Off-Broadway NewsTony Nominee Kara Young to Play Shakespeare's Viola Once Again
The Classical Theatre of Harlem's Twelfth Night is headed downtown in 2023.
By
Leah Putnam
December 08, 2022
The Classical Theatre of Harlem will remount its 2022 Afrofuturistic production of Twelfth Night in 2023 at NYU Skirball with Tony nominee Kara Young reprising the lead role of Viola for the February 11-19 run.
The theatre company's Associate Artistic Director Carl Cofield will once again direct with Tiffany Rea-Fisher as associate director and choreographer. The Shakespeare comedy follows its heroine Viola, who pretends to be a man after being shipwrecked and washing up on the shores of the lively city Illyria. Taking charge of her destiny, Viola works to navigate this new place, find her brother, and not become entangled in love triangles.
Also returning in the cast are William DeMeritt, Carson Elrod, Kat Files, Allen Gilmore, Dennzyl Green, Alisa Gregory, Brynlie Helmich, Madelyn LaLonde, Anthony Lalor, Cassandra Lopez, Collin McConnell, Chivas Michael, Othello Pratt, Jr., Christina Sajous, Donathan Walters, and Zoë Lishinsky.
“With its Afrofuturistic aesthetic and diverse team of artists, our production of Twelfth Night will tackle the global conversation around equity, diversity, and inclusion,” said director Cofield in an earlier statement. “I look forward to showing audiences what the magical world of Illyria can teach us here and now.”
Reuniting on the creative team will be co-fight directors Rick Sordelet and Christian Kelly-Sordelet, scenic designer Riw Rakkulchon, costume designer Mika Eubanks, lighting designer Alan C. Edwards, composer and sound designer Frederick Kennedy, projection designer Brittany Bland, properties designer Samantha Shoffner, and hair and make-up designer Earon Nealey. Jessica Forella is production stage manager and Chris Steckel is stage manager.
The Classical Theatre of Harlem originally presented the production outside at Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem July 5-29.
The National Asian American Theatre Company production is the world premiere of a new modern verse translation of the Shakespeare play from Andrea Thome.
When the play premiered in London in 1912, it was considered controversial, but was praised for its depiction of two young people seeking pleasure before marriage.
The move follows a breakdown in negotiations between the Off-Broadway company and IATSE, through which the company's backstage workers unionized in 2024.
Set in a 1947 Provincetown beach house, the play unfolds over one sultry night as Tennessee Williams and a young Marlon Brando craft A Streetcar Named Desire together.
Partially inspired by Sophocles' Antigone, the show is an intimate exploration of love that goes beyond faith between a queer Pakistani-American man and his deeply devout mother.