer Charitable Fund, a fund of Hamilton County Community Foundation

Dr. & Mr. Nichols

Dr. Joseph M. Overhage & Dr. Mary R. Brunner

Larry & Louise Paxton

Kenneth A. & Joan C. Peterson

Dr. & Mrs. Lee Phipps

Gail & William Plater

The David and Arden Pletzer Endowment Fund, a fund of Hamilton County Community Foundation

Bob & Kathi Postlethwait

Phil & Joyce Probst

Scott & Susan Putney

Michael & Melissa Rawlings

Peter & Karen Reist

Ken & Debra Renkens

Karen & Dick Ristine

Chip & Jane Rutledge

Paula F. Santa

Jane W. Schlegel

Alice Schloss Donor Advised Fund, a fund of Jewish Federation of Greater Indianapolis

Tom & Barbara Schoellkopf

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William Witchger, II & Kimberly Witchger

John & Linda Zimmermann

47 ANNUAL CAMPAIGN GIFTS $1,500+ | JULY 1, 2022 - JANUARY 12, 2023

THE SUPPORTING CAST

INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE DONORS

ANNUAL CAMPAIGN GIFTS $300 - $1,499 |

JULY 1, 2022 - JANUARY 12, 2023

Phyllis & Ed Gabovitch

Ric & Jan Good

Julie Goodman

Thecla Gossett

David & Mary Allen

Bob & Pat Anker

Anonymous

John Champley & Julie Keck

Brady Clark

Robert Clifford

Daniel P. Corrigan

Sherry Faris

Drs. Eric Farmer & Tate Trujillo & Christopher Scott*

Dawn M. Fazli

Peter Furno & Pamela Steed

Priscilla Gerde

Richard & Sharon Gilmor

Elizabeth Hansen

Lisa Harris, M.D.

The Steven Herker Charitable Fund, a donor-advised fund

Anita & Henry Johnson

James & Sara Lootens

John & Carolyn Mutz

Susan & Jim Naus

Ann Marie Ogden & Brian Murphy

Roger & Anna Radue

Jean Richcreek

Sallie Rowland

Thomas & Teresa Sharp

Lee Shevitz

Michael Skehan

Cheryl & Bob Sparks

Mary Ann Thiel

Dr. James & Linda Trippi

Karen J. Weyrauch

Philip & Shandon Whistler

Nancy Woolf

Kwin & Jill Abram

Jay Allen & Cathleen Fogler-Allen

Katy & Tim Allen

The Todd A. Andritsch

Family Fund

Anonymous (3)

Mark K. Bear

Constance C. Beardsley*

Dan & Barb Bickel

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Black III

Jesse L. & Carolynne Bobbitt

Barbara & Christopher Bodem*

Joseph & Louise Boling

Karry Book & John Hansberry

Mauvene Borton

Steve & Darlene Bricker

William Capello M.D.

