The Rogue Theatre Logo T U C S O N    A R I Z O N A
rogue, (rôg), n. [<16th-c. thieves' slang <L.rogare, to ask]


Recipient of the
2012 American Theatre Wing
National Theatre Company Award

 

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Once Upon a Time.

The irrational fears that haunt our childhood are exploited and
brought to too-vivid life by this pristine ensemble cast.

—Arizona Daily Star

As enchanting as it is delicious...
—TucsonStage.com

It's an exquisite production. So many elements are astonishing,
beautiful, brutal and of unexpected magnitude.

—Barbara Seyda, Audience Member

A brilliant work of ensemble acting by The Rogue Theatre.
Mary Zimmerman’s play expertly brought to life through exquisite stage craft, dance,
original music, improvisation ...and fun. One week left and you will not regret it.

—Alicia Fodor, Audience Member

'The Secret in the Wings' by Mary Zimmerman

The Secret in the Wings

by Mary Zimmerman

PRODUCTION SPONSOR:
BARBARA MARTINSONS AND LARRY BOUTIS

Directed by Cynthia Meier
Music Direction and Original Composition by Jake Sorgen

February 28–March 17, 2019

Thursday–Saturday 7:30 P.M., Saturday & Sunday 2:00 P.M.
Discussion with the cast and director follows all performances

Performance Schedule

The Rogue Theatre at The Historic Y
300 East University Boulevard

Free Off-Street Parking
See Map and Parking Information

Through the frame of a modern telling of Beauty and the Beast,
seven other fairy tales are enacted in the setting of a basement play space.
Rich and phantasmagoric, the play evokes an air of danger,
both physical and sexual, along with a triumph of love.

 

 

'He has a tail!' Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher, Joseph McGrath and Matt Walley.

“He has a tail!”
Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher, Joseph McGrath and Matt Walley

 

The Wild Swans

The Wild Swans
Ryan Parker Knox, Bryn Booth, Hunter Hnat, Patty Gallagher,
Claire Hancock, Joseph McGrath, Holly Griffith and Aaron Shand

 

'Will you marry me?' Bryn Booth and Matt Walley

“Will you marry me?” Bryn Booth and Matt Walley

 

 

The Snake-Leaves Princess.

The Snake-Leaves Princess
“Is there such as thing as true love?” Joseph McGrath, Hunter Hant, Aaron Shand,
Bryn Booth, Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock, Patty Gallagher and Holly Griffith

Photos by Tim Fuller

 

Supporting Materials

Free Open Talk:
Once Upon a Fairy Tale

Cuynthia Meier

On February 23, Director Cynthia Meier discussed how author Mary Zimmerman weaves fairy tale archetypes into a moving fable for today and for the ages. Cynthia’s presentation was followed by a sneak preview of the play.

Listen to a podcast of the open talk.

For more background on the play, check out Jerry James’ essay
The Enchantress of Evanston: The Transformative Art of Mary Zimmerman

This open talk was supported in part by a generous gift from Paul Winick & Ronda Lustman.

Poster

View the full-sized poster for the play

 

 


 

Press

Don't Keep This a Secret

Review of The Secret in the Wings by Marguerite Saxton on March 6 in Taming of the Review at TamingOfTheReview.com

Ride back to childhood innocence on The Secret in the Wings

Review of The Secret in the Wings by Chuck Graham on March 5 in Let The Show Begin! at TucsonStage.com

Fairy tales come to bloody life in Rogue production

Review of The Secret in the Wings by Kathleen Allen to appear in the March 7 Arizona Daily Star

Fairy tales take center stage in next performance at The Rogue Theatre

Preview of The Secret in the Wings by Kathleen Allen in the February 28 Arizona Daily Star

Read others’ reviews of The Rogue Theatre, or write your own review on TripAdvisor!

 

