2017 Season

The 63rd Season for the Tony Award®-winning theatre company included four world premieres, a new musical, and the first production of a WTF commissioned artist.

The Roommate (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

The Roommate

Golden Globe and Emmy Award winner S. Epatha Merkerson and Golden Globe and Emmy Award nominee Jane Kaczmarek star in this absorbing comedy about self-discovery. Empty-nested and alone in her Midwestern home, Sharon (Merkerson) takes on a roommate, Robyn (Kaczmarek), who has just arrived from New York City. Before she has even unpacked, Robyn challenges everything about Sharon’s way of life. Book clubs, 80s pop music, and the occasional shared toke complicate their unlikely but enduring relationship, even as they venture into dangerous territory. Mike Donahue directs Jen Silverman’s new play which celebrates unexpected re-invention later in life.

The Roommate (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Jane Kaczmarek and S. Epatha Merkerson in The Roommate, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festiva, photo by Daniel Rader.

The Model American (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

The Model American

In 2017, what does it take for an immigrant to achieve the American Dream? With humor and humanity, playwright Jason Kim (HBO’s “Girls”) explores this question in his timely world premiere play directed by Danny Sharron. Young, Latino, gay and unapologetically ambitious, Gabriel (Hiram Delgado) arrives in New York seeking work, friendship, love and mentorship. But, before he can move forward, he must honestly determine if he is running toward success or away from what he left behind. Developed at WTF under the auspices of the Bill Foeller Fellowship Program in 2016, The Model American asks: what is the price we are willing to pay for a new life?

The Model American (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Hiram Delgado and Han Jonghoon in The Model American, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festival, photo by Daniel Rader.

Where Storms Are Born (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Where Storms are Born

Mourning the loss of her elder son Myles (LeRoy McClain), Bethea (Myra Lucretia Taylor) tries to help her younger son Gideon (Christopher Livingston) through his grief. But as revelations surrounding Myles’ incarceration and death emerge, both mother and son must decide whether to fight or let go. With wit and empathy, this play reminds us of the courage and resilience it takes to chart a better way forward for the ones we love. Saheem Ali directs this world premiere play by 2016 WTF Playwright-in-Residence Harrison Davis Rivers.

Where Storms are Born (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Christopher Livingston and LeRoy McClain in Where Storms Are Born, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festival, photo by Daniel Rader.

The Clean House (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

The Clean House

Two-time Tony Award nominee Jayne Atkinson and Tony Award nominee Jessica Hecht leads the cast in this heartfelt comedy by Pulitzer Prize finalist Sarah Ruhl. Lane (Atkinson), an accomplished physician, discovers that her sister Virginia (Hecht) — not her Brazilian housekeeper Matilde (Guenia Lemos) — has been cleaning her home every day. Though never close, suddenly the sisters find themselves enmeshed in each other’s lives and in Matilde’s great passion for Portuguese jokes. Tony Award winner Rebecca Taichman directs this expressive and lyrical comedy about learning to live with life’s mess.

The Clean House (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Bernard White, Priscilla Lopez, Guenia Lemos and Jayne Atkinson in The Clean House, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festival, photo by Daniel Rader.

Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow

You’ve known Olga, Masha, and Irina for nearly 117 years. But this summer, they are, like, unhappy for reals. Obie Award winner and Drama Desk nominee Trip Cullman directs Outer Critics Award nominee and Theater World Award Winner Halley Feiffer’s world premiere: a contemporary adaptation of Chekhov’s Three Sisters. As our heroes search for meaning in their work and love lives — all the while dreaming of their dear Moscow — we are invited to examine our own existential longings and unrequited yearnings. Feiffer’s bold, unapologetically millennial, and bitingly comedic spin on this Russian classic newly reacquaints us with the emotional contours of the beleaguered and beloved Prozorov family. You totes don’t want to miss it!

Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Rebecca Henderson, Tavi Gevinson, and Cristin Milioti in Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festival, photo by Daniel Rader.

A Legendary Romance (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

A Legendary Romance

Emmy Award winner and Tony Award nominee Lonny Price directs an intimate new musical by composer/lyricist Geoff Morrow and book writer Timothy Prager that delivers us to the intersection of loyalty, love, and ambition. Back in 1950, film producer Joseph Lindy (Jeff McCarthy) was on top of the world, making hit after hit with the love of his life and leading lady, Billie Hathaway (Lora Lee Gayer). Nearly four decades later, retired and forgotten, he must approve for release a version of his abandoned, cinematic masterpiece, an autobiographical film now altered irrevocably by a young producer. Haunted by the choices he made years ago, Joseph’s story hangs in the balance as he reconstructs the film, his memory and, ultimately, his legacy.

A Legendary Romance (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Maurice Jones, Trevor Guyton, Jeff McCarthy, Jose-Maria Aguila, Lora Lee Gayer, and Roe Hartrampf in A Legendary Romance, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festival, photo by Daniel Rader.

Actually (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Actually

Amber (Alexandra Socha) and Tom (Joshua Boone) are freshmen at Princeton University, where their experiences so far have only two things in common: drunken parties and a desire to fit in. But when they meet, their common experience becomes anything but, and their moral mettle is put to the test. Lileana Blain-Cruz directs Anna Ziegler’s deeply felt and relevant world premiere play about intimacy and responsibility, power and provocation, privilege and protocol.

Actually (2017) (2017) by Daniel RaderWilliamstown Theatre Festival

Joshua Boone and Alexandra Socha in Actually, 2017 Williamstown Theatre Festival, photo by Daniel Rader.

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