Vince & Robyn Caponi

Allen B. Carter & Patricia Hester

Robert Cedoz

Jeffrey & Jeni Christoffersen

Jerry & Carol Collins

Shane and Andrea Crouch*

James & Carolyn Curry

Kathleen A. Custer

Karen Dace*

Bill & Shirley Daley

Fr. Clem Davis*

Paul & Carol DeCoursey*

Mary & Steve DeVoe

Tom Dorantes & Sunah C Kim Dorantes*

Patricia Edwards

Nikki Eller

Margie Ferguson*

Arthur Field IV

Jim & Julie Freeman

Roger & Susan Frick

John & Mary Ann Grogan

Greg Grossart

John & Jana Mason Gruner

Ron & Ellie Hackler

Diane Hall

Mr. & Mrs. David J. Hamernik

Don & Carolyn Hardman

Don & Elizabeth Harmon

Mark & Laurie Hartman

Andrea Hatch & Rich Dionne

Steve & Kathy Heath

Sandra Hester-Steele

Eleanor & Joseph Hingtgen

Katie, Tim & Jennifer Holihen

David Jackoway

Kyle & MaryBeth Jackson

Greg & Pat Jacoby

Patricia Johnson & Michael Wilson

Steven & Mary Koch*

Michelle Korin*

Kathy & David Lentz

Andra Liepa Charitable Fund, a fund of The Indianapolis Foundation

Carlos & Eleanor Lopez

Linda Lough*

Mark Magee*

Lyle & Deborah Mannweiler

Dr. & Mrs. Peter Marcus*

Gayle Mayne

William McNiece

Rev. Mary Ann Moman*

James & Valerie (Purcell) Monn

Jim & Shantel Morris

Jim & Judi Mowry

Terry & Lew Mumford

Sharon & Dan Murphy*

Dr. LeeAnne M. Nazer

John D. & Kathy Null

48

The Ostergaard Family

Merrell & Barbara Owen

Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. & Kelli DeMott Park

Deb & Greg Perkins

The Poisel Family

Greg Pugh & Jill Woerner

Douglas Paul Reichl

Richard & Ann Riegner

Benjamin & Anna Roberts

Rabbis Dennis & Sandy Sasso

Richard & Christine Scales

Jim & Sara Schacht

Rev. Robert & Dr. Rita Schilling

Dr. Jill Shedd*

Linda J. Shinn

Doug Sims

Kimberly Sorg-Graves

Luke Stark*

Gregg & Judy Summerville

Nela Swinehart*

Dr. Tim & Tina Tanselle

Steve & Barb Tegarden*

Garrett & Elaine Thiel

The Lori Thompson & Ben Downing Charitable Fund

Robert & Barbetta True*

Barbara S. Tully*

Bill & Janet Wakefield

Norma B. Wallman

Richard M. Warren & Tammey Kikta

Sherry Watkins

Judge Martha Wentworth

A. Donald & Jeanette Wiles

Angie & Andy Wilkinson

Prof. Gail F. Williamson

John & Judy Wilson

Robert & Deborah Wingerter

Reba Boyd Wooden*

Zionsville Physical Therapy*

*Denotes sustaining members

The Ovation Society is an exclusive program that recognizes donors that have made a legacy gift to the IRT. The IRT truly appreciates those individuals whose gift will ensure that the Theatre can continue to provide meaningful and inspirational experiences for future generations.

Gary Addison

Janet Allen & Joel Grynheim

Bob & Pat Anker

Bob & Toni Bader

Frank & Katrina Basile

Charlie & Cary Boswell

Ron & Julia Carpenter

John R. Carr (in memoriam)

John & Mary Challman

Sergej R. Cotton

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Dapp

Nancy Davis & Robert Robinson

Rollie & Cheri Dick

Nancy & Berkley Duck

Dale & Karen Duncan

Jim & Julie Freeman

Meg Gammage-Tucker

David A. & Dee Garrett (in memoriam)

Michael Gradison (in memoriam)

Emily F. (Cramer) Hancock*

Michael N. Heaton

Bruce Hetrick & Cheri O’Neill

Tom & Nora Hiatt

Brenda Horn

Bill & Nancy Hunt

David Kleiman & Susan Jacobs

Frank & Jacqueline La Vista

Andra Liepa Charitable Fund, a fund of The Indianapolis Foundation

Barbara MacDougall

Donald & Ruth Ann MacPherson

Stuart L. Main (in memoriam)

Michael R. & Sue Maine

Megan McKinney

Sharon R. Merriman

David & Leslie Morgan

Michael D. Moriarty

Richard & Lila Morris

Mutter Marines--Jim & Carol

Deena J. Nystrom

Marcia O’Brien (in memoriam)

George & Olive Rhodes (in memoriam)

Jane W. Schlegel

Michael Skehan

Michael Suit (in memoriam)

Gene & Mary Tempel

Jeff & Benita Thomasson

Christopher J. Tolzmann

Alan & Elizabeth Whaley

John & Margaret Wilson

THE SUPPORTING CAST

INDIANA REPERTORY THEATRE DONORS

IN HONOR OF JANET ALLEN | Sarah C. Barney

IN HONOR OF JANET ALLEN’S RETIREMENT | Rabbis Dennis & Sandy Sasso

IN MEMORY OF JED KHALID | Rauf J. Khalid

IN MEMORY OF PATRICIA STASH | Janeann Pitz

IN HONOR OF GENE & MARY TEMPEL | Anna Fender

IN HONOR OF BILL VARANKA | Catherine M. Turner

IN MEMORY OF WILLIAM VARANKA | Cynthia Mahony

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Printing Partners

FOUNDATION

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Charitable Foundation

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The Margot L. Eccles Arts & Culture Fund, a fund of CICF

The Glick Family Foundation

Lacy Foundation

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Nicholas H. Noyes Jr. Memorial Foundation, Inc.

The Penrod Society

The Shubert Foundation

GOVERNMENT

Indiana Arts Commission

Indy Arts Council and the City of Indianapolis

Supported by the Indy Arts and Culture Restart & Resilience Fund: An Indy Arts Council program made possible by Lilly Endowment Inc.

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Marta Gross & Richard M. Barnes

John & Carol Longfellow

Nan Schulte & Matt Russell

ANNUAL CAMPAIGN GIFTS $300+ | JULY 1, 2022 - JANUARY 12, 2023
50
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