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The Chekhov Festival
Lantern Theater Company presents The Chekhov Festival, Friday, November 5 – Sunday, November 7

Three-day festival celebrates playwright Anton Chekhov's 150th birthday with a weekend of special events and performances in conjunction with Uncle Vanya (Oct. 21 – Nov. 21)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 27, 2010

Lantern Theater Company will present a weekend of performances, readings, and scholar events with The Chekhov Festival from Friday, November 5 - Sunday, November 7, in celebration of the work of influential Russian playwright, short-story writer, and physician Anton Chekhov (1860-1904) during the 150th anniversary of his birth. The three-day festival is offered in conjunction with the 2010/11 season opener, Uncle Vanya (through Nov. 21), the Lantern's first-ever production of a full-length Chekhov work.

The Chekhov Festival will be held at various locations and at Lantern Theater Company, located at St. Stephen's Theater at 10th & Ludlow Streets in Philadelphia. Individual event admissions vary. An All-Access Festival Pass is available for $70. Tickets are available online at www.lanterntheater.org or by calling the Lantern Box Office at (215) 829-0395. [A full list of festival schedule and event descriptions follows below.]

About Anton Chekhov
Anton Chekhov is considered one of the greatest writers in the history of world literature. In his early career he produced a number of plays and one-acts, although his enduring reputation as one of the world's greatest dramatists relies largely on the classics The Seagull (1896), Uncle Vanya (1897), The Three Sisters (1901), and The Cherry Orchard (1904). For some, Chekhov's achievements in short story writing eclipse his plays; the most famous of his many short works include The Death of a Government Clerk, Easter Eve, The Bet, The Black Monk, Peasants, and The Lady with the Lapdog. Chekhov began writing as a young man, primarily to support his family and put himself through medical school, and he continued to practice medicine throughout his literary career. "Medicine is my lawful wife," he once said, "and literature my mistress."

The Chekhov Festival
Friday, November 5 - Saturday, November 7
Programs & Events


Presented in conjunction with Uncle Vanya, The Chekhov Festival will feature a series of special events, readings, and a scholars' discussion with special guest panelists, offering deeper insight into the work of one of the greatest writers in the history of world literature. A full schedule of festival events follows below.

Where:
Lantern Theater Company (unless otherwise noted)
At St. Stephen's Theater
10th & Ludlow Streets
Philadelphia, PA 19107

Admission:
Event admissions vary and include FREE programs, $12 performances ($10 for subscribers and students), and more. An All-Access Festival Pass is available for $70, and includes admission to all events and Uncle Vanya performances throughout the weekend.

Information:
(215) 829-0395 or visit www.lanterntheater.org

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5

Festival Kick-Off Party: Mingle with Lantern staff, artists, and fellow theatergoers over complimentary light fare and happy hour specials.
6:00 p.m., FREE
Location: Marathon Grill, 10th & Walnut Streets

Curtain Raiser: On the Harmful Effects of Tobacco, a Chekhov one-act starring Lantern Education Director Joshua Browns
7:15 p.m., FREE
Location: the Lantern Lab; 10min

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6

Chekhov Shorts: Letters, Lovers, and a Lapdog
Selections: The Bet directed by Joshua Browns, The Lady with the Lapdog directed by M. Craig Getting, and Chekhov in Love directed by David Howey. The cast includes Adam Altman, David Blatt, Corinna Burns, John Lopes, Matthew Lorenz, Megan Slater, and Eric Scotolati.
2:00 p.m., $12 ($10 for subscribers and students)
Location: the Lantern Lab; 90min

Scholars' Dinner: Chekhov: Mingling the Ordinary with the Extraordinary, with guest panelists Toby Zinman and Patricia D. Denison, moderated by Uncle Vanya director and Lantern Associate Artistic Director Kathryn MacMillan. Admission includes a three-course meal of salad, choice of entrée, and dessert with coffee or tea, plus one free drink at cash bar.
4:30 p.m., $35 ($30 for subscribers and students)
Location: Fergie's Pub, 1214 Sansom Street

Toby Zinman has been reviewing theater for The Philadelphia Inquirer since January 2006; she's the Philadelpha reviewer for Variety and a frequent contributor to American Theatre magazine. She is professor of English at the University of the Arts, where she was awarded the prize for distinguished teaching. As an academic, she has published widely and lectured internationally on contemporary American drama. She is also an adventure travel writer, which has taken her all over the world.

Patricia D. Denison is a Senior Lecturer in English and Acting Chair of the Department of Theatre at Barnard College. She teaches dramatic literature in both the Department of English and the Department of Theatre at Barnard. Dr. Denison has published articles on Victorian drama, modern British drama, and American drama. She is finishing a book on Arthur W. Pinero and late-nineteenth century British drama.

Curtain Raiser: The Death of a Government Clerk, a Chekhov one-act starring Lantern Artistic Director Charles McMahon
7:15 p.m., FREE
Location: the Lantern Lab; 12min

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7

Curtain Raiser: On the Harmful Effects of Tobacco, a Chekhov one-act starring Lantern Eduction Director Joshua Browns
1:15 p.m., FREE
Location: the Lantern Lab; 10min

Chekhov Shorts: Letters, Lovers, and a Lapdog
Selections: The Bet directed by Joshua Browns, The Lady with the Lapdog directed by M. Craig Getting, and Chekhov in Love directed by David Howey. The cast includes Adam Altman, David Blatt, Corinna Burns, John Lopes, Matthew Lorenz, Megan Slater, and Eric Scotolati.
7:00 p.m., $12 ($10 for subscribers and students)
Location: the Lantern Lab; 90min

UNCLE VANYA
Thursday, October 21 - Sunday, November 21


Set in the provocative, tragicomic world of Chekhov's Russia, the Lantern's fresh interpretation of Uncle Vanya is bursting with passion and fierce humor. Vanya and his niece Sonya have toiled for years to keep the family estate going. When Sonya's father, the retired Professor Serebryakov, and his dazzling young wife Yelena return for a visit, all work comes to a halt. Old resentments explode into arguments and secret longings come to light. The Lantern's production of Uncle Vanya began previews on October 21, opens on October 27 (press night, 7:00 p.m.), and closes on November 21, 2010.

Tickets are $20-$36 and are available online at www.lanterntheater.org or by calling the Lantern Box Office at (215) 829-0395. $10 student rush tickets are available 10 minutes before curtain with valid ID; cash only. Additional discounts are available for seniors and groups of 10 or more.

2010/11 Season
Lantern Theater Company will continue its 2010/11 season with Between Heaven and Hell: The Anthony Lawton Festival (December 3 - 19, 2010); A Skull in Connemara by Martin McDonagh (January 13 - February 6, 2011); A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare (March 10 - April 10, 2011); and Vigil by Morris Panych (May 19 - June 12, 2011).

Lantern Theater Company thanks its 2010/11 season corporate partners at Marathon Grill, La Fourno Ristorante Trattoria, and Dunkin' Donuts, and its community partners at St. Stephen's Church. The Chekhov Festival is supported by the Pennsylvania Humanities Council and Marathon Grill.
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Header Photo: Lawrence Stallings in the world premiere of Me and the Devil (2021); Anthony Lawton and Dave Johnson in Travesties (2022); Melissa Rakiro and Joanna Liao in Twelfth Night (2023); and Paul L. Nolan, Sally Mercer, and Charles McMahon in Copenhagen (2018). Photos by Mark Garvin.

Lantern Theater Company acknowledges that it is situated on Lenapehoking, the ancestral and spiritual homeland of the Unami Lenape, and we pay respect to them as this region's original storytellers.

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