PSA: American Players Theatre Announces Its 2025 Season!!

AMERICAN PLAYERS THEATRE ANNOUNCES 2025 Season

To Run June – November in the Outdoor Hill Theatre and Indoor Touchstone Theatre

Artistic Director Brenda DeVita said, “First, I’d just like to say that I’m so proud of the season we produced this year. Our 45th season. The work was exquisite from beginning to end, and I’m so grateful to our artists and actors, and the staff that takes such great care of our amazing audience. An audience who comes to these shows, whether or not they’re familiar with the story, and puts their trust in us, and in the art we make here. It’s incredible the community that’s been created out here, in the middle of Wisconsin farmland – it consistently fills my heart and blows my mind.

This season has felt like a huge step in our growth as an organization. The company is gelling and maturing, which gives us confidence that the work we do here is special, and important, as well as being beautiful and engaging. We carry that confidence with us into 2025, when we will invite some exciting and new-to-us directors – especially female directors, the most we’ve ever had directing in a season – to work at APT for the first time. Shannon Cochran, who is an actor and director, will do Noël Coward’s Fallen Angels, a playwright she is very familiar with, and can deftly play with that wit and language. Shana Cooper, the talented director who created that indelible, creative production of The Taming of the Shrew at APT in 2021 will return to direct The Winter’s Tale.

And additionally, we continue to expand and grow the talents of our company. David Daniel, a member of the Core Company, and our education director, who directed Oedipus for us in 2021, will direct this Midsummer Night’s Dream. Gavin Lawrence, another Core Company member – he directed Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom for us this season – will direct a play he has written – The Death of Chuck Brown. And John Taylor Phillips who you’ve seen on stage at APT in Private Lives and Born Yesterday and many other plays, will be back to direct The 39 Steps. And we have a number of wonderful returning directors – John Langs on Tribes, Robert Ramirez on Anna in the Tropics, I’ll be directing Picnic, which has been a dream project of mine. We’re already getting started, and I believe it’s a lineup that fits our foundation, while allowing the organization to continue to grow and evolve.”

In the Hill Theatre:

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

By William Shakespeare

Directed by David Daniel

Love weaves a tangled web in this iconic Shakespearean fairy tale. Hermia and her beloved Lysander flee into the forest to avoid Hermia’s arranged marriage to Demetrius. They’re pursued by Demetrius himself, along with Helena, who is, in turn, in love with Demetrius. In that same forest, Oberon and Titania – king and queen of the fairies – are having a quarrel of their own. And when Oberon enlists his accomplice Puck, aka Robin Goodfellow to throw some magic into the mix, everyone  – including a hilarious group of “rude mechanicals” led by Nick Bottom – gets caught up in the spell.

Fallen Angels

By Noël Coward

Directed by Shannon Cochran

Noël Coward’s sparkling wit returns to the Hill for the first time since 2015. Jane and Julia are happily married to charming men when a message arrives from a former flame, sending their perfect lives into a tizzy. It appears a man with whom they’d each had a passionate tryst in the past is planning a visit, and they are both questioning whether they can – or want to – withstand his charms. As the husbands golf, the ladies plot and plan over copious glasses of champagne, with some “help” from a very worldly housekeeper, while awaiting the arrival of their former lover in this decadent and utterly entertaining comedy. Contains adult themes

Picnic

By William Inge

Directed by Brenda DeVita

It’s almost time for the annual Labor Day picnic in Independence, Kansas. But the town buzz is all about Hal – the young handyman hired by sweet Helen Potts. Her neighbor, Flo, is less than enthusiastic about having Hal in the vicinity of her daughters, Madge and Millie. When it turns out Madge’s steady guy, the steadfast Alan, is an old friend of Hal’s, Flo relents, and plans are made for Hal to stick around town more permanently. But young love may have other ideas, and hearts will be filled and broken in this play about desire, expectations and the sacrifices and settlements people make when it comes to love. Contains adult themes & language

Anna in the Tropics

By Nilo Cruz

Directed by Robert Ramirez

In the heat of Florida, a Cuban-American family spends long days rolling cigars for a factory. They carried with them many traditions from Cuba, including employing a lector to read to them as they work. But with automation on the rise, money is tight, and there are differing opinions on whether that tradition should continue. Still, matriarch Ofelia hires a new lector, Juan Julián – a charismatic young man who captures the attention of her daughters, Marela and Conchita. Juan Julián begins his reading sessions with Anna Karenina. As the book’s story unfolds, the family’s lives run parallel, bringing secrets and lies to the forefront and threatening their livelihood and relationships. Contains adult themes

The Winter’s Tale

By William Shakespeare

Directed by Shana Cooper

Shakespeare’s sweet and complex romance returns to the Hill. When King Leontes suspects his pregnant wife Hermione of having an affair with his good friend Polixenes, he jealously hides Hermione away in the palace. He has become so enraged that Leontes orders their infant daughter to be abandoned in the wild, leading Hermione to die of a broken heart. But all may not be as dire as it first appears, as a shepherd saves the young girl to be raised as a shepherdess, with help from a pair of ridiculous clowns, setting in motion a series of events that opens up paths to forgiveness, love and redemption.

