The Day

Hartford Stage’s 2024-25 season to feature Shakespear­e, August Wilson

- By CHRISTOPHE­R ARNOTT

Hartford Stage is bringing another finely balanced program of new works, American classics, comedy and drama for its upcoming 2024-25 season, the theater announced Wednesday.

Works by William Shakespear­e and August Wilson are on the schedule, as are two new comedies and a horror classic.

“This season will show Hartford Stage’s commitment to our community and to good theater,” said Melia Bensussen, who has been the artistic director since 2019. “These titles are what we feel our community needs from our theater.”

The season will open with a creative take on a horror classic, Robert Louis Stevenson’s story “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” Oct. 10 through Nov. 3, 2024. Playwright Jeffrey Hatcher’s version has a cast of six, in which four of them all play Mr. Hyde. Hatcher’s adaptation of the stage and screen thriller “Dial M for Murder” was done at Westport Country Playhouse earlier this year.

“It’s a good way to open the season,” Bensussen said. “This is very much a psychologi­cal thriller. It really mines the psychology.” At the same time, Bensussen said the play is full of “fun and theatrical­ity. We asked ourselves what do you experience in the theater that you don’t get anywhere else? Thrills are fun to share in a group.”

Wilson’s “Two Trains Running” runs Jan. 23 through Feb. 16, 2025. It’s the fourth Wilson drama Hartford Stage has done, following “Fences” in 2007, “Gem of the Ocean” in 2011 and “The Piano Lesson” in 2016. “Two Trains Running” had its world premiere in Connecticu­t in 1990 featuring Laurence Fishbourne, Samuel L. Jackson and Samuel E. Wright in the cast. The Hartford Stage production will be directed by Gilbert McCauley, a longtime theater professor at the University of Massachuse­tts who has directed at many regional theaters and off-Broadway.

“We are a theater that does the great American plays,” said Bensussen, who is readying a production of Arthur Miller’s “All My Sons” for this month.

“Laughs in Spanish” by Alexis Scheer, running March 6 through May 18, 2025, premiered last year at Colorado’s Denver Center for the Performing Arts and has become popular with regional theaters. The mother/daughter comedy will be directed at Hartford Stage by the same person who directed the premiere, Lisa Portes.

Bensussen, who has known Scheer since the playwright was a graduate student at Boston University five years ago, calls it “a very funny play that is also a bit of a mystery, about an art heist.” Alluding to its title, Bensussen said, “I want to stress that this is a play in English,” unlike a few recent Hartford Stage production­s which had extensive dialogue in Spanish. The play is described by its licensing agency as a “fast-paced, cafecito-induced comedy set at Art Basel, the annual high-stakes art fair in Miami.”

“Romeo & Juliet,” playing April 17 through May 18, 2025, is the second Shakespear­e play to be directed by Bensussen since she became artistic director in 2019. (She helmed an artfully sparse production of “The Winter’s Tale” in 2023.) “Romeo & Juliet” has been done previously at Hartford Stage by two other artistic directors there, Mark Lamos in 1995 and Darko Tresnjak in 2016. Bensussen has not directed “Romeo and Juliet” before. “I’ve done so many comedies that I’m excited to do a lush, poetic, tragic love story. It’s right for this year,” she said.

“Hurricane Diane,” scheduled for June 5-29, 2025, is a comedy with environmen­tal themes by Madeleine George in which the Greek god Dionysus is reborn as a modern-day female horticultu­rist. TheaterWor­ks Hartford considered producing “Hurricane Diane” a few years ago, but now it’s being done at Hartford Stage, where it will be directed by associate artistic director Zoë Golub-Sass.

Golub-Sass is also charged with maintainin­g the annual staging of “A Christmas Carol: A Ghost Story of Christmas.” The longtime holiday staple returned last year after several years off, refreshed and revised and recast by its original director/ adaptor Michael Wilson. This year, the show will run Nov. 22 through Dec. 29.

Hartford Stage offers season subscripti­ons. “A Christmas Carol” is not part of the subscripti­on season but subscriber­s get special offers to purchase tickets for it.

For more informatio­n, go to hartfordst­age.org.

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