sage of emporia performance program

8
This event is sponsored, in part, by the Lied Performance Fund. Please be mindful of the following in the auditorium: • Please silence cellular phones and electronic devices • No food or drink • No cameras or recording devices Sponsored by Based on the Autobiography of William Allen White The Sage of Emporia: Fri & Sat APR 17 & 18 7:30 pm Brandon Woods at Alvamar is a beautiful, active retirement community that offers seniors a lifestyle rich with opportunity so you enjoy each day. It starts with a focus on independence and well-being—life here at Brandon Woods revolves around your choices. By Henry C. Haskell

Upload: lied-center-of-kansas

Post on 08-Apr-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Sage of Emporia performance program

This event is sponsored, in part, by the Lied Performance Fund.

Please be mindful of the following in the auditorium:

• Please silence cellular phones and electronic devices• No food or drink• No cameras or recording devices

Sponsored by

Based on the Autobiography of William Allen White

The Sage of Emporia:

Fri & Sat

APR17 & 18

7:30 pm

Brandon Woods at Alvamar is a beautiful, active retirement community that offers seniors a lifestyle rich with opportunity so you enjoy each day. It starts with a focus on independence and well-being—life here at Brandon Woods revolves around your choices.

By Henry C. Haskell

Page 2: Sage of Emporia performance program

April 17 & 18, 2015

CAST

William Allen White……….Jack B. Wright

Production Stage Manager…......Judy Locy Wright

SETTINGThe living room of the White’s home in Emporia, Kansas,

toward noon of a mid-February day in 1942

Original Production in 1981, by the University of Kansas Theatre

Ronald A. Willis, Director

Delbert Unruh, Set and Lighting Design

Chez Haehl, Costumes

Beth Reiff, Production Stage Manager

THIS PRODUCTION IS DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF RONALD A. WILLIS.

DIRECTOR’S NOTESTo be a Kansan, either by birth or adoption, is to owe a debt to William Allen White. He put Kansas on the map of the nation’s consciousness and did so with dignity and humor. Henry C. Haskell, able to speak with the voices of both the journalist and the playwright, has captured much of the indomitable Kansan’s spirit. We also welcome the spirit of William Allen White and hope that this depiction on stage remains faithful to the ideals and passions he so boldly set forth during his Kansas years. Ronald A. Willis (1983)

ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHTHenry C. Haskell, the author of The Sage of Emporia spent his life working in journalism, spending nearly 40 years as a newsman with the Kansas City Star. Although he never worked for The Emporia Gazette, Haskell was a lifetime friend of the White family.

“Mr. White worked for the Star as did my father and although he left the year before my father started, I can remember visiting back and forth—in Emporia and in Estes Park—and my father spoke at William Allen White’s funeral,” Haskell once said. “I was a classmate of Bill White’s at Harvard and we remained good friends though the years.”

There will be no intermission.

Page 3: Sage of Emporia performance program

The Sage of Emporia

Haskell began his career in the newspaper business as an apprentice at The Kansas City Star during the summers of 1920-23, while a college student. Following his graduation, he worked as a correspondent in France and returned to the United States in 1925 to take a job as a reporter for The Wichita Beacon. After a few years with The Baltimore Evening Sun, Haskell joined the news staff for The Kansas City Star, a post he kept until his retirement in 1968. An accomplished playwright, Haskell wrote a number of plays which have been produced at KU, by the Missouri Repertory Theatre and in California.

Haskell and Michael Berbiglia were instrumental in the founding of the Lyric Theater. Haskell also served on the boards of the UMKC Conservatory of Music, the Kansas City Art Institute, the Philharmonic, and the United Fund. In 1969 he was appointed to the board of the National Council of the Humanities by President Lyndon Johnson. Haskell died in 1981.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSSpecial thanks always to the White Family, especially Mrs. Katherine K. White, and Barbara White Walker

JACK WRIGHTJack Wright, retired professor of theatre and film, has held the titles of Artistic Director of Theatre at KU from 1976 to 1994, and Director of the University Theatre at KU from 1989 to 1994. He is now Professor Emeritus. He received his undergraduate degree in theatre from Otterbein College in Ohio and his Master of Arts and Ph.D. from KU. In 1979 he received the Otterbein College Distinguished Alumni Award. Prior to joining the KU faculty, he served on the theatre faculties at the University of Texas at Austin and at the University of Oklahoma at Norman. He holds several Teaching Awards from KU. Wright became a Fellow of the College of Fellows of the American Theatre in 1998, and is a member and Past President of the National Theatre Conference.