In the Touchstone Theatre:

The World Premiere of

The Death of Chuck Brown

By Gavin Dillon Lawrence

Directed by Gavin Dillon Lawrence

A local icon’s death signals the end of an era and the beginning of a new look for a once-predominantly African American neighborhood in Washington, DC. A barbershop is the backdrop for conversations about gentrification, race and family as the owner, Kofi, considers selling his beloved establishment while keeping his son Prince on the path to success. A funny, touching and devastating world-premiere from APT Core Company Member Gavin Dillon Lawrence. Contains adult themes & language

Art

By Yasmina Reza

Director TBA

Reza’s philosophical comedy comes to APT at last. Three long-time friends – Serge, Marc and Yvan – ponder art, class and love; fraught and funny discussions sparked by Serge’s extravagant purchase of a painting that is simply a white canvas with a few thin lines. As the conversation progresses, cracks form in the men’s relationships as they question whether they are who they think they are, or if they are who their friends think they are, in a play that has been awarded the Tony, New York Drama Critics’ Circle, and Olivier Award for Best New Comedy. Contains adult themes & language

Tribes

By Nina Raine

Directed by John Langs

There is the family we choose, and the one we’re born to. And neither are perfect. When Billy, Ruth and Daniel – Beth and Christopher’s adult children – all move home, the rivalry is intense among this group of “creatives.” But not for Billy, who is the sole deaf member of this hearing family. The family made the decision long ago that Billy should not learn sign language, and instead learn to read lips. But when he meets Sylvia, who comes from a deaf family and is coping with losing her own hearing, Billy’s world opens up as she teaches him to sign. What his family makes of this new world is another thing entirely, as they try to elevate themselves while holding Billy at status quo in this funny, biting play. Contains adult themes & language

Opening in October

The 39 Steps

By Patrick Barlow

Directed by John Taylor Phillips

Richard Hannay’s adult life has taken a decided turn for the boring, when one night he decides to go to the theater. There he meets a mysterious woman (and a couple of clowns) during a performance by Mr. Memory. When shots are fired, Hannay finds himself hurtling toward a hilarious adventure built from a foundation of all the most famous noir, and into a delightful parody of the genre itself. A theatrical and hilarious send up of Hitchcockian thrillers, with four actors playing every character – a special event perfect for fall in the Touchstone Theatre.

About American Players Theatre:

APT is a professional repertory theater devoted to the great and future classics. It was founded in 1979 and continues to be one of the most popular outdoor classical theaters in the nation.

The Theatre is located in Spring Green, Wis., on 110 acres of hilly woods and meadows above the Wisconsin River. The outdoor amphitheater is built within a natural hollow atop an oak-wooded hill. Under the dome of sky, 1,075 comfortably cushioned seats encircle three sides of the stage. In 2009, APT opened the 201-seat indoor Touchstone Theatre, offering a different type of play and experience.

For more information, visit www.americanplayers.org

The 2025 schedule will be available in January, and tickets will go on sale to returning patrons in March. More information at www.americanplayers.org.

Stealth Public Sculpture In Milwaukee County’s Lake Park! And The Sculptor Is? McMo

In case you missed it, Dan left a comment on my original post Stealth Public Sculpture In Milwaukee County’s Lake Park! (I am guessing Dan Randa from what I gather from the website) His comment: ” The artist is a local Milwaukee resident who goes by the name of “McMo”. You can find everything you need to know at his website:
http://www.mcmo.is

McMo from his website

Well yes, the website identifies the sculptor as McMo but that is an alias and we aren’t really much closer to who McMo is. But here is some of the information from the landing page on his site:

Who Is McMo? McMo is an Earthworks Artist who creates and displays Earthworks Art on Lincoln Memorial Drive in Milwaukee Wisconsin. Displayed just down the road from the Milwaukee Art Museum are his Milwaukee Lakefront Art Installations built from materials found off the Shores of Lake Michigan. They have been described by his colleagues as “Brutal Elegance“, and have garnered local critical acclaim from the Milwaukee artist community.

