
Don & Ann Brown Theatre
Theatre To Think About
Theatre To Think About
Northern Trust is proud to support Palm Beach Dramaworks. For more than 130 years, we’ve been meeting our clients’ financial needs while nurturing a culture of caring and a commitment to invest in the communities we serve. Because we firmly believe the show must go on. FOR
Welcome to Suzan-Lori Parks’ Pulitzer Prize-winning Topdog/Underdog, our final production of the 2022-23 season. We want to thank everyone – actors, directors, staff, designers, stage managers, tech crew, volunteers, and our wonderful patrons – for making the season such a great success.
Now, we want you to meet the newest member of our staff and our first chief financial & operating officer, Rudina Toro. We have known the immensely talented Rudina for years, and we’re confident that her business acumen will be a game-changer for PBD. Rudina, the floor is yours.
Working at PBD is such a special opportunity. I grew up in theatre; my mom was a producing artistic director in Albania, where I was born, and my favorite uncle was an actor and director with the national theatre. He also read plays on the radio and acted in movies. Both were exceedingly caring, nurturing, and generous, and always happy to take me to work. I took them up on every offer, which means I was at the theatre more than anywhere else during my entire childhood. So, theatre is really in my blood.
When I was a young teenager, my family moved to South Florida and considered our plans for the future. In his infinite wisdom, my dad steered me toward a business career. He knew I was good with numbers and believed an accounting degree would perpetually provide opportunities and security. As always, he was right. Even now, I know that if I can access an organization’s financials, I can understand most everything about the operation; numbers always tell the real story.
Prior to joining the PBD team, I was CFO at two nonprofits. But I spent the first 14 years of my career with a CPA firm and met Sue Ellen while working there. We collaborated on the very first PBD audit when the nonprofit was newly established, and we connected instantly. I started coming to shows at the Banyan theatre and never left.
As an accounting professional, I feel I must be entirely invested in an organization’s mission so I can help support it and contribute to its success. And PBD is such a good fit: I respect and admire Bill and Sue Ellen and the incredible work they do. I cannot think of another local company that creates such enriching and impactful work, and I am beyond grateful for the opportunity and the trust they place in me daily.
Contributing to life-changing work is the privilege of a lifetime, as I have witnessed first-hand the transformative power of PBD. When my husband and I first started dating, he was unfamiliar with theatre. I said, “I love PBD, and you have to go with me.” He wanted to make me happy, so he said he would do whatever I wanted. From his first show, The Dresser, he was completely won over and now attends all productions eagerly. We hope our two girls, Logan and Remi, will grow up to feel the same!
My husband and I first came to Dramaworks when the company was performing at a hole-in-the-wall theatre on Clematis. We were so impressed with the quality of the plays and the performers that we quickly became subscribers. Because I liked what they were doing, and I liked the people involved, I also began volunteering. That was 20 years ago, and I’m so delighted by the company’s continued growth and evolution. The move to the Don & Ann Brown theatre gave Dramaworks the opportunity to enhance its production values; the set, costume, lighting, and sound design enrich the entire experience.
If I had the financial resources, I would give enormous sums to Dramaworks, because Dramaworks has given so much to me. But I have to be realistic. So, when they started the monthly giving campaign, I was the first person to sign up. It’s easy to pay a fixed amount each month, and by the end of the year, the money adds up. I know how much it’s appreciated, and it’s very gratifying to help out. And I still volunteer!
Bill Bone & Chris Larmoyeux help injured people get their lives back together.
The law firm of Larmoyeux & Bone exclusively represents victims of automobile negligence, medical malpractice, product liability and other claims involving serious injury or death.
Chris Larmoyeux and Bill Bone are specialists in civil trial law as certified by the Florida Bar. The firm is located downtown at CityPlace, 550 South Quadrille Boulevard, Suite 200, West Palm Beach, Florida 33401. Tel: {561} 832-9400 www.LB-LAW.com
My plays are for the kind of black people who relate to funk music, to Parliament-Funkadelic.
When those guys get out of a spaceship –the idea that black people are from outer space, there’s a poetic truth to that. We are this vast people.
― Suzan-Lori Parks
Palm Beach Dramaworks presents
William Hayes
Producing Artistic Director
Sue Ellen Beryl
Managing Director
by Suzan-Lori ParksTopdog/Underdog is presented by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York.
Produced on Broadway by Carole Shorenstein Hays, Waxman/Williams
Entertainment, Bob Boyett, Freddy De Mann, Susan Dietz, Ina Meibach, Scott Nederlander, Ira Pittelman Hits Magazine, Kelpine Arts, Rick Steiner/Frederic H. Mayerson, The Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival.
Original New York production by The Joseph Papp Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival, George C. Wolfe, Producer.