Direction

JCynthia Meier, Director

Cynthia Meier (Director) is Co-Founder and Managing and Associate Artistic Director for The Rogue Theatre where she has adapted and directed James Joyce’s The Dead, Kafka’s Metamorphosis and F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tales of the Jazz Age, and directed The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Galileo, King Lear, Bach at Leipzig, Celia, A Slave, The White Snake, Miss Julie, Hamlet, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, The Merchant of Venice, Waiting for Godot, Jerusalem, Betrayal, Arcadia, Richard III, Journey to the West, The Winter’s Tale, Shipwrecked!, New-Found-Land, Old Times, The Tempest, Naga Mandala, The Four of Us, Othello, Animal Farm, Orlando, Happy Days, The Good Woman of Setzuan, The Fever and The Cherry Orchard. She holds a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from the University of Arizona. She is co-founder of Bloodhut Productions, a company performing original monologues and comedy improvisation, which toured throughout the western United States. She also directed The Seagull (featuring Ken Ruta) for Tucson Art Theatre, and she directed Talia Shire in Sister Mendelssohn and Edward Herrmann in Beloved Brahms for Chamber Music Plus Southwest. Cynthia received the Mac Award for Best Director, Drama for Richard III in 2013, and for Arcadia in 2014. She has been nominated for eight Mac Awards for Best Actress from the Arizona Daily Star, and in 2008, she received the Mac Award for Best Actress for her performance of Stevie in Edward Albee’s The Goat at The Rogue Theatre.
Cynthia Meier’s direction of The Secret in the Wings is supported in part by a generous gift from Ann & Nils Hasselmo.

Notes from the Director

Bruno Bettelheim in The Uses of Enchantment writes: “Each fairy tale is a magic mirror which reflects some aspects of our inner world and of the steps required by our evolution from immaturity to maturity.”

For the child, fairy tales offer her a way to understand what is going on inside and to project her concerns onto a canvas outside herself. For example, in many fairy tales, a child is abandoned by her parents—a mother dies, a wicked stepmother takes her place or both parents die and the child is out on her own. Little Red Riding Hood goes out into the deep dark forest, Cinderella is left with a wicked stepmother and stepsisters, Beauty bravely goes to take her father’s place at the castle of the Beast. As children, we hear these stories of trial and success and know that even if the worst thing in the world were to happen to us—our parents abandoning us—we have the resilience to survive. Fairy tales teach us about what it means to grow up, to persevere, to be brave, to love.

In many ways, fairy tales are like dreams and can often be interpreted as such. They certainly represent a kind of deep cultural consciousness—or perhaps subconsciousness—because many of the tales we now know are thousands of years old and have been told and retold and passed down through many generations.

Fairy tales (which seldom have fairies in them—the term actually comes from the adjective “fairy” which means “enchanted” or “magical”) are usually told for children. But I would suggest that inside of all of us, in spite of our maturity, a child still lives. C. S. Lewis has a wonderful dedication to his goddaughter Lucy in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe: “I wrote this story for you, but when I began it I had not realized that girls grow quicker than books. As a result you are already too old for fairy tales, and by the time it is printed and bound you will be older still. But some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again. You can then take it down from some upper shelf, dust it, and tell me what you think of it.”

I think this may be true of theatre as well. We revel in it as children, then we often outgrow it. Later, much later, we return to the theatre when we are “old enough to start hearing plays again.”

In The Secret in the Wings, Mary Zimmerman tells us seven uncommon fairy tales from European origins. She begins with Beauty & the Beast as a framing story for the evening. (Some sources say Beauty & the Beast is over 4,000 years ago.) She tells the rest of the stories in an unusual structure: Stolen Pennies is told in episodes throughout, but the other fairy tales are fanned out to us with four beginnings, the fifth complete story—The Wild Swans—at the center of the play, and then the endings of the four stories. This structure makes the stories seem even more dream-like as we in the audience try to piece the different elements together.

Enjoy the dream, dear Rogues. And may you live happily ever after.

Cynthia Meier, Director
director@theroguetheatre.org

 

Playwright

Mary Zimmerman (Playwright)

Mary Zimmerman (Playwright) is an American theatre director and playwright. Born in Nebraska, she spent much of her childhood in Hampstead Garden, England, and in Paris. She is currently a faculty member in the Performance Studies department at Northwestern University. She is an ensemble member of the Lookingglass Theatre Company and the Manilow Resident Director at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago.

Zimmerman received degrees in theatre and performance studies at Northwestern University. She has earned national and international recognition in the form of numerous awards, including the prestigious John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship in 1998. She won a 2002 Tony Award for Best Direction for her adaptation of Ovid's Metamorphoses. Other notable productions include Eleven Rooms of Proust, The White Snake (performed at The Rogue in January 2017), Pericles Prince of Tyre and Cymbeline.

Zimmerman has adapted several literary works in addition to Metamorphoses, including Journey to the West (performed at The Rogue in September, 2012), The Odyssey, The Arabian Nights, The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci and Argonautika, the Greek story of Jason and the Argonauts' search for the Golden Fleece. Zimmerman has directed Bellini's La Sonnambula, Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor andRossini's Armida for the Metropolitan Opera. She is the director and co-librettist of the 2002 opera Galileo Galilei, with music by Philip Glass, commissioned by the Goodman Theatre.