McMo: NEOLITHIC FAMILY 2022

And from his ABOUT page, a little more detail:

THE MCMO VISION McMo has been hand crafting beautiful installations, creating stunning designs, and making clients happy for years. With his remarkable eye for Earthworks and Land Art, combined with an everlasting thirst for pop-up installations, McMo has propelled himself onto a new artistic plateau as a Milwaukeean. McMo describes his art as “BRUTAL ELEGANCE“, due to the rigorous and tiresome process of moving massive pieces of newly discovered stone, metal, and mortar to his art space, where he bends, modify’s, constructs, designs, and builds his BRUTALLY ELEGANT art installations.

McMo: RUSTY JONES. 2022

Please visit his site because he has a gallery of his work going back some years and they are quite beautiful as are the public sculptures that he has installed along Lincoln Memorial Drive over the years. The photos that I am using to illustrate this article were taken from his site. I wanted to show different pieces than those I photographed in situ. And he briefly describes his process for assembling raw materials, assembling his pieces, and then installing and distributing them. He also has pieces that are available for sale.

One fun bit of whimsy is the physical address shown on the ABOUT page: 2400 N Lincoln Memorial Dr Milwaukee, WI 53211. That just happens to be the art deco bath house building at Bradford Beach!!

So there you have it, part of the mystery is solved. And I for one will keep an eye out for other pieces as they may appear!! Thank you for your art, McMo!

McMo: ATHENA’S NECKLACE. 2023. This piece is currently on view just south of Colectivo Coffee on the east side of Lincoln Memorial Drive in Milwaukee.

modern IMPACTS Celebrating 50 Years Of The Rosenberg Collection At UWM!

The Emile Mathis Gallery at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee opens the 2024/2025 season with a celebration of a generous gift of 20th Century Art from Henry and Blanche Rosenberg. The show is curated by gallery director Leigh M. W. Mahlik and encompasses the entire span of the Rosenberg’s collection. Primarily anchored in prints or other works on paper, Mahlik has also included a number of paintings and small table top scaled sculptures.

Visiting this show is incredibly rewarding. Most of the major European artists of the period are represented. And the work is certainly museum quality but the scale is a more personal size and invites you to spend some time getting familiar with it. Something that isn’t always available when viewing work of epic proportion. When I visited a second time, part of my intent was to take photos of work that spoke to me that I wanted to post with the article and hoped that they would speak to you. Unfortunately I got carried away and will have to make choices now so that I don’t overwhelm you with visuals. After all, I do want you to visit the gallery.

But the Rosenberg’s clearly had an eye for design. Although these works aren’t necessarily well known they are clean and crisp in design, and exhibit the exquisite draftsmanship that these artists are known for. And color is also a focus of many of these works. But there are some abstract pieces here that stand out too. This is a captivating show. And the best part it is easily accessible and free to the public.

My initial intention here was to quote a bit from Leigh Mahlik’s wall text about the show. But rather than try to edit it and retype it, I am just going to post a photo of the introductory text here. As it mentions, the collection has been instrumental in the educational mission of UWM and the Art History Department (which I understand is celebrating its 60th Anniversary this year). And with that in mind, Mahlik has also included short histories on the various ‘isms’ exhibited here…the show and the collection is certainly a delight!

User comments

I urge you to take the time to visit the Emile Mathis Gallery and enjoy this marvelous show. The Mathis Gallery is on the ground floor of Mitchell Hall which is on the corner of Downer Avenue and Kenwood Boulevard. The gallery is in the southwest corner of Mitchell but there is clear signage on the first floor at the entrances pointing you in the right direction. The Gallery is open Monday through Thursday from 10 AM to 4 PM and admission is free.

Modern Impacts: Celebrating 50 Years of the Rosenberg Collection at UWM continues through November 14th, 2024.

So there, I have given you plenty of links for more information. I will include one more here that is my take on the gallery as a whole: A Place For A Muse: The Emile H. Mathis Art Gallery @ UW – Milwaukee.

And now, I will include a few photos of the work that I loved from the show. I hope you enjoy them and then make plans for your visit!!

Edgar Degas, Dancer, drawing, c. 1880
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Landscape, pastel drawing, c 1917
Maurice de Vlaminck, landscape, gouache, 1925/27

Barbara Hepworth, Sphere and Hemisphere, bronze, 1962

Maurice Utrillo, Orchampt Street, lithograph, 1925

Henry Moore, Two Torsos, bronze, 1962

Edmund Lewandowski, untitled, lithograph, no date

And yes, there are Picassos! Several of them but this one is particularly fun:

Pablo Picasso, Still Life With Caged Owl, oil on canvas, 1947