Theatre To Think About
by Suzan-Lori ParksDirector
Belinda "Be" Boyd
Executive Producer
Penny Bank
Stage Manager
Suzanne Clement Jones*
Scenic Design
Seth Howard
Costume Design
Brian O’Keefe
Lighting Design
Kirk Bookman
Sound Design
Roger Arnold
Fight Choreographer
David A. Hyland
In Suzan-Lori Parks’ funny and tragic Pulitzer Prize winning Topdog/Underdog, African American brothers Lincoln (Link) and Booth are ensnared in an endless loop of poverty, hustling, and violence. They’ve been fending for themselves since their parents abandoned them when they were teenagers, and live together in Booth’s seedy boarding house room. Lincoln, a master of the con game three-card monte, threw in his cards for a “legitimate” job as an Abraham Lincoln impersonator in whiteface and stovepipe hat, making $314 a week at an arcade where customers pretend to shoot the president. Booth, who has an aversion to work and desires only to learn how to become the best three-card monte hustler on the street, wants his brother to teach him the art of the con. Meanwhile, he spends his time shoplifting. The brothers alternately support and disparage each other – often quite hilariously – as they look back at their troubled past and look ahead to an uncertain future.
Topdog/Underdog is a play about sibling rivalry, about a modern-day Cain and Abel, about one more dysfunctional family. But it is about so much more: Parks didn’t name her characters Lincoln and Booth for nothing. “The play is about the failure of the American Dream,” says director Belinda “Be” Boyd, “and specifically how the failure of the American Dream affects this African American family. The parents gave their sons $500 apiece when they left, which indicates to me that they weren’t poverty stricken. So, I think that at one time the parents were building something and bought into the American Dream. And then whatever they were building fell through, and the family fractured. Imagine that abandonment. What do you do with your pain? How do you navigate what life has to offer you?”
Lincoln and Booth had no safety net and fell through the cracks. Lacking adult guidance when they were coming of age, they never had the opportunity to nurture the
skills they needed to make something of themselves. Lincoln is smart, and under different circumstances might very well have led the successful life he craves. But he can’t get there. Booth has an outsized personality but is insecure, impulsive, aggressive, and angry, and has no tools to help him get out of his own way.
“At the very beginning of the play, Parks tells us who Link and Booth are,” Boyd says. “She doesn’t apologize for their challenges and flaws, the things that keep them from functioning in the world in a way that is healthy. We think we know them right off the bat, but we find out so much more about them as she continues to peel back the layers. What she does so beautifully is she lets us see their hearts, what they think, how they feel, and what could be. They have this familial relationship that is both incredibly tight and incredibly fragile, and she makes us love them and bond with them, while making us angry and frustrated and at times disgusted with them. She takes us on this incredible journey with these two young men, and we see them and treat them as human beings.”
Boyd directed Topdog/Underdog once before, in 2010, and her view of the play has shifted over time. “When I first directed it, I thought we were on the cusp of understanding the plight of the young, urban African American man,” she says. “I thought this play was educational, and would help enlighten audiences. Today, I still think of it is an educational piece, but I also think of it as historical. I thought things would be very different by now for African American men. And in many ways, they are. But then again, in many ways they aren’t. One example: the Black teenager in Kansas City who went to pick up his brother, went to the wrong house, rang the doorbell, and was shot by a White man. Too many people still don’t get it. I think that the people who come to see this play really want to educate themselves and try to have more insight into how to navigate humanity.”
Boyd is delighted to be back at PBD following her debut last season with Intimate Apparel. “That was such a beautiful experience,” she says. “I was blessed with an incredible cast. I laughed a lot and enjoyed crafting the piece. I loved the energy of the theatre and the people and the audience – I was so impressed by the audience. They’re so engaged, so hungry, and so appreciative. I feel like I’ve found kindred spirits here, a theatrical family.”
Palm Beach Dramaworks presents CAST
Lincoln...........................George Anthony Richardson*
Booth......................................................Jovon Jacobs*
SETTING Here TIME Now
Production Crew
Stage Manager ..................................................................... Suzanne Clement Jones*
Assistant Stage Manager.................................................................... Tyler B. Osgood
Head Stagehand........................................................................... Caroline Castleman
Wardrobe Supervisor .............................................................................John Santillan
Head Electrician ...................................................................................... Addie Pawlick
The videotaping or making of electronic or other audio/visual recordings of this production and distributing recordings or streams in any medium, including the internet, is strictly prohibited, a violation of the authors(‘s) rights and actionable under United States copyright law. For more information visit https://www.concordtheatricals.com/resources/protectingartists.
(Lincoln) is an artist based in NYC. A 2021 graduate of Juilliard, his recent acting credits include Tanya Barfield’s Blue Door and Hansol Jung’s Cardboard Piano. He made his Broadway debut earlier this season in the acclaimed revival of Topdog/Underdog, and is honored to revisit this enthralling story of two brothers working desperately to transcend the tragic phenomenon of domination. He sends a huge Thank You to God, his family, his team (Dan, Colin, John), and the entire cast and crew of Topdog/Underdog at PBD.