 

Three princes. Hunter Hnat, Ryan Parker Knox and Aaron Shand.

Three princes
Hunter Hnat, Ryan Parker Knox and Aaron Shand

 

Three portraits they liked. Hunter Hnat, Ryan Parker Knox, Joseph McGrath, Aaron Shand, Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock and Patty Gallagher.

Three portraits they liked
Hunter Hnat, Ryan Parker Knox, Joseph McGrath, Aaron Shand, Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock and Patty Gallagher

 

The Princess Who Won't Laugh. Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock, Patty Gallagher, Aaron Shand, Holly Griffith, Joseph McGrath, Hunter Hnat and Bryn Booth.

The Princess Who Won’t Laugh
Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock, Patty Gallagher, Aaron Shand,
Holly Griffith, Joseph McGrath, Hunter Hnat and Bryn Booth

 

Falling in Love Again. Ryan Parker Knox, Aaron Shand, Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith and Claire Hancock.

Falling in Love Again
Ryan Parker Knox, Aaron Shand, Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith and Claire Hancock

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Cast

Snake-Leaves Princess & others Bryn Booth+
Allerleira & others Patty Gallagher*+
Princess Who Won’t Laugh & others Holly Griffith+
Wild Swans’ Daughter & others Claire Hancock
Son of Three Blind Queens & others Hunter Hnat+
Allerleira’s Father & others Ryan Parker Knox*+                       
Ambassador & others Joseph McGrath*+
The Sea Captain & others Aaron Shand*+
Mr. Walley Matt Walley+

*Member of Actors’ Equity Association,
the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
+ Member of The Rogue Resident Acting Ensemble

Bryn Booth (Snake-Leaves Princess & others)

Bryn Booth (Snake-Leaves Princess & others) is a graduate of the BFA Acting program at the University of Arizona. She was most recently seen as Hero in The Rogue’s production of Much Ado About Nothing. This is Bryn’s second season as a member of the Resident Acting Ensemble with The Rogue where she has performed as Voice Five/No. 40 (The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time), Little Monk (Galileo), Regan (King Lear), Rose of Sharon (The Grapes of Wrath), Sybil (A House of Pomegranates), and Lady Macduff (Macbeth). Other credits include Mag in Lovers and Gowdie Blackmun in The Love Talker with the Scoundrel & Scamp Theatre, Juliet in Romeo & Juliet (Tucson Shakespeare in the Park), and Bianca in Othello (Arizona Repertory Theatre). In recent years, she had the pleasure of understudying with Arizona Theatre Company in Romeo & Juliet as Lady Montague and Lady Capulet, and Of Mice and Men as Curley’s Wife. Bryn is ecstatic to spend another season at The Rogue creating beautiful performances with talented artists.
Bryn Booth’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Clay Shirk.

 

Patty Gallagher (Allerleira & others) is a Resident Acting Ensemble member at The Rogue. She is Professor of Theatre Arts at University of California Santa Cruz where she teaches movement, mask, Balinese dance, clown traditions and Shakespeare. With The Rogue, she was last seen as Siobhan in Curious Incident.   Other roles at The Rogue include: Fool in King Lear,  B in Three Tall Women, the White Snake in The White Snake, Mrs. Kilbride in By the Bog of Cats, Rosencrantz in Hamlet and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Portia in The Merchant of Venice, Mabel in The Lady in the Looking Glass, Madame Moiselle in Dante’s Purgatorio, Hannah Jarvis in Arcadia, Kali in Mistake of the Goddess (Hayavadana), Red Peter in Kafka’s Monkey, Mrs. Samsa in Metamorphosis, Monkey King in Journey to the West, Autolycus in The Winter’s Tale, Player 1 in Shipwrecked!, Alibech in The Decameron, Ariel in The Tempest, Rani in Naga Mandala, Emilia in Othello, the Player in Act Without Words, Orlando in Orlando, Sonnerie and Scarron in Red Noses, Winnie in Happy Days, Ranevskaya in The Cherry Orchard and Shen Te in The Good Woman of Setzuan. She was recently named an Artistic Associate at Santa Cruz Shakespeare. She has also worked with The Folger Shakespeare Theatre, California Shakespeare Theater, The Jewel, EnActe, The New Pickle Circus, Ripe Time Theatre, Two River Theatre, RangaShankara, Jagriti, Teatro Cronopio and Grupo Malayerba. She has performed, choreographed and directed workshops in Asia, South America, Europe, and the US. She served as a Fulbright Scholar in Quito, Ecuador, and in 2014 she was awarded a Chair in Creative Studies at UCSC’s Porter College. She holds a doctorate in Theatre from University of Wisconsin–Madison and a BS from the University of Arizona. From 2002 to 2010, she was Director in Residence at Circus Center San Francisco.
Patty Gallagher’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Jan Linn & Richard Pincus.

