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NEW
YORK CITY
THE EXONERATED
Shows start October 1, 2002
45 Bleecker Theater
at Bleecker and Lafayette
Tuesdays-Fridays at 8 pm,
Saturdays at 3 and 9 pm and
Sundays at 2 and 7 pm.
Written
by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen,
Directed by Bob Balaban
Currently starring (in alphabetical order):
Charles Brown, Gabriel Byrne, David brown jr.,
Amelia Campbell, Bruce Kronenberg, Philip Levy,
Curtis McClarin, Jay O. Sanders, Marlo Thomas,
April Yvette Thompson
The
cast for The Exonerated is rotating, and the following people will
be appearing on these dates (For more info go to http://www.45bleecker.com/main.htm
November 19-24
Gabriel Byrne, Mia Farrow, Aidan Quinn
November 25 - December 1
Amanda Plummer, Aidan Quinn
December 3-8 Bebe Neuwirth
December 10-15 Richard Dreyfuss
December 17-22 Debra Winger
December 30 - January 5 Lynn Redgrave
January 7-12 Christine Lahti
January 21-26 Penn Jillette
January 28 - February 2 Judy Collins
Tickets are available through Ticketmaster
or in person at the 45 Bleecker Box office. Performances begin October
1st. Please note there is no performance on October 11.
For
info on "The Exonerated" in LA
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"Imagine
everything you did between the years 1976 and 1992. Now remove all
of it. Those 16 years were taken from Sunny Jacobs, a kidnapping
victim, convicted and sentenced to death for a crime she did not
commit.
Written
by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen, The Exonerated shares the true
stories of six innocent survivors of death row. Their stories, told
in their own words. Stories you won't ever forget."
Press
Coverage from:
Los Angeles Times,
Salon.com,
Revolutionary Worker,
The Guardian
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From
the first performance of The Exonerated in October 2000 at 45 Bleecker
Street Theater.
Performers pictured include Charles Dutton, Susan Sarandon, Tim
Robbins, David Brown Jr., Sarah Jones.
From
the Actors' Gang press release:
A
new play about real-life experiences of people who were wrongly
convicted of capital crimes and spent time on death row, THE
EXONERATED, will have its West Coast premiere at The Actorsâ
Gang, opening Friday, April 19. Writers Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen
will direct the production which is based on interviews with former
prisoners. Bob Balaban serves as supervising director.
[Jessica
and Erik have been involved with the Artists Network in New York
City where THE EXONERATED was first presented in October 2000 at
the 45 Bleecker Street Theater.] After attending a conference on
the death penalty at Columbia University, writers Blank and Jensen
were moved to action. Several months of staggering research later,
they spent six weeks traveling America, interviewing 40 of the [then]
92 former death row prisoners and their families. Developing a structure
for a reading version of the play, they collaborated with Bob Balaban
who directed actors such as Susan Sarandon, Richard Dreyfuss, Tim
Robbins, Steve Buscemi, Charles Dutton and David Morse in several
staged readings last fall. Balaban will also direct a fully staged
production in New York City later this year.
One
of the people whose story is dramatized in THE EXONERATED is Sonia
"Sunny" Jacobs, a vegetarian yoga instructor whose husband spent
13 minutes dying in a faulty electric chair. When Sunny went to
prison for murder in 1976 her son was 9 and her daughter, 10 months
old, still nursing. When she was freed in 1992, her daughter was
16 and her son was married with a child of his own. Ms. Jacobs who
has seen three of the staged readings responded, "Each time I am
struck by the sensitivity and intelligence with which it was conceived.
It is healing to see us depicted in the context of each othersâ
lives - so different and yet so alike. I feel easier about moving
on now? I feel that part of my life is being left in good hands
to serve a good purpose."
Press
on the Exonerated:
LA
Times review of The Exonerated
By PHILIP BRANDES,
SPECIAL TO THE LA TIMES 4/26/02
With
Conviction, a Look at Convictions 'The Exonerated' collects true
tales of those who were wrongfully placed on death row. It's vivid
and thought-provoking at the Actors' Gang.
To
speak of life-or-death stakes in "The Exonerated" is, for once,
no exaggeration. Created and directed by New York-based Jessica
Blank and Erik Jensen from interviews they conducted with former
death row inmates whose wrongful convictions were eventually overturned,
a riveting Actors' Gang staging examines capital punishment and
the justice system in chilling terms.
