The Tooth of Crime

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DIRECTED BY RANDALL KING

ANNOUNCING NEW DATES

August 3 - 21, 2022

CAST


A rarely produced Sam Shepard masterpiece

A battle for psychic territory rages amid a post-apocalyptic world driven by rock music.  In a future dominated by “The Game”, Hoss, an aging rockstar living by his own code is pitted against his young rival Crow, a rising gypsy maverick driven by image and vying for the new status quo.  Through celebrity, mortality, and good ole’ rock ‘n’ roll, Sam Shepard unmasks the cyclical nature of fame and succession.

 
Visceral and sexual... one of Mr. Shepard’s best plays.
— The New York Times
 
 
Lean and mean and wired to the eyeballs.... a stunning show.
— New York Post
 

CREATIVES


RANDALL KING | DIRECTOR

ALLISON F. RICH | MUSIC DIRECTION

DON DALLY | COMPOSITION

GUILIO CESARE PERRONE | SET DESIGN

MADELINE BERGER | COSTUME DESIGN

MAURICE VERCOUTERE | LIGHT DESIGN

STEVE SCHOENBECK | SOUND DESIGN

DANTE CARBALLO | PROJECTIONS DESIGN

FINN KUPEL | PROPS DESIGN

BILL VUJEVICH | SCENIC PAINT

CHRISTOPHER MORTON* | STAGE MANAGER

 

About the Playwright


SAM SHEPARD (November 5, 1943 – July 27, 2017) is an American playwright, actor, author, screenwriter, and director whose body of work spanned half a century.  Described by New York magazine as "the greatest American playwright of his generation.”  He wrote 44 plays, 10 of which won Obie Awards for writing and directing, the most given to any writer or director.  Shepard received the PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award as a master American dramatist in 2009.

Shepard's plays are chiefly known for their bleak, poetic, often surrealist elements, dark humor, and rootless characters living on the outskirts of American society.  His style evolved over the years, from the absurdism of his early Off-Off-Broadway work to the realism of Buried Child and Curse of the Starving Class (both 1978).

Penning his first play in 1964, in unprecedented fashion, his next three works Chicago, Icarus's Mother and Red Cross, were all written in 1965, which would earn him his first three Obie Awards.  In 1975, Shepard was named playwright-in-residence at the Magic Theatre, where he created many of his notable works, including his Family Trilogy. One of the plays in the trilogy, Buried Child, won the 1978 Pulitzer Prize, and was nominated for five Tony Awards.  This also marked a major turning point in his career, heralding some of his best-known work, including True West, Fool for Love, and A Lie of the Mind.

Tickets


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