Mockingbird
Theatre Productions in association with Asheville Community Theatre is excited
to bring RED to Asheville’s 35below for the first three weekends in
November. RED will be performed November 3 - November 19, 2017
with performances Friday and Saturday evenings at 7:30 pm and Sunday afternoons
at 2:30 pm. Tickets are available online at www.ashevilletheatre.org, over the phone at
828-254-1320, or in person at the Asheville Community Theatre Box Office.
Winner
of six Tony awards including Best Play in 2010, RED was written
by playwright John Logan. A multi-award winning writer in theatre and film,
Logan collaborated with the famous Donmar Warehouse for the original staging of
RED in London.
Set
in New York City in 1959, RED is an explosive exploration of the
creative process. The play takes place during a crucial moment in the career of
renowned Abstract-Expressionist artist Mark Rothko as he prepares for his
greatest commission, a series of murals in New York’s prestigious Four Seasons
restaurant. A two-person show, RED reveals Rothko and his
assistant Ken as Rothko struggles to fulfill his vision of creating a sacred
space for his deeply emotional paintings in the temple of “status and
conspicuous consumption” that is the Four Seasons. What follows is a series of
clashes between the fiery and domineering Rothko and his young, impressionable
assistant. As the explosive interaction between the two escalates, the audience
learns of the famous painter’s artistic vision as well as his battle with the
New York art world and his own inner demons. Seemingly a blank slate, assistant
and budding artist Ken reveals a devastating secret in his life, as he pushes
back against Rothko’s controlling nature.
This
production features Asheville veteran actor John Hall as Mark Rothko, and
rising star Alex Daly as the painter’s assistant Ken. RED is
helmed by Chanda Calentine who directed both Hall and Daly in ACT’s hit Peter and the Starcatcher last spring at
UNCA’s Belk Theatre. Hall and Calentine chose RED for 35below’s
2017-2018 season, and were both gripped by the play’s thrilling word-play and
deep emotional core. “The painter Mark Rothko was a true revolutionary,” says
Hall, “creating a uniquely original as well as highly emotional and spiritual
painting process. He truly believed art could save humanity.” By beginning the
play as Rothko is preparing his murals for the Four Seasons restaurant, the
playwright is putting the audience right in the painter’s studio during the
creative process. Director Calentine adds, “Both characters have been scarred
by life, but have chosen to deal with these wounds in very different ways.
Their interaction in the painter’s studio, in the midst of creating art, is
riveting.”
For
more information about RED, please visit www.ashevilletheatre.org.
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