By
depicting the stories of six innocent people (out of 100 similar
cases and rising), this devastating docudrama proves more profound
and persuasive than any rhetorical pitch to abstract moral principles.
Others bore the stigmata of racial animus, like the sweet-tempered,
naive black teenager (Ben Cain) who was held incommunicado for a
week before signing a confession drafted for him. Or the fiercely
eloquent former seminary student (Richard Lawson) who serves as
the central narrator, charged for a murder--in a state he hadn't
even visited--solely on the basis of his skin color.
All
of these people shared only the unsettling predicament of being
in the wrong place at the wrong time, unable to defend themselves
against circumstances that conspired against them. As one reminds
us, it can happen to anyone.
While
many of the protagonists had the nobility to make peace with their
experience, the fact that they eventually regained their freedom
offers scant comfort. There is no way that white former bartender
Kerry Cook (Ken Palmer) can erase the invectives carved into his
flesh during his stay in prison. Former jockey Robert Hays (Ken
Elliott) was unable to regain his racing license to pursue his occupation
after his release. And Jesse Tafero, whose story we hear only second-hand,
was unavailable for interviews, having undergone a horrific electrocution
that required three jolts and took 13 minutes, before evidence proving
his innocence came to light.
While
capital punishment occupies the forefront here because it is irreversible,
the underlying indictment embraces the broader fallibility of our
justice system. There is no way to dismiss these stark case histories
as statistical aberrations--we can and must do better.
"Wrongly
convicted, they sat on death row for years. Extraordinary legal
measures saved their lives. A new play confronts us with their nightmares."
-- Salon.com Article
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2000/10/20/exonerated/
"Meet
Robert and Georgia, a Black couple from a small town in Mississippi
(played by David Brown Jr. and Sarah Jones). They dig each other,
they tell their stories in tandem, interrupting one another as lovers
do, they are funny and strong together. Robert, a professional horse
trainer, was convicted of raping and killing a white woman in 1991.
The murdered woman was found clutching 16-inch long strands of red-blond
hair in her hand. At the time Robert was convicted, it was known
that another worker at the racetrack had been pursuing the victim
sexually and had made racist comments about how she dated Black
men. He had long red-blond hair. Robert was released in 1997 after
six years of fighting for his innocence from prison and finding
people on the outside to fight with him. From the play we learn
that he is still harassed by police in his home town, and the racing
commission has refused to give him his license back, so he can't
make a living working with horses. Georgia: "He can't do something
he likes to do."
"....As
the play ends, Larry Marshall comes to the stage. He is a Chicago
lawyer who is known to many on death rowas someone who has devoted
his law practice to helping people fight for their lives in the
prisons of the U.S. He calls up Robert and Georgia from the audience,
then Randall and Brenda, Kerry and Sandra, Brad, Sunny, and finally
Delbert. The theater rises as one with thunderous applause as these
people you have come to know take their places with the actors.
For me, it is one of those transcendent moments. Before us are people
who had the courage to stand strong and unbroken through unspeakable
horrors. They have come forward to tell their stories to these artists
who used the power of their art to return all this to us in the
form of a beautiful play that will, without doubt, do its part to
help us change this world."
--Revolutionary Worker article
http://rwor.org/a/v22/1070-79/1078/exoner.htm
"Steve
Earle, the roots rocker and political activist, is in ebullient form.
"Hey," he calls out across the crowd making its way into the theatre.
"I didn't realise they let pinkos in here." In fact, this being the
reading of a script about Death Row, the auditorium in the United
Nations building in New York is peopled exclusively by pinkos. Earle,
who spends much time campaigning against the death penalty, is a guest
at the latest outing for The Exonerated. The script is based on interviews
with some of the 87 innocent people convicted and then released from
Death Row in the US. The biggest star on the stage tonight is Debra
Winger, and any Broadway producer would envy the names who have volunteered
their services for previous readings, a list including Richard Dreyfuss,
Steve Buscemi and, inevitably, the him and her of New York actorly
liberalism, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins.
--The Guardian Article
http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/story/0,3604,417155,00.html
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