2008 - 2011 2005 - 2008 2003 - 2005 2000 - 2003 1997 - 2000 1995 - 1997
The Fastest Clock in the UniverseApril 28 - May 23, 1998
Intar Theater
by Philip Ridley, directed by Jo Bonney
featuring: David Cale, Joe Kern, Jeannette Landis,
Ellie Mae McNulty, Bray Poor
A comedy about the fear of aging, egotism and a seduction that backfires.
"Director Jo Bonney has assembled a very creditable cast. David Cale is particularly good…some fine comic moments…so good that you almost swallow what happens."
-Elyse Sommer, Curtain Up
My Night With RegJune 3 - June 29, 1997
Intar Theater
by Kevin Elyot, directed by Jack Hofsiss
featuring: Ron Bagden, David Cale, Maxwell Caulfield, Edward Hibbert,
Joseph Siravo, Sam Trammel
A modern comedy of the unfaithfulness and loyalties surrounding the friendships in a "family" of six gay men living in London in the age of AIDS.
"Excellent" -Bill Brantley, The New York Times
This is Our YouthOctober 26 - November 25, 1996
Intar Theater
by Kenneth Lonergan, directed by Mark Brokaw
featuring: Josh Hamilton, Mark Ruffalo, Missy Yager
A play about the children of a dysfunctional family.
"Lonergan's 'Youth' a smash winner"
-Clive Barnes, New York Post
Lucille Lortel Award Winner
(Outstanding actor, Mark Ruffalo)
Theatre World Award Winner
(Mark Ruffalo)
CurtainsApril 13 - May 12, 1996
Intar Theater
by Stephen Bill, directed by Scott Elliott
featuring: David Cale, Kathleen Claypool, John Henry Cox, Lisa Emery,
Laura Esterman, Jayne Haynes, Betty Miller, Frederick Weller
A play that confronts the fearful topic and effects of old-age and death.
"It is one of the funniest, most painful and accomplished plays about English family life for a long time."
-Observer
Winner of 2 OBIE Awards
(Direction; Ensemble Acting)
EcstasyApril 25 - May 14 ,1995
Judith Anderson Theater
by Mike Leigh, directed by Scott Elliott
featuring: Patrick Fitzgerald, Jared Harris,
Marian Quinn, Caroline Seymour
The story of six working class friends experiencing life in a dilapidated London flat in 1970.
"Seemingly aimless, pointless, plotless, the evening almost imperceptibly grows more hilarious, more poignant. Nothing happens, and continues not to happen and goes on not happening, but it's the astonishing achievement of this production that every minute we're increasingly riveted to the people on stage and by the end of the play we realize that nothing has been told, everything has been said. Subtle direction, skillful design, extraordinary acting, they all came seamlessly together which is why the judges have voted an Obie to the entire company of The New Group for its production of Mike Leigh's Ecstasy."
-OBIE Award Presentation, May 22, 1995
OBIE Award Winner
(Overall Excellence)