María Irene Fornés’ Mud/Drowning Revival Completes Run October 9 | Playbill

Off-Broadway News María Irene Fornés’ Mud/Drowning Revival Completes Run October 9

JoAnne Akalaitis directs the show presented by Mabou Mines and Weathervane Productions.

María Irene Fornés

María Irene Fornés' Mud/Drowning, presented by Mabou Mines and Weathervane Productions, completes its run October 9. The revival began previews September 21 and opened September 24 in association with Philip Glass' Days and Nights Festival.

Based upon Anton Chekhov’s short story, Drowning follows a man who falls in love with a woman in a photograph and drowns in grief, and was written alongside Mud. The latter is a drama centered on the hopes and trials of the hard-working Mae, who lives in rural poverty with plans to improve her life, as she becomes caught up in a love-hate triangle and navigates the problems—and men—who stand between her and her goals.

Paul Lazar, Sifiso Mabena, Tony Torn, and Wendy Vanden Heuvel star in Mud, which features original music by Philip Glass, while Tomas Cruz, Gregory Purnhagen, and Peter Stewart star in Drowning, Glass' operatic transformation of Fornés' work. Mud/Drowning was first performed in 2019 in California as part of the Days and Nights Festival.

Director JoAnne Akalaitis, who previously directed the original production, helms the creative team comprised of scenic and costume design by Kaye Voyce, lighting design by Thomas Dunn, and make-up design by Gabrielle Vincent and Anne Ford Coates. Kate Croasdale serves as production stage manager, and Kendra Bator and Tom Casserly are executive producers.

Akalaitis said in an earlier statement, “Fornés is also known as La Maestra—the teacher of a generation of playwrights. She creates worlds within worlds and then hurls audiences headlong into them: rural poverty, secret brutality in the center of banal households, angry eccentric women, violence and humiliation, sexual obsession—and often through the voices of those who dream of a more fulfilled life or love, articulating their longings in Fornés’ beautiful, terse, emotional language, which is both highly stylized and surprisingly natural.”

For tickets and more information, visit MabouMines.org.

 
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