JOVON JACOBS (Booth) is elated to be returning to PBD, where he was most recently seen in last season’s production of Intimate Apparel. He is a Silver Palm Award recipient (2019) for his performances in Fences (PBD), A Raisin in the Sun (New City Players), and Skeleton Crew (GableStage). Other regional credits include Last Night in Inwood and The Glass Piano (Theatre Lab), The Royale and It’s A Wonderful Life (Barter Theatre), Sweat and Ain’t Misbehavin’ (CCT Theatre), Summer Shorts (City Theatre/Adrienne Arsht Center, 2019 and 2022), Boesman and Lena (Mad Cow Theatre), All The Way (Actors’ Playhouse), Informed Consent (GableStage), One Night In Miami (Miami New Drama), and Five Guys Named Moe (M Ensemble Company). Film credits include No Vacancy (Prime Video), Love on the Reef, and Rap Sh!t (HBO). Jovon holds a BFA in acting and is a proud member of Actors’ Equity. @singaboi_jj.
BELINDA
BOYD (Director) is excited to return to PBD after directing Intimate Apparel last season. As a show director for the Walt Disney Company, she directed theme park shows as well as productions for Disney Event Group and the Disney Institute. Additional professional directing includes productions in New York, Texas, Toronto, Tennessee, North Carolina, Kentucky, Vermont, and Florida. A member of Actors’ Equity, Be has performed for several Shakespeare companies. Her voice-over and commercial credits include KFC, Wycliffe, Disney, Thrifty Car Rental, Belk, Zora’s Roots (Zora Neale Hurston documentary), Food Lion, and The Gallery series. A member of the Dramatists Guild, she was commissioned by Orlando Repertory Theatre to create a script about the Ocoee massacre. She will also be seen in the title role in an upcoming documentary about Mary McLeod Bethune. Be has been a consultant for corporations/ companies including Tourism for South Africa, FARO (3D technology, engineering, and computer simulation), and Mursion (virtual training).
performingarts.cah.ucf.edu/faculty-staff/ profile/334
SUZAN-LORI PARKS (Playwright) is the first African-American woman to receive the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Other awards include a MacArthur “Genius” Grant and the prestigious Gish Prize. Theatre includes Topdog/Underdog (Pulitzer), adaptation of Porgy and Bess (Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical), 365 Days/365 Plays, Father Comes Home from the Wars (Part 1, 2 and 3), The Book of Grace, The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World, Imperceptible Mutabilities in the Third Kingdom, Venus, Unchain My Heart: The Ray Charles Musical, The America Play,
Watch Me Work, In the Blood, White Noise, Sally & Tom, Plays for the Plague Years, and The Harder They Come. Film: Girl 6, The United States vs. Billie Holiday. TV: Genius: Aretha (creator/writer/showrunner). Novel: Getting Mother’s Body. Parks writes songs and fronts her band Sula & The Noise. She credits James Baldwin, her writing teacher and mentor, for starting her on the path of playwriting.
SUZANNE CLEMENT
JONES (Stage Manager) has been stage managing at PBD since All My Sons in 2011, the company’s first production at the Don & Ann Brown Theatre. Recent shows for PBD include 4000 Miles, The Belle of Amherst, Intimate Apparel, The People Downstairs, Ordinary Americans, The House of Blue Leaves, and House on Fire. At Maltz Jupiter Theatre: Oliver!, Sweet Charity, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, An Inspector Calls, Brighton Beach Memoirs, and I Hate Hamlet. As a lighting designer, productions include The Subject was Roses, The Price, and That Championship Season at PBD; Cane and The Cha-Cha of a Camel Spider at Florida Stage; Death and the Maiden and The Birds at Mosaic Theatre; and Ring of Fire at Arts Garage. She earned a Carbonell Award for her lighting design of Dark Rapture in 1995. Suzanne has an MFA in design from Northwestern University, is proud to be a member of Actors’ Equity Association, and is presently leading the South Florida Equity Community.
SETH HOWARD (Scenic Designer) is a freelance scenic designer based out of Orlando. He has designed many regional productions and themed experiences across the country, and is excited to be joining PBD for this production of Topdog/Underdog. Some of his recent design credits include The Mountaintop and Deathtrap (Constellation Stage & Screen), Jersey Boys (Theatre Aspen), Once on This Island (Charleston Stage), and Princess & Frog and The Wiz Jr. (The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati). He received his BFA in stage design, props, and scenic art from the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM).
@sethhowarddesign / sethhowarddesigns.com
BRIAN O’KEEFE (Costume Design) began designing for PBD in 2009, became costume shop manager and resident designer in 2015, and has designed over 60 shows here. He has received 11 Carbonell Award nominations, winning for Les Liaisons Dangereuses, The Lion in Winter, and A Doll's House, and was a Silver Palm Award recipient in 2022. A graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill, he spent his earlier career as a patternmaker for the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, DC and major costume houses in New York, including Barbara Matera, Ltd., Parsons-Meares, Michael-Jon Costumes, and Eaves-Brooks. He was later resident designer, principal patternmaker, and shop manager for Seaside Music Theatre in Daytona Beach, spending 16 years designing over 75 productions and supervising 90 more. Other regional design credits: Playmakers Repertory Theatre, Orlando Repertory Theatre, Winter Park Playhouse, St. Augustine's Limelight Theatre, University of Central Florida. Other regional patterning credits: Alabama and Utah Shakespeare Festivals, and Stages St. Louis.