 

Patty Gallagher (Allerleira & others)
Holly Griffith (Princess Who Won’t Laugh & others)

Holly Griffith (Princess Who Won’t Laugh & others) is a 5th year member of the Resident Acting Ensemble at The Rogue. Favorite productions include Much Ado About Nothing, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Three Tall Women, Celia A Slave, A House of Pomegranates, The White Snake, Uncle Vanya, Angels in America, By the Bog of Cats, Hamlet, and Arcadia. She also serves as a Box Officer and Co-Producer of the John & Joyce Ambruster Play-Reading Series at The Rogue. Holly holds an MA in English Literature from the University of Arizona where she now teaches in the department of Theatre, Film, & Television. She also serves as Artistic Associate and Director at the Scoundrel and Scamp Theatre, and maintains a fierce interest in the culture and literary tradition of Ireland.
Holly Griffith’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Bill & Barbara Dantzler.

 

Claire Hancock (Wild Swans’ Daughter & others) holds a Master of Arts degree in European Dance Theatre from Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in London, England, and earned both a Bachelor and Master of Fine Arts degree in dance from the University of Arizona. In 2009 she began collaborating with colleague Ashley Bowman and co-founded Artifact Dance Project. They have been creating main stage concerts, short dance films and collaborative projects together ever since. Claire has danced professionally with ODC/San Francisco and River North Dance Company in Chicago, and has been a guest teacher and choreographer for organizations including the Broadway Theatre Project, Arizona Theatre Company, Arizona Opera, Tucson Symphony Orchestra, True Concord: Voices and Orchestra, Arts Express, and Broadway in Tucson. She is a Qualified Fletcher Pilates® teacher at Body Works Pilates™ in Tucson, AZ. 
Claire Hancock’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Carol Mangold, in memory of Bill Mangold, M.D.

 

Claire Hancock (Wild Swans' Daughter & others)
Hunter Hnat (Son of Three Blind Queens & others)

Hunter Hnat (Son of Three Blind Queens & others) is grateful to be in his first season as a member of The Rogue Resident Acting Ensemble. You may have seen him in previous Rogue productions as Claudio in Much Ado About Nothing, Christopher in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time; Andrea in Galileo; Oswald in King Lear; Steindorff in Bach at Leipzig; and Ensemble for A House of Pomegranates. He has also been a part of The Rogue’s staged readings of The Illusion, No Exit, and Cloud 9. Other credits include Jokanaan in Salomé (The Scoundrel & Scamp); Ensemble and Romeo U/S in Romeo and Juliet (Arizona Theatre Company); Boyfriend in How the House Burned Down (Live Theatre Workshop) as well as several other workshops and readings. He is a U of A alumnus with his BFA in Musical Theatre, class of 2015. Enjoy the show!
Hunter Hnat’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Jim Wilson & Adam Hostetter.

 

Ryan Parker Knox (Allerleira’s Father & others) continues this season, his 7th in The Rogue’s Resident Acting Ensemble, with The Secret in the Wings being his 34th company production. Audiences will remember him from Arcadia (2014 Mac Award winner for drama), Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, Uncle Vanya (2016 Mac Award winner for comedy), Jerusalem, King Lear, Galileo, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, and most recently Much Ado About Nothing, among others. Ryan hails from South Dakota, but spent over a decade in Minnesota’s Twin Cities and surrounding regions where he appeared in over 90 productions. He received his BFA with an Acting Emphasis from the University of South Dakota in 1999. Ryan would like to thank the patrons and board of The Rogue for their never-ending support of art and of artists, and would like to thank his dearest loved ones for always having his back. Here’s to another inspired season of creativity and imagination!
Ryan Parker Knox’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Kathy Ortega & Lawrence Johnson.

