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Press Release "Generation (bu)Y" |
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Jonathan Slaff & Associates Theatrical Press Representative 55 Perry Street, #1M New York, NY 10014 Tel. (212) 924-0496 Fax (877) 534-4061
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www.jsnyc.com "Generation (bu)Y" aims to to raise awareness of the effects of marketing and advertising to children. WHERE AND WHEN: May 6 to 16, 2010 Theater for the New City, 155 First Avenue, NYC Presented by Theater for the New City Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 pm; Sundays at 3:00 pm Tickets: Adults $15; Seniors, Teachers and Students $5 Box office/info (212) 254-1109. Online ticketing: www.theaterforthenewcity.net NEW YORK, March 23 -- "Generation (bu)Y" explains our slavery to marketing from the mouths of babes. Conceived and directed by Philip Suraci, the play will be written and performed by a young ensemble of 18 (ages 11 to 13) plus 3 adult actors, to be seen by an audience of both adults and children over the age of 10. The intent of the production is to raise awareness of the effects of and spur reflection upon marketing and advertising to children. Adults will be asked to think about the future they will create by regarding children as consumers and our culture’s relentless materialism. "Generation (bu)Y" examines strategies used by marketers such as the belittlement of parents and adults (parent/child alienation) and the exploitation of child needs of acceptance by peers.
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Theater for the New City Presents
Crystal Field, Executive Director |  |
Generation (bu)Y a comedy about selling our children | Performances: May 6th thru 16th Thursday-Saturday at 8:00 Sundays at 3:00
Reservations (212) 254-1109 Adults $15 Seniors, Teachers and Students $5
Theater for the New City 155 First Avenue (between 9th and 10th Streets) in Manhattan | written and directed by Philip Suraci
| music by Joseph Albano Feiger choreography by Barry Blumenfeld sets by Mark Marcante; lighting by Alex Bartenieff | | costumes by Kat Martin art direction by Spica Wobbe press agent: Jonathan Slaff graphics: Fred Sullivan | | with: Elisa Blynn, Ryan Bruno, Lola Buncher, Rockella Caporale, Eli Cauley, Ty Cotton, Priscilla Delmoral, Jackie Donnaruma, Leila Eliot, Mykel Macedon, Will Mairs, Malcolm McKenzie, Tom O’Connor, Tiffany Otero, Valentine Petrillo, Willa Pittman, Frances Raybaud, Collin Rhyins, Kendrick Shoji, Brandon Smith, Mitchel Thomas, Malcom Zelaya |
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Lysistratas Children Reviewed by nytheatre.com |
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Lysistrata's Chilren was reviewed by Kelly Aliano · November 7, 2008 Prodcution as presented at Theater for the New City Nov. 6- Nov. 23 2008 "I am very impressed with the depth of this production and I commend each student on the level of professionalism he/she brought to the work. These young people are speaking out, in clear and meaningful ways, about an issue that too many adults, even those with influence and power, too often ignore. This play would have had incredible value just as a learning exercise for the performers. Beyond this, however, the piece is relevant and significant for whomever views it. Kids should know about the realities of the world in which we live and should be aware of the role art can play in reflecting the issues of our time. In addition, art should continually confront its viewers with social and political concerns that need to be addressed." Read the rest of the review at nytheatre.com. |
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Lysistrata's Children Gala Benefit |
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Lysistrata's Children Gala Benefit will be held at the National Arts Club on Friday October 3rd, 2008 from 6-9PM. There will be live jazz and poetry readings and cocktails will be served at the reception tax donations will be accepted at the reception. If you are unable to attend tax deductable contributions for Lysistrata's Children may be done as follows: Please make checks payable to Theater for The New City mailed care of Philip Suraci 115 Milton Place South Orange, NJ 07079 |
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Welcome To Eagle Peak, "Lysistrata's Children"
a comedy about love and war WHERE AND WHEN: November 6 to 23, 2008 Theater for the New City, 155 First Avenue Presented by Theater for the New City Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 pm, Sundays at 3:00 pm Tickets: Adults $15, Seniors, Teachers and Students $5 Box office/info (212) 254-1109. Online ticketing: www.theaterforthenewcity.net NEW YORK, July 1 -- To share an outstanding show of last season with a larger audience, Theater for the New City will present a return engagement of "Lysistrata's Children," a Brechtian comedy written and directed by Philip Suraci, from November 6 to 23, 2008. Inspired by Aristophanes, "Lysistrata's Children" is an original work conceived by Suraci and devised for and with the teenage cast. Like "The Me Nobody Knows" and Broadway's current "Spring Awakening," it is a play performed by young people for adults to see. It explores issues of war and peace, violence and non-violence through the power dynamics of child/parent relationships. In Aristophanes' original, Athenian wives denied their husbands sex in order to persuade them to make peace. In Suraci's ingenious adaptation, children withhold love from their parents until they sign an oath of "Victory over violence" and join the children's quest for peace. There is sly comedy in the children's manipulation of their parents' behavior and in the parents' responses to their children's demands. The play was originally workshopped and produced in 2006 with students of Friends Seminary on Stuyvesant Square. It was presented by Theater for the New City last fall. In program notes to last year's production, author/director Philip Suraci wrote, "I hoped to create a peaceful response to the human plagues war and violence using classical references voiced through young people. I asked actors to research the history of war in the U.S., to create collages based on the theme of war and peace, as well as compose prose poems inspired by the art and poetry of child war victims. In rehearsal, we brainstormed methods that children use to get their parents to do what they want, and later, strategies employed by parents to control their children. In small groups, the actors created short scenes based on these ideas. These embryonic 'scene-lets' became the basis for individual scenes in the piece itself, which I structured and wrote out more fully. Much of the dialogue concerning thoughts about war was culled from a discussion in rehearsal on the topic of 'Is war necessary and if so, when?'" The visual style of the play is Brechtian and expressionistic. Larger-than-life puppets, in the style of Bread and Puppet Theater, are used throughout.The play is staged with teens and 'tweens in all the parts, donning half-masks when they play their parents. This production is not recommended for audiences under twelve. |
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