KIRK BOOKMAN (Lighting Design) For PBD, he has designed August: Osage County, The Science of Leaving Omaha, Twelve Angry Men, 4000 Miles, The Belle of Amherst, Intimate Apparel, The Duration, Almost, Maine, The People Downstairs, A Streetcar Named Desire, The House of Blue Leaves, Equus, Satchmo at the Waldorf, Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill, and Buried Child. Maltz Jupiter Theatre: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Thoroughly Modern Millie, and Glengarry Glen Ross. NYC: American Dance Machine at the Joyce Theater; Closer Than Ever at The York Theatre Company; Company with the New York Philharmonic starring Neil Patrick Harris and Patti LuPone (subsequently broadcast in movie theatres nationwide); Charles Busch’s The Divine Sister, Shanghai Moon, and The Tribute Artist Broadway: The Sunshine Boys (with Jack Klugman and Tony Randall), The Gin Game (with Julie Harris and Charles Durning), and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. San Francisco Symphony and PBS: The Thomashefskys with Michael Tilson Thomas. Many productions for Pittsburgh Public Theater and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.
ROGER ARNOLD (Sound Design) has been a freelance sound engineer and designer for over 35 years. He is a voting member of both NARAS (the Grammys) and the Audio Engineering Society (AES.org). Roger became an educator of music technology in 2006 and was the senior music technology professor at the University of New Haven. During his tenure there, he designed and provided sound for The Rocky Horror Show, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, and Spring Awakening. In 2018, he relocated to South Florida, and in 2019 he became sound engineer and resident sound designer for PBD, where his credits include August: Osage County, The Science of Leaving Omaha, Twelve Angry Men, 4000 Miles, The Belle of Amherst, Intimate Apparel, The Duration, Almost, Maine, The People Downstairs, and Skylight. BA in music and sound recording, University of New Haven. MA in music technology, University of Newcastle.
DAVID A. HYLAND (Fight Choreographer) is the Chair of the Theatre Department at Palm Beach State College. He was previously seen at PBD as Sheriff Deon Gilbeau in August: Osage County (he was also the fight choreographer), The Visitor in The Spitfire Grill, Herr Fahrenkopf in The Night of the Iguana, Sam Craig in Our Town, Karl Lindner in A Raisin in the Sun, and Frank in All My Sons. Additionally, David was recently the fight choreographer for Twelve Angry Men and Almost, Maine, understudying the male roles in the latter. He has also been seen in South Florida at Theatre Lab, playing Roger in Tar Beach. Other notable credits include Edward in Someone Who'll Watch Over Me, Eddie in Fool for Love, and Benedick and Dogberry in a six-actor version of Much Ado About Nothing. David also performs regularly with an improv theatre group called Mod 27 and holds an MFA in acting from The Ohio State University.
TYLER B. OSGOOD (Assistant Stage Manager) is excited to be spending his second season with PBD. Regional credits include the Young Playwrights 10-Minute and 1-Minute Play Contests (2023), the One Humanity Tour (2022), August: Osage County, The Science of Leaving Omaha, Twelve Angry Men, 4000 Miles, The Belle of Amherst, Intimate Apparel, The Duration, Almost, Maine, and The People Downstairs at PBD; The Sound of Music, Songs Under the Stars, The Very Hungry Caterpillar Show, Holiday Heroes 2019, A Christmas Carol 2019, and Sunday in the Park with George at ZACH Theatre; A Wrinkle in Time, A Christmas Carol 2018, Detroit ’67, and The Age of Innocence at McCarter Theatre. Tyler is a proud graduate of Texas State University, where he earned his BFA in theatre technology and production.
Actors’ Equity Association (AEA) was founded in 1913 as the first of the American actor unions. Equity’s mission is to advance, promote and foster the art of live theatre as an essential component of our society. Today, Equity represents more than 40,000 actors, singers, dancers and stage managers working in hundreds of theatres across the United States. Equity members are dedicated to working in the theatre as a profession, upholding the highest artistic standards.
Equity negotiates wages and working conditions and provides a wide range of benefits including health and pension plans for its members. Through its agreement with Equity, this theatre has committed to the fair treatment of the actors and state managers employed in this production.
AEA is a member of the AFL-CIO and is affiliated with FIA, an international organization of performing arts unions. For more information,visit www.actorsequity.org.
Topdog/Underdog is a story of urban, African American brotherhood/manhood and the perpetual game of survival, shaped by family, loss, love, myth, mystery, and violence.