 

Ryan Parker Knox (Allerleira’s Father & others)
Joseph McGrath (Ambassador & others)

Joseph McGrath (Ambassador & others) is Co-Founder and Artistic Director for The Rogue Theatre and has appeared in Galileo (2018 Mac Award for Best Actor), King Lear, Bach at Leipzig, Celia, A Slave, Macbeth, Penelope, The White Snake, Angels in America Part One, Tales of the Jazz Age, Miss Julie, Hamlet, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Merchant of Venice, Waiting for Godot, Jerusalem, Awake and Sing, Arcadia, Measure for Measure, Richard III, The Night Heron, Journey to the West, The Winter’s Tale, The New Electric Ballroom, Shipwrecked!, Major Barbara, New-Found-Land, Old Times, The Tempest, Ghosts, Naga Mandala, Othello, Krapp’s Last Tape, A Delicate Balance (2009 Mac Award for Best Actor), Animal Farm, Orlando, Happy Days, Six Characters in Search of an Author, Red Noses, The Goat, The Cherry Orchard, The Good Woman of Setzuan, Endymion, The Dead, and The Fever. Joe is a graduate of the Juilliard School of Drama and has toured with John Houseman’s Acting Company. He has performed with the Utah Shakespearean Festival and has been a frequent performer with Ballet Tucson appearing in The Hunchback of Notre Dame, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and for seventeen years as Herr Drosselmeyer in The Nutcracker. He has also performed with Arizona Theatre Company, Arizona Opera, and Arizona Onstage. Joe owns, with his wife Regina Gagliano, Sonora Theatre Works, which produces theatrical scenery and draperies.
Joseph McGrath’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Jan Stewart.

 

Aaron Shand (The Sea Captain & others) is thrilled to be in his first season as a member of The Rogue Theatre’s Resident Acting Ensemble, after having appeared as Don Pedro in Much Ado About Nothing, Sagredo in Galileo, Noah Joad in The Grapes of Wrath and Duke of Albany in King Lear. Born and raised in Tucson, he received his B.F.A. in Acting from the University of Arizona, performing for the Arizona Repertory Theatre in Bus Stop, The Miracle Worker and Romeo & Juliet. He also spent a season with the Milwaukee Repertory Theater, performing in The Cherry Orchard, State of the Union and A Christmas Carol. Aaron would like to thank his wife and two sons for sacrificing their evenings together so he can continue to pursue his passion.
Aaron Shand’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from Meg & Peter Hovell.

 

Aaron Shand (The Sea Captain & others)
Matt Walley (Mr. Walley)

Matt Walley (Mr. Walley) is a member of The Rogue Theatre Resident Acting Ensemble and was most recently seen as Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing, Roger in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Matti in Galileo, Edmund in King Lear and Uncle John in The Grapes of Wrath. He has enjoyed previous roles at The Rogue in Bach at Leipzig, Macbeth, Richard III, Journey to the West, The Winter’s Tale, Shipwrecked!, As I Lay Dying and Major Barbara. Last year, as an Artist in Residence at The Scoundrel and Scamp Theatre, Walley co-created and performed in Oaf. Matt is on the board of The Tucson Fringe Festival and also The Shakespeare Forum in New York City. His company, Theatre 3, created new work for Live Theatre Workshop’s late night series Etcetera including Theatrum Orbis Terrarum and Mixtape. He graduated from Dell’Arte International in 2009 with an MFA in Physical Ensemble Theatre. He has also performed with The Pinnacle Peak Pistoleros and their Wild West Stunt Shows, Stories that Soar!, and Live Theatre Workshop
Matt Walley’s performance is supported in part by a generous gift from John & Joyce Ambruster.

 

 

 

A dress as radiant as the sun. Joseph McGrath, Patty Gallager, Aaron Shand and Ryan Parker Knox.

A dress as radiant as the sun
Joseph McGrath, Patty Gallager, Aaron Shand and Ryan Parker Knox

 

Stolen Pennies with Bryn Booth.

Stolen Pennies with Bryn Booth

 

Swan wings. Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith, Ryan Parker Knox, Aaron Shand, Claire Hancock and Hunter Hnat.

Swan wings
Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith, Ryan Parker Knox, Aaron Shand, Claire Hancock and Hunter Hnat

 

More swans. Matt Walley, Joseph McGrath, Aaron Shand, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock, Ryan Parker Knox, Hunter Hnat and Patty Gallagher.

