The Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script Pdf

The Last Night of Ballyhoo
Written byAlfred Uhry
CharactersSunny Freitag
Adolph Freitag
Lala Levy
Boo Levy
Peachy Weil
Joe Farkas
Reba Freitag
Date premieredJuly 20, 1996
Place premieredOlympic Arts Festival
Atlanta, Georgia
Original languageEnglish
GenreComedy/Drama
SettingAtlanta, Georgia
December 1939

The Last Night of Ballyhoo is a play by Alfred Uhry that premiered in 1996 in Atlanta. The play is a comedy/drama, which is set in Atlanta, Georgia, in December 1939.

The last night of ballyhoo script Adolph is a kind soul, who understands the good impact Joe has on the family Described in cast of characters as 'a businessman, late 40s. Known for his obnoxious behavior and outspokenness Described in cast of characters as 'a visitor from Lake Charles, 20s. Dramatists Play Service, one of the premier play-licensing and theatrical publishing agencies in the world, was formed in 1936 to foster national opportunities for playwrights by publishing affordable editions of their plays and handling the performance rights to these works.

Plot[edit]

The Last Night of Ballyhoo (Alfred Uhry) Waiting For Godot (Samuel Beckett) Twelve Angry Men (Reginald Rose) The Beauty Queen of Leenane (Martin McDonagh) The Importance of Being Earnest (Oscar Wilde) A Christmas Carol (Charles Dickens/Adapted by Richard Hellesen, Music by David DeBerry). The play script and in the interview below, how, for him, characters are more interesting than themes, and are the starting point for his plays. At the heart of The History Boys are four characters, each with contrasting outlooks on teaching and school. HECTORis an eccentric English teacher, close to retirement. He is described as both. Atlanta, Georgia. The Last Night of Ballyhoo is a play by Alfred Uhry that premiered in 1996 in Atlanta. The play is a comedy/drama, which is set in Atlanta, Georgia, in December 1939.

The play is set in the upper classGerman-Jewish community living in Atlanta, Georgia in December 1939. Hitler has recently conquered Poland, Gone with the Wind is about to premiere, and Adolph Freitag (owner of the Dixie Bedding Company), his sister Boo, and sister-in-law Reba, along with nieces Lala and Sunny – a Jewish family so highly assimilated they have a Christmas tree in the front parlor – are looking forward to Ballyhoo, a lavish cotillion ball sponsored by their restrictive country club. Adolph's employee Joe Farkas is an attractive eligible bachelor and an Eastern Europe Jew, familiar with prejudice but unable to fathom its existence within his own religious community. His presence prompts college student Sunny to examine intra-ethnic bias, her Jewish identity (or lack thereof), and the beliefs with which she has been raised.

Characters[edit]

The Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script Pdf

Boo Levy – Lala's mother, Sunny's aunt, and Adolph's sister. Her husband is dead, and she struggles with wanting her daughter to be socially successful. Boo is the main character driving the play's inter-Jewish racism. Described in cast of characters as 'Adolf's sister, a few years older.'[1]

Sunny Freitag – A junior at a well-to-do liberal arts college (Wellesley College), Sunny is interested in the works of Eugene V. Microsoft office for mac free download. Debs and Upton Sinclair. She struggles with her Jewish identity, but faces this through her relationship with Joe. It is unknown whether the end scene is a dream or a reality. Described in cast of characters as 'Reba's daughter, 20s.'[1]

Script

Adolph Freitag – Adores Sunny, but has little tolerance for Lala. Adolph is a kind soul, who understands the good impact Joe has on the family. Described in cast of characters as 'a businessman, late 40s.'[1]

Night

Lala Levy – Obsessed with 'Gone With The Wind.' Somewhat childish and awkward, Lala finally finds a husband in Peachy. Lala fights with her mother over their Jewish identity and her social status. Thomas the train mod skyrim. Described in cast of characters as 'Boo's daughter, 20s.'[1]

Old version of skype for mac os x 10.5.8. Reba Freitag – Sister-in-law to Adolph and Boo. Reba is somewhat simple, but is more shrewd than others give her credit. Like the other characters, Reba is oblivious to what it means to be Jewish. Described in cast of characters as 'Adolf's sister-in-law, middle 40s.'[1]

Joe Farkas – Works for Adolph Freitag, and finds an intellectual match in Sunny. Challenges the family to reassess their ideas of identity and family. Described in cast of characters as 'Adolf's business assistant, 20s.'[1]

Peachy Weil – Finds a match in Lala. Known for his obnoxious behavior and outspokenness. Described in cast of characters as 'a visitor from Lake Charles, 20s.'[1]

Background[edit]

Originally a series of vignettes, each featuring a different member family of the city's exclusive Standard Club, Ballyhoo was inspired by the playwright's childhood memories. In revising the play, Uhry opted to focus solely on the Freitags and expanded their storyline into two acts. Ballyhoo was commissioned by the Olympic Arts Festival for the 1996 Summer Olympics and was staged at Atlanta's Alliance Theatre that year.[2][3][4] The Atlanta cast included Terry Beaver as Adolph, Dana Ivey as Boo, Stephen Mailer as Joe, Jessalyn Gilsig as Sunny, Mary Bacon as Lala, Valerie J. Curtin as Aunt Reba, and Stephen Largay as Peachy Weil. (T. Beaver, D. Ivey, and S. Largay were the only cast members to transfer to Broadway.)[5]

Production[edit]

The Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script Pdf

The play opened on Broadway at the Helen Hayes Theatre on February 27, 1997 and closed on June 28, 1998 after 556 performances.[6] Directed by Ron Lagomarsino, the original cast included Terry Beaver as Adolph, Dana Ivey as Boo, Paul Rudd as Joe, Arija Bareikis as Sunny, Jessica Hecht as Lala, Celia Weston as Aunt Reba, and Stephen Largay as Peachy Weil.[5][6]

Replacements later in the run included Peter Michael Goetz as Adolph,[7]Kelly Bishop (in circa May 1998)[8] and Carole Shelley (as of August 26, 1997) as Boo,[9]Mark Feuerstein and Christopher Gartin as Joe,[7]Kimberly Williams as Sunny (as of August 26, 1997),[9] and Cynthia Nixon (as of August 26, 1997) [9] and Ilana Levine as Lala.[7][10]

The Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script Pdf Download

Critical reception[edit]

The Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script Pdf Download

Ben Brantley of the New York Times observed, 'Much of the gently barbed, idiosyncratic Southern humor recalls a vintage episode of the television sitcom Designing Women . . . Mr. Uhry's one previous play, Driving Miss Daisy . . . was a modest masterpiece of obliquely rendered sentimentality and social commentary. Here the author employs much more direct and conventional means that work more blatantly to elicit laughs and tears. Ballyhoo isn't a clumsy work; on its own terms, it's a model of old-fashioned tailoring. And Mr. Uhry has a fascinating and incendiary subject in the self-hatred implicit in the social stratifications among Southern Jews, particularly given that the play is set on the eve of World War II. But the context in which he couches it can feel very treacly . . . There's no doubting that Ballyhoo is a sincere, good-hearted work, but it almost never feels spontaneous. Despite its provocative subject, its form is the theatrical equivalent of comfort food, something for those who like their nostalgia repackaged in the guise of something new.'[5]

The Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script Pdf

Awards and nominations[edit]

Last Night Of Ballyhoo Summary

  • 1997 Tony Award for Best Play (winner)
  • 1997 Tony Award, Best Featured Actor in a Play, Terry Beaver (nominee)
  • 1997 Tony Award, Best Featured Actress in a Play, Dana Ivey (nominee)
  • 1997Tony Award, Best Featured Actress in a Play, Celia Weston (nominee)
  • Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Broadway Play (winner)
  • 1997 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Play (nominee)
  • 1997 Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play, Dana Ivey (winner)
  • 1997 Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play, Celia Weston (nominee)
  • 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Drama – finalist[11]

References[edit]

Last night of ballyhoo summary
  1. ^ abcdefgUhry, Alfred (1997). The Last Night of Ballyhoo. ISBN9780822216179. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  2. ^Glaser, Blair. 'Plays Commissioned for Olympics Are Going the Distance' Playbill, April 25, 1997
  3. ^Mardenfeld, Sandra. 'Uhry Prepares Ballyhoo for Atlanta's Olympic Arts Fest' Playbill, June 6, 1996
  4. ^'Hippodrome Theatre -'. thehipp.org. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  5. ^ abc'- Review – Theater – New York Times'. nytimes.com. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  6. ^ ab'The Last Night of Ballyhoo' Broadway'Archived 2012-06-19 at the Wayback Machine playbillvault.com, accessed November 8, 2015
  7. ^ abc'Current Cast of 'The Last Night of Ballyhoo'[permanent dead link] playbillvault.com, accessed November 8, 2015
  8. ^Smith, Starla. 'PLAYBILL BACKSTAGE by Starla Smith: 'Last Night of Ballyhoo' Playbill, May 5, 1998
  9. ^ abcLefkowitz, David and Nassour, Ellis. 'Carole Shelley, Cynthia Nixon Join Ballyhoo Aug. 26' Playbill, August 26, 1997
  10. ^'Replacements' ibdb.com, accessed November 8, 2015
  11. ^'Drama' pulitzer.org, accessed November 8, 2015

Last Night Of Ballyhoo Script

External links[edit]

  • The Last Night of Ballyhoo at the Internet Broadway Database
  • The Last Night of Ballyhoo at the Internet Broadway Database
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Last_Night_of_Ballyhoo&oldid=1002230716'

In his second play, The Last Night of Ballyhoo, Alfred Uhry explores the lives of Jewish southerners, a society that he introduced to the American theater-going public with his Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Driving Miss Daisy. The setting and plot of The Last Night of Ballyhoo developed from stories Uhry heard growing up in a southern Jewish family, as well as his own experiences. As he told Don Shewey from American Theatre, 'I went to one of the last Ballyhoos there was, when I was 16—it was like a German-Jewish debutante ball.' However, Uhry also had a keen desire to explore Jewish identity, including prejudice inflicted on Jews by other Jews. Uhry combined these two interests to create the privileged world of the Levy/Freitag families. They live in a large home on one of Atlanta's finest streets. They belong to an elite country club. Their children may attend prestigious private universities. All these trappings and conveniences of wealth, however, cannot change the fact that they are Jews who live in an overwhelmingly Christian society. The prejudice that they experience as a result of their religion does not deter them from embracing mainstream southern society or from replicating this discrimination within their own culture; German-Jews such as the Levys and Freitags look down on 'the other kind' of Jews—Eastern European Jews. While The Last Night of Ballyhoo deftly explores this anti-Semitism, Uhry also intersperses his serious message with sparkling banter, comedic non sequiturs, and hilarious characters and characterization. The Last Night of Ballyhoo was first produced at the Atlanta Olympic Games in 1996 and went to Broadway the following year; its play script is available from Theatre Communications Group.