Belinda “Be” Boyd
Executive
Producing Artistic Director
Managing Director
Chief Financial & Operating Officer
Administrative
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Development Manager
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The Dramaworkshop Manager
Box Office & Group Sales Manager
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Production
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Resident Director
Resident Lighting Designer
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Charge Scenic Artist/Carpenter
Wardrobe Supervisor
Assistant Stage Manager
Head Stagehand
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Poster Artwork
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William Hayes
Sue Ellen Beryl
Rudina Toro
Lara Garcia
Linda Berman
Gary Cadwallader
Kenzie Frysztak
Pierre Tannous
Bruce Linser
Mark Sullivan
Darius Rivera
Desmond Lewis
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Banyan Garage: 200 Banyan Blvd. between Olive Ave. and Narcissus Ave. = 3 minutes
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Peter Rezzonico
Elaine and Larry Rothenberg
As a corporate partner of PBD, you will enjoy exclusive benefits and recognition including opportunities to entertain clients and employees, networking events with diverse groups of theatre supporters, and co-branding opportunities with one of the most highly regarded professional theatres in South Florida.
Benefits may include:
• Complimentary tickets to a sponsored performance/event with opportunity to purchase additional tickets
• Logo inclusion in the playbill
• Stage mention at sponsored performance/event
• Invitation as a sponsor to exclusive events, programs, and performances
• Recognition as a sponsor on PBD’s website, in the playbill, and on signage at sponsored event
• Opportunity to host a pre-show reception at the theatre on night of your choice (expenses to be paid by corporate partner)
• An ad in all season playbills
For more information call Linda Berman (561) 514-4042 ext 106 or email lberman@palmbeachdramaworks.org
Beth Alcalde, Akerman LLP
Madeline and Stephen Anbinder
Edwige and John Bade
Michael Bakst and Tim Harris
Judy and Sam Barker
Sherry and Tom Barrat
Jameson Baxter
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Roy Cacciaguida
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Gail and John Cooney
Karol and Paul Costa
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Stuart and Lynn Edinoff
Mary Jo and Vince Elhilow
Arlene and Glenn Englander
Diane Exter
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James Fuld
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Richard and Connie Galley
Sandra and George Garfunkel
Joan Gelch and Morris Weintraub
Virginia Gibson
Toby Gluckstern
Mary Cirillo-Goldberg and Jay Goldberg
Sandra and Paul Goldner
Roe Green
Rachel Grody
Byron Gross and Ricky Tovim
Peter Grossman and Lawrence Timmins
Allison and Stuart Haft
Marcia Halpern
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Joann and Forrest Hayes
Carla and David Herwitz
Phyllis Hopman
Jean Hutchison
Sherry and Michael Hyman
Patricia and William Jordan
Jeanne Kanders
Daniel Kaufman and Timothy Beaver
Judy and Jerry Kaufman
Allan and Margaret Keene
Susan and Charles Kiernan
David Kwiat
Marsha and Henry Laufer
Monica and Scott Laurans
Arlene Lazarus
Patricia Lebow
Sidney Lesowitz and Peter Rogers
Wendi Levine and Hall Sisson
Judy Lewent and Mark Shapiro
Terry and David Liddell
Ibby Lucas
Virginia Lynn
Macy's Inc.
Stephen and Emily Magowan
Barbara and Eric Malkin
Pamela and Brian McIver
McNulty Charitable Foundation
Thomas Meier
Joan and Carlton Moody
Jeri and Charles Muoio
Elsie and Dick Myers
Elinor and Harold Oertell
Lenore Orlowska-Warren and Donald Warren
Palm Beach County Human Rights Council
Martha and Ward C. Parker
Mary Ellen and Michael Peyton
Norman Resnick
Elizabeth and Gerald Rorer
Carrie and Stan Rosenbaum
Linda and Jay Rosenkranz
Jeff Rosenkranz
Linda and Harold Rosenson
Carol and Joseph Rosetti
Joseph O. Rubinelli, Jr.
Fran and Leon Sachs
Elizabeth and John Santoro
Donna Marie Schooley
Hazel and Michael Schultz
Susan Schwartz
Lindalee and Robert Scrivener
Anita and Bob Seidemann
Caroline and Bill Shepherd
Phyllis and Herbert Siegel
Linda and Don Silpe
$1,000 - $4,999
You for Supporting Our Annual
Your generosity keeps the curtain rising!
