![]() "... a solid core of emotional honesty" Margo Jefferson, The New York Times, Oct. 7, 2005 "Beautifully directed by Susan Fenichell and splendidly mounted by Urban Stages, it's a terrifically entertaining and engaging work. I highly recommend it. "Martin Denton, nytheatre.com "O'Connor
shines on in Daniel MacIvor's old-fashioned but quietly effective Marion
Bridge... O'Connor's unexpectedly touching Louis epitomized the play's
gentle message that people are rarely as simple as they appear" Adam
Feldman, Oct. 13 "Compelling and moving." - Back Stage Susan O'Connor - "People of the Year" at nytheatre.com. Congratulations! |
URBAN
STAGES PRESENTS: |
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| "...beautifully performed drama at Urban Stages by Mr. MacIvor, a vastly underrated and prolific writer... There's no murder, no shocks and no dark secrets waiting to be revealed. But in some ways, this moving drama, which tiptoes toward sentimentality without ever reaching it, is the most surprising play that he's ever written. When was the last time you saw a drama about three distinct, complex women that had nothing to do with their relationships with men? The MacKeigan sisters, whose affection for one another shows despite their constant bickering, are troubled, each in her own way. Agnes (Henny Russell) has a faltering acting career and an estranged daughter; Theresa (Christa Scott-Reed) is a rigid nun questioning her faith (a portrait on par with Cherry Jones's in "Doubt"); and childlike Louise (Susan Louise O'Connor, above right, with Ms. Scott-Reed) is married to her soap operas. They have all come home to see their dying mother, but while Mr. MacIvor often writes about death, this resolutely hopeful play is as much about making the most of life (despite all its flaws and disappointments). JASON ZINOMAN, Oct. 28, 2005 | ||||||||
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October 1 - November
13, 2005 BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW: |
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Three
sisters return home to care for their mother in this lyrical, poignant,
and funny play by Obie-winning Canadian playwright Daniel MacIvor. Trapped
by life choices and unfulfilled expectations that have left them isolated,
the three women search for the courage to create a new family from the
remnants of the old. Marion Bridge uses an elegant theatricality to portray
three remarkable women struggling to change their lives. Daniel MacIvor,
author of In on It, Never Swim Alone, and Cul-de-Sac, is a recipient of
The Governor General's Award and one of Canada's most acclaimed contemporary
playwrights. |
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![]() Christa Scott-Reed & Susan Louis O'Connor &d , photo by Pavel Antonov |
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with Susan Louise O'Connor |
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