These days, if any city outside of New York has traction inside New York theatre-wise, it’s Chicago. But Berkeley has also been holding its own in terms of transplants to both Broadway and Off-Broadway of late.
Berkeley Repertory Theatre‘s 50th world premiere, Sarah Ruhl’s In The Next Room (Or, The Vibrator Play) will open at one of the Shubert houses in Manhattan this fall, The Lincoln Center just announced. The show, which, like the world premiere, will be directed by Berkeley Rep associate director Les Waters, begins previews on October 22 and opens November 19. Read my review of the show here.
While Ruhl and Waters have often worked off Broadway – including bringing Eurydice to Second Stage Theatre after producing it in Berkeley – both celebrate their Broadway debuts with this play. I hear that Waters, who hails from the UK, responded to the news in his usual self-effacing way, saying: “Well, really, if you want to know, I’m utterly chuffed.”
The Vibrator Play represents the eighth show in eight years that Berkeley Rep has helped develop and send to New York. In addition to the recent Broadway run of Passing Strange, these plays include Danny Hoch’s Taking Over (2008), Ruhl’s Eurydice (2007), Sarah Jones’ Bridge & Tunnel (2006), Tony Kushner and Maurice Sendak’s Brundibar (2006), Naomi Iizuka’s 36 Views (2002), and Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses (2001). Overall, Berkeley Rep has delivered 17 shows to Manhattan in the last 22 years.
The Rep isn’t the only Berkeley-based theatre to send a show to New York this year. In a couple of weeks’ time, the Berkeley company Shotgun Players will bring its spellbinding rock musical (or “songplay”) Beowulf: A Thousand Years of Baggage (a collaboration with the San Francisco-New York performance Collective Banana, Bag & Bodice) to the Abrons Arts Centre in Manhattan. This show, which runs from March 31 – April 18, is pretty ingenious. Read my review of the show, which had its world premiere at Shotgun Players’ Ashby Stage theatre in Berkeley last year before going on to win the Will Glickman Award for Best New Play of 2008, here. Go Berkeley!