More swans
Matt Walley, Joseph McGrath, Aaron Shand, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith,
Claire Hancock, Ryan Parker Knox, Hunter Hnat and Patty Gallagher

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Music

Music Director and Composer Jake Sorgen
Vocal Director Russell Ronnebaum

Music is supported in part by a generous gift from Sally Krusing

 

Jake Sorgen (Music Director and Composer)

Jake Sorgen (Music Director and Composer) is an Artistic Associate and Resident Music Director at The Rogue. Since 2014 Jake has composed, performed and/or arranged music for nearly 25 productions at The Rogue. Jake is a composer/improviser/musician originally from Woodstock, New York. He performs solo and in music and interdisciplinary ensembles around the world with musicians, writers, actors, and dancers. As the 2018 “Maverick Prodigy,” Jake debuted two new works for text and music and two new works for guitar, double bass, and drum set at the Maverick Concert Hall in New York. His recorded output includes 4 albums of lyrical songs, the most recent, American/English was released in May 2018. Jake currently studies guitar and composition with Robert Windbiel and has previously studied improvisation with violist Mary Oliver and dancer Katie Duck and performed and studied with members of the Instant Composers Pool and the Creative Music Studio in the Netherlands and New York.

Russell Ronnebaum (Vocal Director) is happy to be back for his second production at The Rogue Theatre, this time providing vocal and choral direction. Past credits include The Rogue’s most recent production of Much Ado About Nothing, in which Russell served as Music Director, Pianist, and Composer of an original score. Russell holds a Master of Music degree in collaborative piano from the University of Arizona where he studied under Dr. Paula Fan. He currently serves as the assistant director of music at St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church in Oro Valley, as well as the staff accompanist for the Tucson Masterworks Chorale. Recent composition commissions and premieres include music for voice, choir, piano, string orchestra, dance and live theatre. Recordings, sheet music, and upcoming concert dates can be found at: www.RRonnebaum.com.

Russell Ronnebaum (Vocal Director)

Music Director’s Notes

In Mary Zimmerman’s theatre there is a sometimes subtle—sometimes coyly clear—enthusiasm for the making of theatre as an act in and of itself worth investigating before an audience. In this play she has written one of the best visual and textual examples of my own approach to composing and performing music in the theatre. Often I choose to write out only the bare necessities to get started making sounds: decide the instrument(s) best suited to the play, and prepare a handful of motifs and harmonic progressions that allow me to be as present as possible in the room with the team and build it out together. The Secret in the Wings not only encourages this method of working but displays it visually with sheer joy: the costumes and props adorning the stage before the play even begins, the transformation from one fairytale to the next done right before our eyes.

The play is deceptively technical and complex. Seven different stories require seven different sounds, tempos, moods, keys, etc. In kinship with Zimmerman’s aesthetic in this play, I’ve chosen to use only one instrument (piano), forcing me to find the thundering percussion, the melodic flute, the subtle guitar, and more.

The preshow features motifs and variations heard throughout the show in an often blended manner, never quite sure where one story ends and the next begins.

—Jake Sorgen, Music Director and Composer

Snake Song is written by Andre Pluess and Ben Sussman, and arranged by Russell Ronnebaum.

 

 

The Three Blind Queens

The Three Blind Queens
Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock, Patty Gallagher and Joseph McGrath

 

'I hear my father calling.' Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock and Bryn Booth.

“I hear my father calling.”
Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock and Bryn Booth

 

Dress-up. Patty Gallagher, Claire Hancock, Bryn Booth and Holly Griffith.

Dress-up
Patty Gallagher, Claire Hancock, Bryn Booth and Holly Griffith

 

A boat drilled with holes. Joseph McGrath, Hunter Hant, Aaron Shand, Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher, Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock and Holly Griffith.

A boat drilled with hole
Joseph McGrath, Hunter Hant, Aaron Shand, Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher,
Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock and Holly Griffith

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Designers

Costume Design Cynthia Meier

Costume design is supported in part by a generous gift from Ellen Bodow

Scenic Design Joseph McGrath

Scenic design is supported in part by a generous gift from Ward & Judy Wallingford

Lighting Design Deanna Fitzgerald

Lighting design is supported in part by a generous gift from Kristi Lewis

 

Production Staff

Stage Manager Shannon Wallace
Scenic Artist Amy Novelli
Set Construction Joseph McGrath &
Christopher Johnson
Costume Construction Cynthia Meier & Nanalee Raphael
Props Mistress Shannon Wallace
Master Electrician Peter Bleasby
Associate Lighting Designer Shannon Wallace
Electricians Tori Mays, Connor Greene, Mack Woods & Mandy Spartz
House Manager Susan Collinet
Assistant House Managers Paul Winick & Susan Tiss
Box Office Manager Thomas Wentzel
Box Office Assistants Kara Clauser, Shannon Elias,
& Holly Griffith
Program Advertising Paul Winick
Poster, Program & Website Thomas Wentzel

 

Deanna Fitzgerald (Lighting Design)

