We're thrilled to welcome you to the 2011/12 Season:
When everyday lives are touched by war. Five stories about winning and losing. Five stories about coming home.
We are no longer selling subscriptions to the 2011-12 season.
You can buy tickets to individual shows or buy a Steppenwolf Pass. Three tickets to any show for $150. Use them all on one show or spread them out and see three shows. Find out more...
On two separate afternoons, 50 years apart, a modest bungalow on Chicago's northwest side becomes a contested site in the politics of race. September 1959: Russ and Bev are moving out to the suburbs. They've inadvertently sold the house to the neighborhood's first black family and ignited a community showdown. September 2009: the neighborhood is ripe for gentrification and the house is again changing hands. This time to a young white couple with plans for demolition and a knack for saying the wrong thing at the wrong time.
In a provocative nod to A Raisin in the Sun, long-time Steppenwolf collaborator Bruce Norris takes a hilarious look at what happens when home becomes a battleground.
Read an article about the relationship between neighborhood boundries and race in Chicago.
WatchClybourne Park actor and Steppenwolf ensemble member James Vincent Meredith talk about the show.
Actor and Steppenwolf ensemble member James Vincent Meredith talks about Clybourne Park.
On a sun-scorched island off the coast of Greece, beautiful Penelope awaits the return of her husband from war. Beneath her window, four Speedo-clad men camp in an empty swimming pool, a cock-eyed internment where both provisions and time are running low. Locked in a do-or-die competition to win Penelope's love, they preen and posture and connive in a last ditch effort to cheat a grisly fate.
Penelope, the newest play by powerhouse Irish playwright Enda Walsh, is an eloquent, wildly funny riff on life, love and the war at home.
WatchPenelope director and Steppenwolf ensemble member Amy Morton talk about the show.
Read an interview with playwright Enda Walsh, author of Penelope, on The Guardian website.
Read an article about Penelope and another of Enda Walsh's plays, My Friend Duplicity, on The Guardian website.
Director and Steppenwolf ensemble member Amy Morton talks about Penelope.
For photojournalist Sarah Goodwin, happiness is rushing from hotspot to hotspot capturing images of global conflict. When she barely survives a bomb blast in Iraq, she's forced to return home into the care of her long-time lover, James. She's caught off-guard by James' desire for family and by the simple domestic life pursued by Richard, her editor, and his much younger girlfriend, Mandy. Pressed to consider settling into a "normal" life, Sarah must confront her addiction to the drama and chaos of war.
From Pulitzer Prize winner Donald Margulies, Time Stands Still is a witty, intelligent look at what happens when ordinary life is refracted through the lens of war.
The March
Based on the novel by E. L. Doctorow
Adapted and directed by ensemble member Frank Galati
Co-commissioned with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival as part of American Revolutions: the United States History Cycle.
General William Tecumseh Sherman, Uncle Billy to his men, marches 62,000 Union soldiers through lush Georgia countryside. Bearing along both black and white refugees, the march destroys everything in its path, turning home into exile and exile into home. Its epic force forever changes the lives of those caught up in its sweep: a liberated slave, a sheltered daughter of a Southern judge, a pair of Confederate deserters and Uncle Billy himself.
The March is a story of momentous upheaval and the limits of courage and love.
Watch ensemble member Frank Galati talk about The March.
Find out more about E.L. Doctorow, author of The March.
Ensemble member Frank Galati talks about his new adaptation of E.L. Doctorow's civil war novel, The March.
E.L. Doctorow
Named for Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Lawrence Doctorow occupies a central position in the history of American literature. On a shortlist that might also include Philip Roth, Toni Morrison, John Updike, Saul Bellow, and Don DeLillo, E. L. Doctorow is generally considered to be among the most talented, ambitious, and admired novelists of the second half of the twentieth century. Long celebrated for his vivid evocations of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American life (particularly New York life), Doctorow has received the National Book Award, two National Book Critics Circle Awards, the PEN/Faulkner Award, the Edith Wharton Citation for Fiction, the William Dean Howell Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the presidentially conferred National Humanities Medal.
Doctorow was born in New York City on January 6, 1931, and, like the novelist Everett in City of God, attended the Bronx High School of Science. After graduating with honors from Kenyon College in 1952, he did graduate work at Columbia University and served in the U.S. Army, which stationed him in Germany. In 1954, he married Helen Setzer. They have three children. Doctorow was senior editor for New American Library from 1959 to 1964 and then served as editor in chief at Dial Press until 1969. Since then, he has devoted his time to writing and teaching. He holds the Glucksman Chair in American Letters at New York University and over the years has taught at several institutions, including Yale University Drama School, Princeton University, Sarah Lawrence College, and the University of California, Irvine.
With The Book of Daniel, his third novel, Doctorow emerged as an
important American novelist with a strongly political bent. A fictional
retelling of the notorious Rosenberg spy case, the novel deftly evokes the
complex anxieties of Cold War America, shuttling back and forth in time from the
1950s, when Paul and Roselle Isaacson are convicted and electrocuted, to the
late 1960s, when their troubled son, Daniel, a grad student at Columbia, must
deal with the consequences of his unusual birthright. The Book of Daniel was
adapted in 1983 into the film, Daniel, starring Timothy Hutton and
directed by Sidney Lumet. Four years after The Book of Daniel came
Ragtime, a dazzling reimagining of the United States at the dawn of the
twentieth century by means of a plot that, like City of God, ingeniously
brings together real-life figuressuch as Henry Ford, J. P. Morgan, Harry
Houdini, and Emma Goldmanwith an array of invented characters. Ragtime
was named one of the 100 best English-language novels of the twentieth century
by the editorial board of the Modern Library and was adapted into a successful
Broadway musical in 1998. The March was published in 2005.
Widely acclaimed for the beauty of his prose, his innovative narratives, his
feel for atmospherics, and above all for his talent for evoking the past in a
way that makes it at once mysterious and familiar, Doctorow has created one of
the most substantial bodies of work of any living American writer.
Three Sisters
by Anton Chekhov Adapted by ensemble member Tracy Letts
The Prozorov family chafes at the constraints of life in their small provincial town, once a bustling army garrison where their late father served as general. Attempts to shore up their crumbling social status lay bare the larger forces of unrest that will soon engulf them all.
Tony® Award-winning ensemble members Tracy Letts and Anna D. Shapiro continue their celebrated collaboration, bringing fresh insight to this classic story of a privileged family’s changing fortunes.
Watch an interview with ensemble member Anna Shapiro about directing Three Sisters.
Ensemble member Anna Shapiro talks about directing Chekhov's Three Sisters.