Showing posts with label Danny Binstock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Danny Binstock. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2014

Three actors making their PlayMakers debuts in "Assassins"

We are pleased to welcome three actors making their PlayMakers debuts in AssassinsDanny Binstock takes on the role of the John Wilkes Booth, the matinee idol who became famous for the role he cast himself. Joseph Medeiros as Giuseppe Zangara is both off-putting and mesmerizing as he trieto fix his stomach pains with a bullet… directed at someone else.  And, Spencer Moses is the Balladeer, singing about our assassins with charm and sly commentary.
Spencer Moses, on right, with Jeff Meanza
Danny Binstock

Joseph Medeiros
Something these actors have in common is their enjoyment of PlayMakers’ university setting. Spencer says, “my favorite thing about my first time at PlayMakers is meeting and working with such an incredibly talented and warm company of professors and students.  It's a very unique experience and one that I wish I'd had when I was in college.”  Joseph adds, “I love the atmosphere of education, the energy of people working on their craft, of being focused on their process as theater practitioners. It's so present in the rehearsal studio and has given my own work on the show a wonderful boost.”  Danny says “My favorite thing about working at PlayMakers is Julie Fishell. She cracks me up and is an actor’s actor. In fact, I'd say this is true of the whole company. It's such a joy to work with a group of actors who know and trust each other.“

As for their roles, all three have found interesting challenges and quirks associated with portraying their individual assassins. Danny shares “something interesting I've found about playing Booth is how charming he is, and how he felt (and he wasn't alone) that his actions were going to heal the country.” Joseph says “I love this role (Giuseppe Zangara). I like playing characters who are dispossessed in some way, and finding an avenue of empathy and understanding in order to be able to give life to that person on stage. As a character, I may achieve some of my goals, which makes my character happy, but what makes him happy and the audience happy are not the same. The tension this creates is the point. We leave the audience to sort through their own feelings, in their own time. At that point, the piece belongs to each individual spectator. This is a wonderful thing.” Spencer says “the most interesting thing about my role (the Balladeer) is that my scene partner is mostly the audience.  So it's a really good challenge to take my focus to them and try to involve them in the story.”

See these talented newcomers to PlayMakers in Assassins, running through April 20.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Dress Rehersal for "Assassins"

The Ensemble in Assassins. Photo by Jon Gardiner.
The assassins are ready to take the stage. With opening night just a few days away, PlayMakers is ready to introduce its cast of sharp-shooting, cake-dancing, butterfingered, misguided souls, who sing and dance their way towards the American Dream. Stephen Sondheim gives voice in Assassins to these disaffected protagonists with the wit and complex emotional portraits his work is renowned for.

Check out these pictures from the final dress rehearsal of Assassins. Assassins will be running at PlayMakers from April 2-20. Click here to get your tickets!

JOSEPH MEDEIROS as Guiseppe Zangara. Photo by Jon Gardiner.

The Ensemble in Assassins. Photo by Jon Gardiner.


JULIE FISHELL as Sara Jane Moore, DANNY BINSTOCK as John Wilkes Booth, JEFFREY MEANZA as Charles Guiteau and GREGORY DeCANDIA as Leon Czolgosz. Photo by Jon Gardiner.


JEFFREY MEANZA as Charles Guiteau. Photo by Jon Gardiner.

The Ensemble in Assassins. Photo by Jon Gardiner.

PATRICK McHUGH as Lee Harvey Oswald, DANNY BINSTOCK as John Wilkes Booth. Photo by Jon Gardiner.

DANNY BINSTOCK as John Wilkes Booth. Photo by Jon Gardiner.

MAREN SEARLE as Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme and JULIE FISHELL as Sara Jane Moore. Photo by Jon Gardiner.



Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Introducing the Assassins: John Wilkes Booth


John Wilkes Booth. Image from the United States Library of Congress.
John Wilkes Booth was born in Maryland in 1838, one of ten children of America’s preeminent nineteenth-century actor, Edwin Booth and his former mistress, Mary Ann Holmes. Raised outside of Baltimore, Booth had an erratic life before taking to the stage at age seventeen, and quickly becoming a matinee idol. A Confederate sympathizer, his plan to kidnap President Abraham Lincoln to force a prisoner exchange escalated into an assassination plot. Booth carried out the murder during a performance of the English comedy Our American Cousin at Washington’s Ford’s Theatre on Good Friday in April 1865. Booth evaded a massive manhunt for twelve days before being shot to death by authorities in a Virginia barn. Booth was only twenty-six.


New York actor Danny Binstock makes his PlayMakers debut in this unforgettable role. Recently on Broadway in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Danny brings his accomplished musical theatre background to our stage for Assassins.

 

Trivia


Q 1. What distinguishing feature was the coroner able to use as proof of Booth’s identity?f his rhis rightrmance.oth was familiar with both Ford'inthe  of his right hand.

Q 2. After the assassination, under what alias did Booth travel while seeking refuge?

Q 3. What line of dialogue in the English comedy Our American Cousin had Booth planned as his cue for the Lincoln killing?

JWB Wanted Poster. Image courtesy of Library of Congress Rare Book and Special Collections Division.


A 1: As a boy, Booth had tattooed his initials between the thumb and index finger of his left hand. Like much of Booth’s history, this fact is widely contested.

A 2: James W. Boyd, a Confederate officer.  (Booth also adopted the fairly transparent disguise of a false beard.)

A 3: “You sockdologizing old man-trap!”: an insult line that never failed to elicit a roar of laughter from audiences. Booth was familiar with both Ford’s Theatre and that current play in performance.