Deanna Fitzgerald (Lighting Design) is a professional Lighting Designer and member of United Scenic Artists, as well as an Associate Professor and head of lighting design and technology at the University of Arizona, where she also serves as the Associate Director of the theatre program and the Director of Graduate Studies. Her lighting design credits include a range of theatre, dance, opera, circus-themed entertainment, puppets, architectural lighting and more. She is a registered yoga and meditation teacher and conducts classes and workshops focused on using these and other “quietive” practices to enrich creative processes. Some of Deanna’s career highlights include the lighting designs for STOMP OUT LOUD, the Las Vegas version of the internationally acclaimed STOMP, for whom she also toured for six years as lighting director; Cirque Mechanics: Boom Town, which toured for two years with an off-Broadway appearance at The New Victory Theatre; and Erth’s Dinosaur Zoo US Tour. Deanna has been smitten with her Rogue family since 2014 when she designed their extraordinary creation Jerusalem, and has since designed Waiting for Godot, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Miss Julie, Bridge of San Luis Rey, Tales from the Jazz Age, Uncle Vanya, Penelope, Macbeth, Celia A Slave, Bach at Leipzig,Three Tall Women, King Lear, Galileo and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. She is grateful for every moment she gets to spend making things with them and for ME Peter Bleasby and Associate LD Shannon Wallace whose collaborations make that possible.

Shannon Wallace (Stage Manager) is excited for her third year as Resident Stage Manager with The Rogue Theatre. She served as stage manager for Angels in America, A House of Pomegranates, and The Grapes of Wrath. She also worked on The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Bridge of San Luis Rey, Uncle Vanya, Penelope, Macbeth, Celia, A Slave, Bach at Leipzig, Three Tall Women, King Lear, Galileo, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and Much Ado About Nothing as stage manager as well as associate lighting designer. She graduated from the University of Arizona with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, focusing on both stage management and lighting design. During her time in school she worked on over 25 productions with Arizona Repertory Theatre. She has also worked for Arizona Theatre Company, the Oklahoma City Philharmonic, and the Contemporary American Theatre Festival serving on both stage management teams and company & events management teams. She is grateful to be working full-time as a theater artist in her hometown.
Shannon Wallace’s stage management is supported in part by a generous gift from Susan Tiss.

Shannon Wallace (Stage Manager)
Peter Bleasby, Master Electrician

Peter Bleasby (Master Electrician) lit his first show at 13. Professionally, he was with BBC-TV for several years, and was an assistant to UK lighting designer Richard Pilbrow during the inaugural production of the National Theatre (Hamlet, directed by Olivier.) He transferred to architectural lighting, but maintained his theatre interests by lighting many shows on both sides of the Atlantic. When the Rogue established itself at the Historic “Y” in 2009, he volunteered for the initial season, returning in 2013 with  lighting designer Don Fox, and later working with Deanna Fitzgerald. He devised the installation of the permanent wiring system that enables lighting teams to devote more time to the creative process. For the Southern Arizona AIDS Foundation he directs the technical and logistical aspects of fundraisers, including the fashion show Moda Provocateur.

Susan Collinet (House Manager) earned her Bachelor of Arts Degree in Creative Writing and English Literature from the University of Arizona in 2008. Decades before returning to college as a non-traditional student, Susan spent twenty years in amateur theater, mostly on the East coast, as well as in Brussels, Belgium in the American Theater of Brussels, and the Theatre de Chenois in Waterloo. She has worked in such positions as a volunteer bi-lingual guide in the Children’s Museum of Brussels, the Bursar of a Naturopathic Medical school in Tempe, Arizona, an entrepreneur with two “Susan’s of Scottsdale” hotel gift shops in Scottsdale, Arizona, and as the volunteer assistant Director of Development of the Arizona Aids Project in Phoenix. Susan continues to work on collections of poetry and non-fiction. Her writing has won awards from Sandscript Magazine, the John Hearst Poetry Contest, the Salem College for Women’s Center for Writing, and was published in a Norton Anthology of Student’s Writing. In addition to being House Manager, Susan serves on the Board of Directors and acts as Volunteer Coordinator for the Rogue.

Susan Collinet, House Manager

 

Falling in Love Again. Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher, Holly Griffith and Claire Hancock.

Falling in Love Again
Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher, Holly Griffith and Claire Hancock

 

'Mr. Walley? The ogre?' Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth, Joseph McGrath and Matt Walley.

“Mr. Walley? The ogre?”
Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth, Joseph McGrath and Matt Walley

 

You were noticed too soon. Holly Griffith, Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth and Claire Hancock.

