About
The Seagull
by Anton Chekhov
November 8 – December 15
Directors Notes
It is with great enthusiasm that I share with you an idea for the new adaptation and production of Anton Chekhov’s “The Seagull;” in which a cohesion of different cultures, languages and background reach new grounds in human understanding and compassion. While the main themes of the play revolve around art and theater, there is an incredible void that is ever growing between characters, that ultimately ends with a suicide of an artist.
It is an exploration of the nature of an artist, the longing to realize oneself, stand up against the deadening of the arts, of people, and of life. While sometimes at the expense of relationships and loved ones, an incredible beauty is discovered by said artist that heals and unites people.
By mixing different languages, and going deep into exploring Chekhov’s world of creation through his journals, letters and the play itself, we are looking to answer our own struggles as artists and as people in the 21 st century. The alienation of people in the play we find very relevant today, where countries, just as people struggle to listen and hear, look and see and ultimately connect to find compassion.
Thank you very much for your support!
Artistic Director
Igor Golyak
Gallery
Videos
Cast&Crew
Cast
Anne Gottlieb* – Irina Arkadina
Eliott Purcell* – Konstantin Treplev
Dev Luthra – Pyotr Sorin
Irina Bordian – Nina Zarechnaya
Alexander Petetsky – Ilya Shamraev
Darya Denisova – Masha Shamraev
Nael Nacer* – Boris Trigorin
Igor Golyak – Yevgeny Dorn/Director/Yakov
Eric Andrews – Semyon Medvedenko
* signifies member of the Actors Equity Association
Design Team
Igor Golyak – Director
Nikolay Simonov – Scenic Designer
Nastya Bugaeva – Costume Designer
Jeff Adelberg – Lighting Designer
Jakov Jakoulov – Composer
Production Team
Ben Lieberson – Technical Director
Alla Trachtenberg – Assistant Costumer
Madeline Hartrich – Stage Manager/Supervising TD
Ilona Overweg – Asst. Technical Director
Irina Vilenchik – Props Master
Blair Cadden – Dramaturg
Anna Furman – Make-Up Designer
Natalia Mitlina – Wardrobe
Madeline Hartrich – Board Operator
Press Release
Media Contact: Joanne Barrett/JBPR
jbpr@comcast.net 617-834-6021 @jebpr
ARLEKIN PLAYERS THEATRE CONTINUES 10th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
with ANTON CHEKHOV’S CLASSIC THE SEAGULL
NOVEMBER 8 – DECEMBER 15, 2019
“We learn about life not from the plusses alone,
but from the minuses as well…”
—Anton Chekhov
Arlekin Players Theatre presents Anton Chekhov’s tragic comedy The Seagull, featuring members of the Arlekin company performing alongside four of Boston’s favorite professional actors Anne Gottlieb** (Irina Arkadina), Dev Luthra (Pyotr Sorin), Nael Nacer** (Boris Trigorin), and Eliott Purcell** (Konstantin Treplev), in a newly adapted version of the play conceived and directed by Igor Golyak. The new script translation is by Ryan McKittrick and Julia Smeliansky with Chekhov’s letters used in the script translated by Laurence Senelick. Performances will take place Fridays-Sundays, November 8 – December 15, 2019 (*see below*) at Arlekin Players Theatre in Needham. Tickets, $45 – $65. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit arlekinplayers.com or call (617) 942-0022. Arlekin will also offer unique pre-show and post-show talks for interested groups.
“Through this production, Arlekin seeks to bridge the world of Chekhov to today’s contemporary theatre scene, exploring how the timeless work speaks to artists of all cultures, says Artistic Director Igor Golyak. “By mixing different languages, and delving into Chekhov’s world through his journals, letters and the play itself, we seek answers to our own struggles as artists, and as people in the 21st century. Through the examination of this cohesion and collision of different cultures, languages, and backgrounds, Arlekin seeks to create dialogue around human understanding and compassion.”
