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About CTC
Founded by Michael
Kahn in 1983 to be the resident Professional Theater on the grounds
of the Chautauqua Institution, the Chautauqua Theater Company
grew under the 18 year stewardship of Rebecca Guy to include
a nationally recognized training program for actors. Under the
new leadership of co-Artistic Directors Vivienne Benesch and
Ethan McSweeny, CTC unites outstanding theatre professionals
with the finest emerging actors in the country.
Our
Mission
The Chautauqua Theater
Company has a unique role to play in the American Theater --
it offers our loyal and discerning audience the best in classical,
contemporary, and new plays and features a company made up of
internationally acclaimed professional actors, directors, designers,
playwrights and faculty, joined by 15 of the finest emerging
actors in the country.
As originally conceived
by founding artistic director Michael Kahn, the goal of the CTC
was to build "a professional theater company centered at
Chautauqua that would, in the future, be able to do a season
of very, very good theater combining professional actors and
students."
Under the 18-year stewardship
of the incomparable Rebecca Guy, the Conservatory emerged to
fill Michael's original vision of a resident company at Chautauqua.
Patiently, with years of support from Chautauquans near and far,
Guy built the infrastructure of a sustainable theater organization
and completed the stunning renovation of Bratton Theater.
Now, the future that
Michael Kahn once envisioned is here. Building on the firm foundations
laid by their predecessors, Vivienne Benesch and Ethan McSweeny
are poised to bring CTC to the forefront of summer theaters in
this country and unite the twin traditions of performance and
training under one Bratton roof.
Leadership
> Artistic Directors

Vivienne Benesch, New York, NY
Vivienne Benesch is in
her fourth season as artistic director of CTC and her thirteenth
as a member of the Company. Since 1989, when she began as a member
of the Conservatory and performed the role of Rachel in Reckless
for the first time, she has returned to direct (Much Ado About
Nothing, Measure for Measure, A Soldier's Tale, New Burlington,
Skin of Our Teeth, Power of Three, Love by the Water, The September
11th Project), to act (100 Saints You Should Know, Iphigenia
and Other Daughters, Waiting for the Parade, No Exit, Lysistrata),
and to teach.
As an actress, Ms. Benesch
has worked extensively on and Off-Broadway, in film and television
and at many of the country's most celebrated theaters. Most recently,
she performed the title role in Major Barbara at The Shakespeare
Theatre (directed by Ethan McSweeny). Last year she appeared
with Maggie Smith in the London revival of Edward Albee's The
Lady from Dubuque. In 2005 she received an OBIE Award for her
performance in Lee Blessing's Going to St. Ives (which also garnered
the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Off-Broadway Play). In
New York, her Broadway credits include: After the Fall, Salome,
Deep Blue Sea and The Heiress; Off-Broadway: Belle Epoque (Lincoln
Center); Vienna: Lusthaus (New York Theatre Workshop); Pericles
and All's Well That Ends Well (NYSF/Public Theater); Troilus
& Cressida (Theatre for a New Audience); Ancient History
(Primary Stages); and work with Classic Stage Company, MCC and
Underwood. Regional work includes leading roles at The Guthrie
Theater, Hartford Stage, Alley Theatre, A.C.T. San Francisco,
The Shakespeare Theatre, McCarter, Long Wharf, Westport Country
Playhouse and four seasons at the Shakespeare Theatre of New
Jersey. TV & film credits include Teeth, American Splendor,
Tenderness, Corn, "Paradise" (a pilot for Showtime),"Six
Feet Under," "Sex and the City," "The Education
of Max Bickford," "The Division" and multiple
episodes of "Law & Order."
As a director Benesch
most recently staged The Seagull and Getting Out for the Juilliard
School and a highly acclaimed production of Richard III for the
Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey (Star Ledger, Top Ten of 2006).
She is a graduate of Brown University and NYU's Graduate Acting
Program and serves as chair of the theater panel for the National
Foundation for Advancement in the Arts.
Ethan McSweeny, Washington, DC
Ethan McSweeny is in
his fourth summer as artistic director of CTC, for which he has
directed The Just ('07), The Cherry Orchard ('06), All My Sons
('05), Cobb ('03), and the New Play Workshops of Kate Fodor's
100 Saints You Should Know, Quincy Long's Aux Cops, and Rinne
Groff's What Then.
Last fall he directed the New York premieres of 100 Saints You
Should Know and Jason Grote's 1001, which, in a rare double-header,
were chosen to be among the top ten productions of 2007 by Time
Out and Entertainment Weekly magazines. His other New York direction
includes a star-studded Broadway revival of Gore Vidal's The
Best Man (Tony nomination, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle
Awards), Aeschylus' The Persians in a new translation by Ellen
McLaughlin, Willy Holtzman's Sabina and John Logan's Never the
Sinner (Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards).
Recent national highlights
include a revival of Shaw's Major Barbara at the Shakespeare
Theatre (featuring Ms. Benesch in the title role); the world
premieres of In This Corner at the Old Globe, 1001 at the Denver
Center Theatre (Ovation Award) and Lee Blessing's A Body of Water
at both the Guthrie and the Globe (San Diego Theatre Critics
Circle Award); the new musical Chasing Nicolette at the Prince
Music Theater (Barrymore Award nomination); the world premiere
of Noah Haidle's Mr. Marmalade at South Coast Rep (OCIE Award);
and revivals of Romeo and Juliet and Six Degrees of Separation
at the Guthrie (Star-Tribune Award).