$1,000
Culver Smith and Donna Marks
Smith, Ball and Maez Injury Lawyers
Karin and John Strasswimmer
Connie Tamburo
Elissa Terry Gunster
D'Vera Topol
Robin and Richard Abedon
Michele and James Banker
Sherry Norris and John Bauman
Nancy and Peter Berkley
Penny and Harold Blumenstein
Nancy and Peter Brown
Paul Bernabeo and David Cohen
Laura Cole
Martha and Milt Dalitzky
William Deskin
Mikella Di'Siena
Louise Dougher
Harriett Eckstein
Elaine and Thomas Ermolovich
Beth and Rich Fentin
Lynne and Perry Feyk
Willie and Jerod Field
Marsha Fishbane
Pam and Don Ford
Anonymous
Ira Adler
Linda Agnolucci
Deanna and Bernard Albert
Doris and Harry Albirt
Diane and Peter Arnet
Beth Baker
Joan Balfour
Charles Balkcom
Donald and Norita Bandel
Helene Barnett and Howard Rubin
Catherine and Steven Barre
Catherine and Steven Barre
Susan Bauchner
Nadine Bederson
Nancy and Mark Bender
Donna and Charles Ward
Frances and Robert Weisman
Ron Wetzel and Nathan Hench
Louise Ross and Bruce Wolf
Lee Wolf and Jordan Cohen
Diane and John Wren
Marcy and Jack Zeltzer
Anonymous
Eric Geller and Susan Metzler Kirkman
Brenda Kulick and Jay Gettinger
Valerie and Robert Goldfein
Elaine and Joel Goldstein
Cathy Gropper
Michael Hoagland and Joseph Kolb
Judith Hochroth and Allan Green
Enid Hoffman
Gayle Brody Jacobs
David Kamp
Sheryl and Leonard Kessler
Nancy and Paul Knapp
Marjorie and Sheldon Konigsberg
Phyllis and Larry Kushins
Ellen Livingston and Edward Levitt
Barry Benjamin
Nancy Beren
Ellen Bernstein
Bob and Cherrie Bierley
Nona Redding Bilionis
Lori Black
Margaret and Matthew Blake
Susan and Jerome Block
Jane Bloom
Bill Blumberg
Susan and Paul Brenner
Roslyn and Alan Brilliant
Audrey Brody
Helene and Ken Brower
Bonnie and Bob Buchanan
Philip Buttaravoli
Dennis Butz and Susan Gould
Barbara and Myron Levy
Miriam Lieff and Albert Goldberg
Nancy and Paul McKenna
Kari Floren and Michael McKenzie
Country Club at Mirasol
Wilma and Charles Mooney
Luann and Bill Parmelee
Mary Jane Range
Brenda and Larry Robinson
Carolyn Rowe
Jill and Neil Senzer
Barbara Sommers
Lois Steinberg
Jayne Suskin
Donna and Malcolm Wattman
Kimberly and Roger Yaseen
Eleanor and Joel Yura
Brenda and Gary Caplan
Iris Capobianco
Carol L. Carnevale
Sandra and Lowell Cook
Dennis Creaghan and
Deborah Esposito
Janet and David Desmon
Genevieve Dole
Margaret Donnelley
Lawrence Dougher
Linda and Philip Dunmire
Cheryl Dunn Bychek
Dana Egert
Shelly and Neal Ehrenberg
Karen and Jay Eliezer
Harriet Ellis
Janet L. Ellis
Marie and Geoffery Etherington
Matthew Farley
Ronnie Fassberg
Donna and Steven Feldman
Charles Feller
Ann and Lee Fensterstock
Nona Fine
Karen Fischer
Claire Barenholtz and Alan Fishman
Melanie and Mort Fishman
Margaret Flah
Leona and Marvin Fleischman
Regina Foon and Albert Seidner
Karen Sue Fox
Helen Franke
Deena and Seymour Freeman
Judy and Barry Friedfeld
Ann and Ira Friedman
Marilyn and Carlo Funes
Diana and Elliot Garfinkel
Sandy and Frank Geller
Ilene Gerber
Rana Gerson
Carol Getson
Diane and Robert Ghormley
Doris Gilman
Vivian and Harvey Glassman
Suzanne Gold
Sue Goldfinger and Timothy Bell
Rona Goldstein
Joan Goldstein
Sharon and Bruce Goodman
Michael Goodman
Dianne and Martin Gorbaty
Lydia and Stuart Gordon
Conrad Goulet and Orlando Chiang
Gail and Ed Greenberg
Zee Jay and Jerry Greenspan
Joseph Guidetti
Lenora Hall
Carol and Albert Hallac
Jackie and Arthur Harris
Susan Hemmer and Floyd Sovacool
Auta and Robert Hendler
Anne and Robert Hite
Wendy Honig
Nancy and Barry Horowitz
Alesia and John Hoy
Jennifer Jackson
Isa and Ken Joseph
Ellen and Jerry Kahan
Elaine and Harmon Katz
Paula Katz and Bob Davison
Judy and John Keller
Debra Kelly-Ennis and Joe Nestic
Marshall Kern
Barbara Messick and Emil Kessler
Gail and Michael Kirsch
Lois and Larry Kleinberg
Arlene Fine Klepper
Edward Klotz and Linda Allen
Helen and Al Kniberg
Shirley Koo
Linda and Gene Kopf
Matthew Korinko
Ellen and Irving Kramer
Ellen and Jerry Kranzler
Gail and Sid Kreppel
Ethel and Marvin Krotenberg
Iris and Steven Lapidus
Marilyn and Alan LeRoy
Ann and Stephen Leber
Albert Leizman and Ann Harte
Wynne Leon
Ann and David Levin
Stephanie and Sam Levine
Shelley Levine
Dr. Jerold and Renee Kramer
Meron Levitats
Cheryl and Al Liebowitz
