Alexander Harrington
directed the premiere of Douglas Lackey’s "Daylight Precision"
in 2014. He has directed at New York theaters including Metropolitan Playhouse,
La MaMa, The Culture Project, Queens Theatre, and The Actors Studio, regionally
in Maryland, New Hampshire, the Catskills, North Carolina, and New Jersey,
and at Bentley, Clemson, and Louisiana State universities.
He founded and served as artistic
director of The Eleventh Hour Theatre Company and served as 2012 artistic
director of the student ensemble at HB Studio. He wrote and directed a
two-part stage adaptation of Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov,
adapted and directed Chekhov's short story "The Kiss", "The
Philosopher” chapter from Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio,
translated and directed Aeschylus' "Agamemnon" and wrote" The
Great Society" about Lyndon Johnson (not to be confused with
Robert Schenkkan’s play of the same name on the same subject).
Two of his passions as a director
are Shakespeare and classical tragedy. He has directed all the plays
in Shakespeare's major history cycle (Richard II; Henry IV, Parts 1 &2; and Henry
V) and adapted the four plays of the minor history cycle (Henry VI,
Parts 1,2, & 3, and Richard III) into a single play, which
he directed, as well as directing "Much ado about Nothing,"
"Measure for Measure," two productions of "Twelfth
Night," a second production of "Henry V" and
a program of scenes focused on the women of the history plays.
He has focused on the original Greek
practice of setting tragic choruses and exchanges between the chorus and
principal characters to music, collaborating with composers on his own
translation of "Agamemnon,
Richmond Lattimore's translation of "Agamemnon," Seneca's "The
Trojan Women" and "The Burial at Thebes" (Seamus Heaney's
adaptation of Sophocles' Antigone).
He has developed and directed the
premieres of plays by Kathryn Canty (nee Sanders), Joe Robertsson, Edward
Einhorn, Lella Heins, John A. Adams, William Fowkes, Agnes Garrett, TJ
Edwards, Douglas Lackey, Steve Kalvar, Nina Howes, David Vasdauskas, and
Sergio Castillo.
As a scholar and critic, his work
has been published in Dissent magazine; First of the Month; Upstart
Crow; and Shakespeare Criticism, Vol. 89; and Literary Themes for Students:
War and Peace. He contributed an essay on political theater
to the anthology New Threats to Freedom published by Templeton
Press, for which David Mamet and Christopher Hitchens also contributed
essays.
Watch
video interview with playwright Douglas Lackey and director Alexander
Harrington.
September 27
to October 14, 2018
Theater for the New City
155 First Ave (between 9th and 10th Sts.)
Thurs - Sat at 8:00 PM, Sun at 3:00 PM
$15 general admission, $10 seniors and students
Box office: (212) 254-1109
Smarttix (212) 868-4444