Mr. McSweeny received the first-ever undergraduate degree in
theater and dramatic arts from Columbia University and has served
as associate artistic director of the George Street Playhouse
in New Jersey (2000-2004), resident director at New Dramatists
(2001-2002) and associate director of the Shakespeare Theater
Company (1993-1997). He currently sits on the executive board
of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, an independent
national labor union.
This coming year, Mr. McSweeny's work will be seen at the Guthrie
(Miller's A View from the Bridge), CenterStage (Albee's Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), the Juilliard School (Friel's Dancing
at Lughnasa), The Shakespeare Theatre (Euripides' Ion) and the
Old Globe (the world premiere of Cornelia by Mark Olsen).
Production
History
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Ah, Wilderness (June 30-July 8, 2007)
by Eugene O'Neill
Directed by Lisa Rothe
"It's a lighthearted,
entertaining experience and a refreshing breath of air, perfect
for a summer outing." Dave
Zuchowski, Erie Times/Chautauquan Daily
"...the production
is blessed with an outstanding performance by young Gabriel Ebert
join the Millers if you can
you'll emerge happy yet wiser."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown Post-Journal |
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The Just (July 21-29, 2007)
by Albert Camus/Translated by Anthony Clarvoe
Directed by Ethan McSweeny
"Scorching
each
member of this talented, tightly-knit ensemble has a critical
role to play, and all deploy themselves with aplomb
"
Zachary Lewis,
Chautauquan Daily
"Briskly paced
engrossing
a
succinct and effective contemplation on the conflicting forces
of ideology." Colin
Dabkowski, The Buffalo News |
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Much Ado About Nothing (August 11-18, 2007)
By William Shakespeare
Directed by Vivienne Benesch
"This play is laugh-aloud
funny
the overwhelming feeling was one of lightness, laughter
and enjoyment."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown Post Journal
"
in the stable
of Shakespeare clowns, Dogberry is right up there, and Morf's
characterization would need to be among the best."
Anthony Bannon, Chautauquan Daily |
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Vaidehi (July 12-14, 2007)
By Gautam Raja
Directed by Pamela Berlin
Isaac and Ishmael (August 2-4, 2007)
By David Schulner
Directed by Liesl Tommy |
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The Cherry Orchard (July 1-9, 2006)
by Anton Chekhov
Translated by Paul Schmidt
Directed by Ethan McSweeny
"Marvelous ... director
Ethan McSweeny strikes the ideal balance between comedy and tragedy."
Richard Huntington,
The Buffalo News
"... a gossamer
beauty ... subtle and delicate and profound."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown Post-Journal
"... a stunning
production."
Willard Spiegelman,
The Wall Street Journal |
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The Art of Coarse
Acting
(July 22-30, 2006)
by Michael Green
Directed by Dylan Baker
"Certain to make
you laugh, long and hard."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown (NY) Post-Journal
"Deliciously bad!
(A) wacky pageant of high jinks and well-crafted and deliberate
ineptitude."
Dave Zuchowski,
Erie Times
"Uproarious ...
the cast perfected their pratfalls and comic timing and the audience
hooted."
Wilma Salisbury,
Cleveland Plain-Dealer |
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Twelfth Night (August 12-19, 2006)
by William Shakespeare
Directed by Andrew Borba
"Many winning performances
... Susannah Flood is beguiling."
Chuck Klaus, Chautauquan
Daily
"Light, energetic,
and very funny ... I recommend it heartily."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown Post-Journal |
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Aux Cops (July 13-15, 2006)
by Quincy Long
Directed by Ethan McSweeny
100 Saints You Should
Know
(August 3-5, 2006)
by Kate Fodor
Directed by Ethan McSweeny |
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All My Sons (July 7-16, 2005)
by Arthur Miller
Directed by Ethan McSweeney
"A shattering performance
..."
Wilma Salisbury,
The Cleveland Plain-Dealer
"A superb production
... "
Richard Huntington,
The Buffalo News
"... A powerful
debut for the new artistic team."
Dave Zuchowski,
The Erie (PA) Times News |
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Picasso at the Lapin
Agile
(July 21-30, 2005)
by Steve Martin
Directed by Mark Nelson
"You'll leave weary
from laughing ... An evening of very high comedy."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown (NY) Post-Journal
"Very funny ...
and remarkably subtle."
Richard Huntington,
The Buffalo News
" ... from the sublime
to the mundane and several rungs of the comic ladder in between."
Dave Zuchowski,
Chautauquan Daily |
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Measure For Measure (August 11-20, 2005)
by William Shakespeare
Directed by Vivienne Benesch
"A powerful Shakespeare
experience ..."
Robert Plyler,
Jamestown (NY) Post-Journal
"Vivienne Benesch
directs a production replete with deft handlings of the text
... "
Zachary Lewis,
The Chautauquan Daily |
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Ariel Sharon Stands
at the Temple Mount and Dreams of Theodor Herzl
by David Zellnik
Directed by Julia Gibson
What Then
by Rinnie Groff
Directed by Ethan McSweeney |
Bratton
Theater
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Click on the image of Bratton
Theater above to download a Quicktime Virtual Reality movie in
a new window.
(photo Bruce Fox)
After downloading,
to look around, click on the image and keep your mouse button
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Friends
of CTC
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Since 1994, the Friends
of Chautauqua Theater Company have played an important role in
encouraging Chautauqua Institution's commitment to theater as
a vital part of the performing arts during the season. Visit the Friends online to learn more about becoming a member. |
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