AFTERWORDWilliam Allen White died in Emporia on January 29, 1944, a victim of cancer, only days prior to his seventy-sixth birthday. Messages of condolence came to the family from all over the United States and throughout the English-speaking world. Hundreds of newspapers and magazines paid their tribute.

President Roosevelt said of him, “He made The Emporia Gazette a national institution. As a writer of terse, forcible, and vigorous prose, he was unsurpassed. He ennobled the profession of journalism which he served with such unselfish devotion through the more than two score years.”

Harold Laski wrote from London, “White seemed to me to be part of that America of which the supreme representatives were Jefferson and Lincoln; the America which is concerned first of all with the ordinary people and their lot in life; the American which is simple, kindly, and proud to think that a humble man can there become a significant man.”

Page 4: Sage of Emporia performance program

CONNECT WITH US ONLINE!

Elling Swings Sinatra

Kurt EllingGrammy Award winner

A celebration of Frank Sinatra’s 100th birthday

Sunday

APR 19

7:30 pm

“The standout male vocalist of our time.” —The New York Times

lied.ku.edu | 785-864-2787

Page 5: Sage of Emporia performance program

Pilobolus

As seen on Oprah, Late Night with Conan O’Brien and the Academy Awards

Dance TheaterSingular style of modern dance

Saturday

APR25

7:30 pm

lied.ku.edu | 785-864-2787

Page 6: Sage of Emporia performance program

DONATE NOW!Donation levels begin at just $50!Current Friends, renew your 2015–16 donations now!785-864-2788 | lied.ku.edu/donate

Don’t miss the excitement as the Lied Center announces the 2015–16 performances at the Season Announcement Party on Sunday, April 26.

With your donation to the Friends, you can:• Purchase tickets prior to the public• Receive ticket discounts• Receive priority seating• Attend the Season Announcement Party and other

exclusive events

PARTY

DONATE to the Friends of the Lied and receive an invitation to this exclusive event.

SEASON ANNOUNCEMENTDON’T MISS THE

Page 7: Sage of Emporia performance program

SPRING 2015

APRIL

MAYThe Ugly Duckling & The Tortoise and the Hare

19

Pilobolus Dance Theater

25

Elling Swings Sinatra

19

Rent the Lied CenterAre you looking for a unique space with dramatic flair? We offer elegant spaces for conferences, meetings, receptions, dinners, lectures and more.

More information: lied.ku.edu/RenttheLied or 785-864-2774

Page 8: Sage of Emporia performance program

Patron ($500+)Anonymous

Tyrone Duncan & Bozenna Pasik-Duncan

Sponsor ($250+)Rolf & Laura BorchertLewis & Laura GregoryPiersol Foundation, Inc. Ted & Nancy Haggart

Andrea MosherJeannot & Todd

SeymourTim & Julia Shaftel

Contributor ($100+)Anonymous

Hannes CombestMary-Elizabeth Debicki, Phd

Marilyn DobskiJoel & Diana Frederick

Robert FriaufBarbara Gorman

Linda & Rick HoneymanBarbara McCorkle

Christopher & Julie PetrSiyuan Han & Sha Ma Graham & Ann Walker

Sara Trautman-Yegenoglu & Ferit Yegenoglu

Advocate ($50+)Bill & Margaret ArnoldNadya & David Benson

Jim & Yun Butler Mary & David Gage

Dennis & Kristine LaneEJ Necefer

Fred & Cathie PawlickiGavin & Raylene Young

Jo Anne Zingo

UPDATEThese individuals and businesses have become Friends since the original list was published.

Join the Friends of the Lied by calling Development Director Sue Mango at

785-864-2788 or visit lied.ku.edu/donate.

BUSINESS FRIENDS

Benefactor ($1,000+)Maceli’s Banquet Hall & Catering

Sponsor ($250+)Sunlite

Contributor ($100+)Edmonds/Duncan Advisors

Yello Sub

INDIVIDUAL FRIENDS