Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pittsburgh Public Theater reveals 50th anniversar­y lineup

‘The Hobbit’ and ‘Twelfth Night’ highlight the 2024-25 season

- By Joshua Axelrod

Pittsburgh Public Theater is taking local theater enthusiast­s on an unexpected journey for its 50th anniversar­y season.

The nonprofit theater company on Friday announced five of the six shows that it will stage at Downtown’s O’Reilly Theater in 2024 and 2025 to commemorat­e 50 years of production­s. Four of them are Pittsburgh premieres, while one is back by popular demand.

PPT’s golden anniversar­y season will consist of:

• “Dial M for Murder” (Sept. 11-29), the latest adaptation of Frederick Knott’s 1952 thriller about illicit affairs, desire and deception.

• “The Hobbit” (Oct. 23-Nov. 10), an on-stage version of J.R.R. Tolkien’s epic fantasy tome directed by Pittsburgh Public Theater artistic director Marya Sea Kaminski.

• “A Christmas Story: The Play,” (Dec. 4-22), a play based on the 1983 holiday movie classic that will be returning to the O’Reilly in 2024 for the third time.

• “Trouble in Mind” (Feb. 5-23, 2025), Alice Childress’ 1955 examinatio­n of racism and sexism in the world of profession­al theater.

• “Twelfth Night” (June 27-29, 2025), the William Shakespear­e comedy that also ended Pittsburgh Public Theater’s inaugural season and is being presented in collaborat­ion with New York City-based theater initiative Public Works.

Kaminski will also be directing “Twelfth Night” and said in a press release that she feels Pittsburgh Public Theater partnering with Public Works will result in “a truly breathtaki­ng moment to launch our next 50 years.”

Subscripti­ons to Pittsburgh Public Theater’s 2024-25 season are available at ppt.org. A sixth show that will take over the O’Reilly from March 19-April 6, 2025, will be announced on April 8 at the organizati­on’s “Alchemy” fundraisin­g gala.

Pittsburgh Public Theater is coming off a busy 2023 that included the launch of its joint “CREATE PA” jobs training program with the Pittsburgh Film Office and the premiere of original musical “Billy Strayhorn: Something to Live For” that was forced to go partially virtual due to a rash of cast illnesses.

It’s currently in the middle of a 2023-24 season that’s still set to include “The Importance of Being Earnest” from March 27-April 14 and “The Coffin Maker” — written by Pittsburgh theater stalwart Mark Clayton Southers and directed by City Theatre Company co-artistic director Monteze Freeland — from May 29-June 16.

For Kaminski, the way Pittsburgh Public Theater programmed its 50th-anniversar­y season was designed to celebrate both that momentous occasion and “Pittsburgh’s legacy of holding art at the

center of its identity.”

“This monumental anniversar­y season at the Public is brimming with what makes Pittsburgh so special,” Angela Blanton, Pittsburgh Public Theater’s board chair and Carnegie Mellon University’s CFO, said in that same press release.

“And we’re seeing this vision of being a true public theater come to life on and off stage alike.”

 ?? Michael Henninger/Pittsburgh Public Theater ?? Mitchell Jarvis as Feste in “Twelfth Night.”
Michael Henninger/Pittsburgh Public Theater Mitchell Jarvis as Feste in “Twelfth Night.”
 ?? Michael Henninger/Pittsburgh Public Theater ?? Helena Ruoti, John Ahlin and Tony Bingham in “Twelfth Night.”
Michael Henninger/Pittsburgh Public Theater Helena Ruoti, John Ahlin and Tony Bingham in “Twelfth Night.”

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