Marilyn and Richard Litner
Rachel and Per Lorentzen
Jeffrey Luft
Arlene and David Lurie
Anonymous
Stephen and Emily Magowan
Mary Ann Martin
Millie and David McCoy
Nicki McDonald
Jim and Gail McKay
Etta and Froman Mehl
Elaine and David Mendelow
Daisy and John Merey
Sharon and Keith Meyer
Deborah and Ernest Mhoon
Madeline and Arthur Millman
Joan Milowe
Peg Minges
Daniel and Harriet Mironov
Harriet Molk
Eileen and Anthony Montalbano
Barbara Morgenstern
Beverly and Marvin Morse
Alice and Allan Mostoff
Samuel Neulinger
Carolyne New
Sheila and Stuart Novins
Alison and Thomas O'Brien
Laura and William Orlove
Abby and Steve Perelman
Muriel and Bill Perlberg
Dennis Perry
Zakia and Stan Phillips
James Sabin and Yolanda Phinney
Charlotte and Norman Plotsky
Robin and Joseph Pollack
Marsha and Jerry Pollak
Jill and Lee Pollock
Joyce and Norman Primost
Joan Putterman
Diane Quinn
Rochelle and George Ram
Geri and Irv Ratner
Sue Regan
Susan and Erick Reickert
Giselle Reischer and Harvey Rubinson
Beverly Reuter and Arthur Hurwitz
Alison and David Rice
Marilyn Rice
Beverly Ringel
Joel Risch and Richard Smith
Patti and John Riter
Marilyn Ritter
Helenan and Stanley Robin
Stephen Roos and Terri Sobrane
Paige M. Rose
Pearl and Stanley Rosenberg
Susan and Jerome Rosenzweig
Barbara and Chip Ross
Marie Louise and Randolph Roy
Pamela Saba
Fran Sadoff-LeBow
Billie and Steven Sandler
Henrietta and Bergino Santo
Seawinds Singer Island
Marty and David Schindler
Peter Schneider and Dena Seigel
Barbara Schulman
Amy and Richard Schwed
Merri Scott
Carole Sebbane
Rita Seidner
Christine and Mark Shalloway
Steve Shapiro
Linda Sherby
Tina Parsons and
Randy Sherman
Judy and Mark Shernicoff
Phoebe and Sam Shochat
Elizabeth and Alan Shulman
Tracy Siani
Bernice Rieders Sickle
Paul Siegel
Sybil and Marshall Sigel
Debra A. Silver
Miriam and Ron Silverman
Nellie Lou Slagle
Tema Smeyne and Edward Gerstein
Joyce and Robert Smith
Felice and Marty Solomon
Linda Sorenson
June and Jerome Spunberg
Molly and Nick St. Cavish
Mark and Phyllis Stein
Jerry and Myra Stemerman
Barbara and Fred Stern
Shirley Stone Cohlan
Goldie and Alan Stopek
Marc Strassler
Cari and Lenny Sukienik
Judith Suslow
Terrie Temkin
Joan and Irwin Tepper
Shirley and Jack Thompson
Susan and Martin Trefler
Elaine C. Tucker
Beth and Jim Walton
Bruce Warshal
James B. Watson
Betty Weber
Arlin Weingold and Natalie Pincus
Howard Weinstein and Suzanne LeVine
Commissioner Gregg K. and Rebecca Weiss
Barbara and Stephen Weiss
Diane and Stephen Weiss
Carol Weltz
Nancy and David Wolf
Robin Woodard
Allison Worthington
Desi and Ben Zalman
Esther and Richard Zaretsky
A great big thanks to all of you who contributed to our Take a Deep Breath Campaign, helping us to achieve our stringent safety protocols and breathe easy in our beautiful theatre.
$100,000
Honorable Ann Brown
Louise and Barry Snyder
Toni and Martin Sosnoff
$50,000
Nancy and Gene Beard
$25,000
Sue Ellen Beryl and William Hayes
Penny Bank Ruth and Ted Baum
Tina and Jeff Bolton
Leah and Ed Frankel Foundation
Nancy Goodes
$15,000
$10,000
Sally Nathanson
$5,000
Edwige and John Bade
Roy Bartolomei and Peter Wronsky
Lucy W. Cook
Anonymous
Cathy and Tom Farmer
Arlene F. and Donald Fleischman
Renate Franco
Linda L. and Keith Beaty
Karen and Alfred Blum
Joan and Lyle Brundage
Paula Kaminsky Davis
Dinah Fulton
Rochelle and David A. Hirsch
Michael Hoagland and Joseph Kolb
Stephen Brown and Jamie Stern
Phyllis and Herbert J. Siegel
Aarne
Mimi and Frank Walsh
$1,000 - $2,500
Pam and Bob Goergen
Alice Gross
Byron Gross and Ricky Tovim
Ann and Bob Hagelstein
Anonymous
Priscilla Heublein
$500 - $999
Sherry and Stephen Jacobs
Marjorie and Sheldon Konigsberg
Judy and Lew Kramer
Laura Brooks
Randi and Norman Pecan
Stephanie and John Pew
Joanne Polozker
Barbara N. Prine
Patricia and William Jordan
Terry Liddell
Zelda Mason
Arlene and Richard Siudek
Nicki van Vonno
Diana and John Weir
Lois and Barry Weiss
Ann Marie and Peter Rezzonico
Naomi Rosenberg
Carol and Joseph Rosetti
Francine and Art Siegel
Lois Steinberg
Zee Jay and Jerry Greenspan
Marcy and Jack Zeltzer
If you’d like to contribute to the campaign, visit our new website, www.palmbeachdramaworks.org/donate.