You were noticed too soon.
Holly Griffith, Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth and Claire Hancock

 

'You are just bad.' Claire Hancock, Matt Walley, Hunter Hnat, Joseph McGrath, Patty Gallagher, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith, Aaron Shand and Ryan Parker Knox.

“You are just bad.”
Claire Hancock, Matt Walley, Hunter Hnat, Joseph McGrath, Patty Gallagher,
Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith, Aaron Shand and Ryan Parker Knox.

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Our Thanks

Tim Fuller
Tucson Weekly
Chuck Graham
Patrick Baliani
Arizona Daily Star
Shawn Burke
Jerry James
Our Advertisers
Student tickets are sponsored in part by generous donations from
Paul & Mary Ross and
Jean & Jordan Nerenberg

 

 

'Three Blind Queens conclusion. Matt Walley, Bryn Booth, Hunter Hnat, Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock, Aaron Shand, Patty Gallagher, Holly Griffith and Joseph McGrath.

Three Blind Queens conclusion
Matt Walley, Bryn Booth, Hunter Hnat, Ryan Parker Knox, Claire Hancock, Aaron Shand, Patty Gallagher, Holly Griffith and Joseph McGrath

 

Your father's old glasses... Matt Walley and Bryn Booth.

“Your father's old glasses... Matt Walley and Bryn Booth.” Matt Walley and Bryn Booth

 

'And they lived happily ever after.' Aaron Shand, Holly Griffith and Hunter Hnat.

“And they lived happily ever after.” Aaron Shand, Holly Griffith and Hunter Hnat

 

The cast & crew of 'The Secret in the Wings': Shannon Wallace, Jake Sorgen, Hunger Hnat, Claire Hancock, Joseph McGrath, Cynthia Meier, Patty Gallagher, Ryan Parker Knox, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith, Lizzie Schloss, Aaron Shand, Matt Wally and Susan Collinet

The cast & crew of “The Secret in the Wings”:
Shannon Wallace, Jake Sorgen, Hunger Hnat, Claire Hancock, Joseph McGrath,
Cynthia Meier, Patty Gallagher, Ryan Parker Knox, Bryn Booth, Holly Griffith,
Lizzie Schloss, Aaron Shand, Matt Wally and Susan Collinet

Photo by Tim Fuller

 

Performance Schedule for The Secret in the Wings

Location: The Rogue Theatre at The Historic Y, 300 East University Boulevard
Click here for information on free off-street parking

Performance run time of The Secret in the Wings is one hour and twenty minutes. There is no intermission.
Run time does not include the music preshow beginning 15 minutes before curtain, or post-show discussion.

Thursday, February 28, 2019, 7:30 pm DISCOUNT PREVIEW
Friday, March 1, 2019, 7:30 pm DISCOUNT PREVIEW
Saturday, March 2, 2019, 2:00 pm matinee
Saturday, March 2, 2019, 7:30 pm OPENING NIGHT
Sunday, March 3, 2019, 2:00 pm matinee

Thursday, March 7, 2019, 7:30 pm
Friday, March 8, 2019, 7:30 pm
Saturday, March 9, 2019, 2:00 pm SOLD OUT
Saturday, March 9, 2019, 7:30 pm
Sunday, March 10, 2019, 2:00 pm matinee SOLD OUT

Thursday, March 14, 2019, 7:30 pm
Friday, March 15, 2019, 7:30 pm
Saturday, March 16, 2019, 2:00 pm
Saturday, March 16, 2019, 7:30 pm
Sunday, March 17, 2019, 2:00 pm matinee

The Wild Swans

The Wild Swans
Claire Hancock and swans Bryn Booth, Hunter Hnat, Patty Gallagher,
Aaron Shand, Joseph McGrath, Holly Griffith and Ryan Parker Knox

 

The Snake-Leaves Princess.

The Snake-Leaves Princess
Bryn Booth, Patty Gallagher, Holly Griffith and Claire Hancock

 

'eauty and the Beast

Beauty and the Beast
Bryn Booth and Matt Walley

 

The Princess Who Won't Laugh

The Princess Who Won’t Laugh
Ryan Parker Knox, Holly Griffith and Joseph McGrath

 

The Three Blind Queens

The Three Blind Queens
Holly Griffith, Claire Hancock, Patty Gallagher and Joseph McGrath

 

The Snake Leaves Princess with her boat

The Snake Leaves Princess with her boat
Bryn Booth

Photos by Tim Fuller

 

 

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Updated on April 1, 2019

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