Backstage

'Glory Days' Headed to Broadway

Signature's Musical to Play at Circle in the Square; Schaeffer to Direct

Steven Booth and Andrew C. Call in Signature Theatre's "Glory Days," which will open in New York on May 6.
Steven Booth and Andrew C. Call in Signature Theatre's "Glory Days," which will open in New York on May 6. (By Scott Suchman -- Signature Theatre)
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By Jane Horwitz
Special to The Washington Post
Wednesday, March 26, 2008; Page C05

Signature Theatre's "Glory Days," the coming-of-age musical set on a football field, is moving to Broadway next month.

Staged by Signature Artistic Director Eric Schaeffer, the four-man show will play at the Circle in the Square Theatre, which specializes in intimately scaled musicals. "Glory Days" begins previews April 22 and opens May 6. Until recently, Circle in the Square hosted the Tony-winning "25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee."

Adriana Douzos of theatrical press agency Boneau/Bryan-Brown Inc. said that other than Schaeffer's directing, no casting or creative decisions have been confirmed. Schaeffer was in rehearsals and did not return several phone calls yesterday.

The transfer of a play from Washington to Broadway is an exceedingly rare occurrence. Arena Stage's award-winning "The Great White Hope" moved to Broadway in 1968, and the Signature Theatre/Rep Stage production of "Never the Sinner," based on the Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb murder case, was produced off-Broadway in 1998 at the John Houseman Theater.

"Glory Days," with a book by James Gardiner and music and lyrics by Nick Blaemire, uses a variety of musical styles, from folk to pop to rock, to tell the stories of four young men as they reunite a year after their high school graduation. The friends -- none of whom made the "cool crowd" -- roughhouse with each other, try to relive the past and discover some uncomfortable truths about one of them. The musical ended its world-premiere run at Signature on Feb. 17.

Catalyst to Move to Atlas

Catalyst Theater Company has opted out of its residency at the soon-to-reopen Source Theatre on 14th Street NW and will instead make its home at the Atlas Performing Arts Center on H Street NE.

"It was feeling a little crowded at Source," said Catalyst's founding artistic director, Scott Fortier. The ambitious small company would have shared the Source space and calendar with three other resident troupes -- the In Series, Constellation Theatre Company and Washington Improv Theater (WIT) -- as well as the D.C. Arts and Humanities Education Collaborative, which will have its headquarters there.

The nonprofit Cultural Development Corp. (CuDC), which owns and operates Source, is renovating the iconic Washington theater as a multi-use performance venue. It is due to open in late spring with a 150-seat black box theater, offices and rehearsal space.

"It didn't feel like there were enough weeks of programming available to achieve our season," Fortier said. Catalyst has been doing three shows per season in the tiny 49-seat theater at the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, and he hopes to expand it to four shows in the 2009-10 season.

CuDC Executive Director Anne L. Corbett said the Source schedule was tightly packed to make the space financially viable and to foster an atmosphere of collaboration.

"We chose a group that would make it a bit crowded, [but] it wasn't untenable. . . . We needed to hedge our bets and everybody needed to come in with a spirit of collaboration," she said.

Corbett expressed disappointment at the small troupe's move. "It was my top priority to make Catalyst successful at Source, but I didn't get the opportunity to do that," she said. She wouldn't comment on whether she is seeking a group to replace Catalyst.


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