According to Golyak, “While the play thematically revolves around the dominant idea of art and theater, ever-expanding voids grow between the characters, ultimately leading to the suicide of an artist. The Arlekin production explores that conflicted nature in artists — the longing to realize oneself and stand up against the deadening of the arts, of people, and of life — often existing at the expense of lasting relationships, loved ones, and even one’s very existence. Yet, it leads to the creation of an enduring work of art, whose beauty the artist discovered through his sacrifice, that heals and unites people.”
The creative team features Nikolay Simonov (scenographer), Nastya Bugaeva (costume design), Jeff Adelberg (lighting design), Jakov Jakoulov (original score) and a nine-member cast including Anne Gottlieb** (Irina Arkadina), Eliott Purcell** (Konstantin Treplev), Dev Luthra (Pyotr Sorin), Irina Bordian (Nina Zarechnaya), Alexander Petetsky (Ilya Shamraev, Darya Denisova (Masha Shamraev), Nael Nacer** (Boris Trigorin), Igor Golyak (Yevgeny Dorn/Yakov) and Eric Andrews (Semyon Medvedenko). Dramaturgy by Blair Cadden.
** signifies member of the Actors Equity Association
Arlekin Players Theatre was created in Boston in 2009 and has since toured to New York, Chicago, and Hartford, as well as to several international festivals. Arlekin takes strong pride in their emphasis on self-identity; they are a company of immigrants performing works that play on the ideas of cross-culture, home, and traditions, challenging the idea of nationality, and finding common themes that unite us all. The company makes its home in Needham, MA. For more information, visit www.arlekinplayers.com.
This production is sponsored by Webster Bank, Massachusetts Cultural Council, and The Boston Foundation.
Reviews
Don Aucoin’s Top 10 in Boston-area theater in 2019 – Boston Globe
12 Plays And Musicals That Mattered In Boston This Year – WBUR
Theater Review: “The Seagull” — An Exceptional Staging of a Legendary Play – The Arts Fuse
Arlekin’s reimagined ‘Seagull’ speaks to us anew – Rich Fahey’s On Boston Stages
The Arlekin Pleyers play Chekhov’s The Seagull – ArtScope Magazine
Chekhov’s ‘The Seagull’ flies high, with a Jewish twist – Jewish Journal
Cast Bios
* Signifies Actor’s Equity Assosciation Member
Dev Luthra trained at East 15 Acting School, London, England and at Shakespeare and Company in Lenox, MA. Acting credits include Antigonus, Old Shepherd, Bottom/The Winter’s Tale and Midsummer Night’s Dream at Bay Colony Shakespeare Company, Father/Brilliant Adventures and Azdak/Caucasian Chalk Circle (Apollinaire Theatre Company), Mr. Biedermann/Firebugs (Huellas Vivas), Orsino/Twelfth Night (Sun Valley Shakespeare Festival) Northumberland/Henry IV, parts 1 & 2 (Actors Shakespeare Project), M. le Comte/N. Bonaparte (Pilgrim Theatre), Leonato/Much Ado About Nothing (Public Theatre) Worcester/1 Henry IV (Palace Theatre). Dev directs and teaches for Shakespeare Now! Theatre Company, and for Grumbling Gryphons Children’s Theatre, touring throughout the Northeast. He has taught acting and movement at Boston College and Emerson College and currently at Boston University’s Prison Education Program. Dev is the Artistic Director of And Still We Rise Productions, a theatre company committed to the advocacy of the rights of people impacted by the prison system. He is a contributing author to The Heart and Soul of Psychotherapy, S. Linden, ed. Macbeth’s Children, an adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, co-written with Michael Bettencourt, won an AATE New Play award. Dev also works as a presentation skills and presence coach in the corporate sector. Of Anglo-Indian parentage, he has lived and worked in the Northeast since 1978.
