| | “Ghostliness is one aspect of 'Shipwreck' that Saheem Ali’s production, which was revamped as a three-part podcast when the pandemic scuttled plans for a traditional staging, gets across beautifully.” – Jesse Green, The New York Times New York Premiere Audio Play Audio Version and Original Stage Play By Anne Washburn Directed and Freely Adapted by Saheem Ali In a co-production with Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company Now available on publictheater.org or wherever you download your podcasts. This fall, as the election draws near, tune in to a searing and searching new audio drama from acclaimed playwright Anne Washburn about America’s present-day divisions, seen through the eyes of the very recent past. SHIPWRECK centers on a group of liberal friends gathered at an upstate farmhouse on a day of crystalline beauty. While the weather outside grows increasingly apocalyptic and the conversation within grows precariously honest, the group discovers that in turbulent times, every dinner invitation comes at a cost. Slated to be a stage production in The Public’s 2020 season, SHIPWRECK has been re-worked specifically for an audience listening from home or headphones. Saheem Ali directs this harrowing and hilarious masterpiece about race, religion, family and the nightmarish fallout of the American experiment. Learn more & listen today. The cast of Shipwreck features: Deepen your level of engagement for $8.33 per month and join in as a Public Supporter. You will enable us to continue supporting a wide breadth of artists telling relevant stories of today. With your support, you make free access to art possible for hundreds of thousands of people around the world. Join us as a Supporter or Partner today or by making a monthly gift. Check back on our website, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for updates on events and more. The Public is Theater Of, By, and For All People. Additional Digital Season support provided by The Harold & Mimi Steinberg New Play Development Fund, The Shubert Foundation, The Tow Foundation, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts, and David Rockefeller Foundation. |
|
|
|
|