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Perseverance Theatre
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Perseverance Theatre is a professional theater company located on Douglas Island in Juneau, Alaska. It is Alaska's only professional theater and is particularly dedicated to developing and working with Alaskan artists and to producing plays celebrating Alaskan culture, history, and themes. Perseverance Theatre was founded in 1979 by Molly Smith and, over the past quarter century, has emerged as an important not-for-profit regional theater, collaborating with leading theater artists and premiering more than 50 new plays by Alaskan and national playwrights. Paula Vogel’s 1998 Pulitzer Prize-winning play How I Learned To Drive was written and developed while Vogel was an artist-in-residence with the company.
   Smith served as artistic director from the theater's founding until 1998, when she left to become artistic director of the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. She was succeeded by Peter DuBois, who served until the fall of 2003, when he was appointed Associate Producer, then the Resident Director, at the Public Theater in New York. In July 2008, DuBois will become Artistic Director of Boston's Huntington Theatre. In 2004, PJ Paparelli became Artistic Director. He left in November 2007, to lead the American Theatre Company in Chicago. The current Artistic Director is Art Rotch, a Perseverance alumnus who left to earn an M.F.A. in set design at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts
   In addition to a full season of plays produced from September to May on its 161-seat Mainstage, Perseverance Theatre also produces a Second Stage season in its on-site rehearsal space, commonly referred to as "The Phoenix," which features smaller-scale productions, and, often, the work of developing actors, designers, and directors. Readings, as well as productions generated by the theatre's educational programs, are also regularly produced in the Phoenix.
   In 2001, Perseverance Theatre signed an agreement with the University of Alaska Southeast to assume responsibility for all theatre education activities at the University, offering minors to its students. In December 2002, the theatre was one of just seven American theater companies to receive a $500,000 endowment challenge grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation in New York through its Leading National Theatres Program. The company successfully completed the challenge in 2005. The theatre also recently rasied $1.1 million for a facility renovation and expansion project.

Mainstage

An example of the range of productions mounted by the theatre on its Mainstage can be seen in the list of shows from the 2006-07 season:

Second Stage

The theatre's Second Stage features more intimate productions and, often, the work of developing actors, directors, and designers. The 2006 - 07 Second Stage season included:
  • "Red Light Winter," written by Adam Rapp, directed by Jaime Castaneda.
  • "Speech And Debate," written by Stephen Karam, directed by David Charles Goyette.
  • "A Question Of Mercy," written by David Rabe, directed by Brandon Demery.
  • "Translation: A 31-Year-Old Woman's Strange Journey Toward Herself," written by Sarah Brooks, directed by John Leo.
  • "," written by Bert V. Royal, directed by David Charles Goyette. Performed at the University of Alaska Southeast, featuring students from the University's "Acting II" class.
  • "The Typographer's Dream," written by Adam Bock, directed by Jesse Morgan Young.
  • "The Last Five Years," written by Jason Robert Brown, directed by Colin Høvde.Further Information

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