Nael Nacer* (Trigorin) was recently seen at Merrimack Repertory Theatre in Tiny Beautiful Things. Area credits include: Romeo and Juliet; A Doll’s House; Bedroom Farce; Come Back, Little Sheba; Awake and Sing!; The Seagull; Our Town (Huntington Theatre), The Return (Israeli Stage), Small Mouth Sounds; A Future Perfect; Tribes (SpeakEasy Stage), Macbeth; Equivocation (Actors’ Shakespeare Project), True West; Bank Job; The Flick (Gloucester Stage), Calendar Girls (Greater Boston Stage Company), Constellations; Sila; Distracted (Central Square Theatre), Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play; Intimate Apparel; Animal Crackers (Lyric Stage), 45 Plays for 45 Presidents; It’s a Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play (Merrimack Rep), A Number; Lungs; The Kite Runner; Pattern of Life (New Repertory Theatre), Rhinoceros; Windowmen (Boston Playwrights’ Theatre), and Shear Madness (Charles Playhouse). Nael was born and raised in Paris, France and currently resides in Brookline, MA. He is the recipient of Elliot Norton and IRNE awards for his work, and is a resident acting company member of Actors’ Shakespeare Project, as well as a monologue coach with My College Audition.
ANNE GOTTLIEB* is thrilled to work with Arlekin. She first fell in love with Russian and Polish theatre and specifically Michael Chekhov training when she traveled to St. Petersburg in college and returned to Moscow to perform in a student festival. Recent Stage credits include, The Little Foxes, Lyric Stage, Broken Glass and Frankie and Johnny in the Claire de Lune, The New Rep (IRNE & Elliot Norton Award) The Women, Other Desert Cities, In the Next Room, or the Vibrator Play, (Elliot Norton Award) all with Scott Edmiston at Speakeasy Stage Co. Absence with Joanna Merlin at Boston Playwrights theatre. Not Enough Air, Crave, Betrayal (IRNE award) with the Nora Theatre Company. She is the co-creator of The Wrestling Patient based on the letters and diaries of Etty Hillesum which she co-produced with Speakeasy Stage Company and Boston Playwrights Theatre. Anne is currently developing a new play with director Uli Meyer- Horsch in Hamburg about how war and love live across generations long after the event. She is the founder of the newly formed Talk to Strangers Community Initiative, teaches presence work internationally and is an ongoing student and teacher of the Michael Chekhov work. For Gabriel Kuttner, in honor of his brilliance and humor.
Eliott Purcell* (Treplev) Recent Credits: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (IRNE Nomination Outstanding Actor), Hand to God (Elliot Norton Nomination Outstanding Actor) appropriate [SpeakEasy Stage Company]; Cherry Docs [Acropolis Stage], Our Town [Huntington Theatre Company]; Old Money, King Lear, Two Gentlemen of Verona, Romeo and Juliet [Commonwealth Shakespeare Company]; Laura and Meet Me in St. Louis [Greater Boston Stage Company]; A Measure of Normalcy [Gloucester Stage]; The Weird [Off the Grid]. Ethan Frome, Helen, The Oresteia, Living in Exile, Mansfield Park [Newton Theatre Company] NYC credit: Jews on First [Piece of Tish Productions] Education: Boston College Class of’14.
Eric Andrews debuted at Arlekin Players Theatre as Edward Tulane in last season’s Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. In addition to training with Igor Golyak, Eric also trained under Scott Fielding at Michael Chekhov’s Actor’s Studio Boston. Eric Andrews grew up in Norway, Maine.
Alex “Sasha” Petesky Have been with Arlekin Players Theatre for the past 10 years as actor and director. Played Guest of Laura in the production of “Guest” by A. Pushkin, Kochkarev in Gogol’s “Marriage”, Sorin in Chekhov’s “The Seagull”, directed and played the role of King in the production of “Cinderella”, Alex in “Immigrants 3.0”, Constable in “Memorial Prayer”, Ruvim in Tales of the Last Wednesday”, multiple roles in the production of “US”, multiple roles in the production of “Dead man’s diary. Theatrical novel,” multiple roles in the production of “The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane”.