The PBD Restaurant Club provides our patrons with special offers and discounts throughout the season at these restaurants that support our theatre.
Complimentary scoop of gelato with the purchase of an entrée
185 Banyan Blvd
(561) 342-6699
Complimentary order of fries with the purchase of a burger
213 Clematis St
(561) 651-1075
3-Course Prix Fixe Dinner ($34.99)
120 S Dixie Hwy (561) 659-7373
10% off (excludes tax, gratuity, and happy hour items)
207 Clematis St
(561) 899-3117
3-Course Prix Fixe Dinner ($52-offer valid show days only))
101 N Clematis St (561) 833-5090
Complimentary order of guacamole w/ purchase of (2) entrees
224 Clematis St (561) 650-1001
palmbeachdramaworks.org
2023-2024 Compass LGBTQ+ Community Center
Our mission is to engage, empower and enrich the lives of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) people and those impacted by HIV and AIDS.
Opportu Internships
Sponsorships
Volunteering & Service Work
Business Alliance Membership
Diversity and Inclusion Training
SAVE THE DATES!
Puertas Abiertas - Oct. 14, 2023
SMART Ride - Nov. 17 to 18, 2023
World AIDS Day - Dec. 1, 2023
Cocktails for Compass - Dec. 11, 2023
AIDS Memorial Quilt - Dec. 1 to 31, 2023
Miss. Palm Beach Pride - Feb. 2024
Palm Beach Pride - Mar. 23 to 24, 2024
Stonewall Ball - Jun. 29, 2024
HIV Testing & Education
Health Services
Social & Support Groups
Mental Health Services
Business Alliance
Youth & Family Services
Palm Beach Dramaworks is a professional, nonprofit theatre company that engages and entertains audiences with provocative and timeless productions that personally impact each individual.
To enhance the quality of life through the transformative power of live theatre.
Ruth Baum
Nancy Beard
Ravi Chaturvedi
Esther Dinerstein
Roe Green
Daryn M. Kirchfeld
Sidney Lesowitz
J. Barry Lewis
Sherron Long
Pamela McIver
Marilyn Meyerhoff
Charles Muoio
Sally Nathanson
Robert Nederlander
Shari Santell
William N. Shepherd
Louise Snyder
Mimi Draper Walsh
Beth Walton
Lee Wolf
Palm Beach Dramaworks is a proud member of...
October 13 - 29, 2023
Four New Yorkers involved in a murder investigation – a slacker security guard in a Manhattan apartment building, his by-the-book boss, a rookie cop and her macho partner – face moral and ethical dilemmas in this comic drama by the Academy Awardwinning screenwriter of Manchester by the Sea. The play explores issues of racism and sexism, and whether it’s ever honorable to do the wrong thing for the right reason.
December 8 - 24, 2023
WORLD PREMIERE
A meditation on the connections between past, present, and future, and on the choice between speaking up and speaking out regardless of the consequences or remaining silent for the sake of self-preservation. Inspired by the life of Hungarian Holocaust survivor Georgia Gabor, the play interweaves her story with that of a young American woman facing racial discrimination in this country in 2020.
February 2 - 18, 2024
WORLD PREMIERE
Executive Producers
Marsha & Stephen Rabb
Lauren Fein and her wife, Paola Munoz, are professors at a prestigious American university. They live with Dylan, their 16-year-old African American foster son whom they’ve cared for since he was a baby. When Professor Fein’s actions run afoul of the university’s “diversity, equity, and inclusion” policies, her groundbreaking research, her career, and her family are all put in jeopardy.
March 29 - April 14, 2024
Executive Producers
Toni & Martin Sosnoff
Producers
Nancy Goodes
Ruth Baum
This Pulitzer Prize-winning, groundbreaking play changed American theatre in the person of its everyman tragic hero, Willy Loman, a dime a dozen, disappointed, disillusioned, and delusional traveling salesman with a skewed vision of the American Dream. All he wanted, the playwright wrote in his memoir, was “to count.” Or as Willy’s wife, Linda, implores, “Attention must be paid.”
Joanna McClelland Glass
May 24 - June 9, 2024
Executive Producers
Stephen Brown & Jamie Stern
In 1967, feisty Sarah Schorr, a 25-year-old from rural Canada, goes to work as secretary for 81-year-old Francis Biddle, the patrician former US Attorney General. The brilliant Biddle is now frail, sometimes befuddled, and always irascible. Inspired by the playwright’s experiences as Biddle’s secretary, the piece is a tender yet unsentimental portrait of two disparate people navigating their vast differences to form a bond of mutual admiration, consideration, and respect.