Full Casting for “8″ Broadway Premiere Announced
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PRESS CONTACTS
American Foundation for Equal Rights:
Elizabeth Riel 213.785.5352 or elizabeth@afer.org
Broadway Impact:
Sean Martin — 516.480.6976 or sean@broadwayimpact.com
Boneau/Bryan—Brown for “8″:
Chris Boneau/Michael Strassheim — 212.575.3030 or mstrassheim@bbbway.com
Emmy and Tony Award winner and two-time Golden Globe Award nominee ELLEN BARKIN, Tony Award nominee JAYNE HOUDYSHELL, Broadway star KATE SHINDLE, two-time Tony Award winner STEPHEN SPINELLA and additional cast members complete the company for the one night only staged reading on Broadway September 19, 2011
New York City, NY — Emmy and Tony Award winner and two-time Golden Globe Award nominee Ellen Barkin; Tony Award nominee Jayne Houdyshell; Broadway star Kate Shindle; and two-time Tony Award winner Stephen Spinella will appear in the world premiere of “8″ on Broadway, joining the previously announced Bob Balaban, Matt Bomer, Campbell Brown, Anthony Edwards, Morgan Freeman, Cheyenne Jackson, Larry Kramer, Christine Lahti, John Lithgow, Rory O’Malley, Rob Reiner, Yeardley Smith and Bradley Whitford. The cast of “8″ will also feature Tony Award nominee K. Todd Freeman, Jay Armstrong Johnson, Ken Leung and Ben Rosenfield. Marisa Tomei has had to withdraw from the reading due to a film scheduling conflict.
“8″ is an unprecedented account of the Federal District Court trial in Perry v. Schwarzenegger (now Perry v. Brown), the case filed by AFER to overturn Proposition 8, which eliminated the right to marry for gay and lesbian couples in California. Black, who penned the Academy Award-winning feature film Milk, based “8″ on the actual words of the trial transcripts, first-hand observations of the courtroom drama and interviews with the plaintiffs and their families. The new play will have its world premiere on Broadway at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in New York City on Monday, September 19, 2011 for an exclusive, one-night only fundraiser to benefit AFER.
Bob Balaban will play US District Chief Judge Vaughn Walker, who ruled over a year ago in California that Prop. 8 is unconstitutional. Morgan Freeman and John Lithgow will play David Boies and Theodore B. Olson, the two attorneys appointed by AFER to lead the case filed to overturn Prop. 8. Bradley Whitford will play Charles Cooper, the lead attorney for the defense, the proponents of Prop. 8. Matt Bomer and Cheyenne Jackson will play Jeff Zarrillo and Paul Katami, a gay couple of ten years and two of the four plaintiffs in the Prop. 8 trial; Ellen Barkin will play Sandy Stier and Christine Lahti will play Kris Perry — the other plaintiffs — a lesbian couple that have been together for eleven years and are the parents of four boys. Jay Armstong Johnson and Ben Rosenfield will play Spencer and Elliott, Sandy and Kris’ twin sons.
Anthony Edwards, K. Todd Freeman, Larry Kramer, Ken Leung, Rory O’Malley, Rob Reiner, Yeardley Smith and Stephen Spinella will play witnesses in the trial: Anthony Edwards will play Dr. Ilan Meyer, a Columbia social psychologist and expert in the relationship between discrimination and mental health outcomes; K. Todd Freeman will play Dr. Gregory Herek, a Professor at U.C. Davis and a psychologist whose work focuses on the effect of social stigma on LGBT people; Larry Kramer will play Evan Wolfson, the Founder and President of Freedom to Marry, the national campaign to end marriage discrimination; Ken Leung will play Dr. William Tam, a proponent of Proposition 8 and a member of an evangelical Christian group who testified that he believes there is a connection between gay marriage and pedophilia, polygamy and incest; Rory O’Malley will play Ryan Kendall, a young gay man who was forced by his parents to undergo gay conversion therapy; Rob Reiner will play David Blankenhorn, Founder and President of the Institute for American Values and the principal witness for the opponents of marriage equality; Yeardley Smith will play Dr. Nancy Cott, a Harvard Professor who specializes in the history of marriage; Stephen Spinella will play Dr. Gary Segura, Professor of Political Science at Stanford and an expert on the subject of the political power or powerlessness of minority groups in the United States.
Campbell Brown will play the role of the Broadcast Journalist. Jayne Houdyshell will play Maggie Gallagher, president of the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy and chairman and co-founder of the National Organization for Marriage — both opposed to marriage equality — and a prominent opponent of marriage equality. Kate Shindle will play the Clerk.
Following the New York debut on September 19th, AFER and Broadway Impact will license “8″ to schools and community organizations nationwide in order to spur action, dialogue and understanding. AFER and Broadway Impact will coordinate these staged readings across the country, so that “8″ will live on beyond its September premiere.
The story for “8″ is framed by the trial’s historic closing arguments in June 2010, but features the best arguments and witness testimony presented by both legal teams. Scenes include reenactments of many of the well-documented jaw-dropping moments of trial, such as the admission by the Prop. 8 supporters’ star witness David Blankenhorn that “we would be more American on the day we permitted same-sex marriage than we were on the day before.”
AFER prevailed in federal district court when, based on the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, Chief Judge Walker concluded that California had no rational basis or vested interest in denying gays and lesbians marriage licenses and thus found Proposition 8 “unconstitutional” on August 4, 2010. It is currently under appeal by the anti-marriage proponents and is being expedited through the court system at a relatively rapid pace.
Unfortunately, the American public was not given a chance to witness the historic trial because the proponents of Proposition 8 launched a number of desperate attempts to forever hide the trial videotapes. Although the trial proceedings were open to the public, and all courtroom testimony and events were thoroughly documented, the trial video most vividly compares the weakness of the proponents’ arguments to the well-reasoned, valid and constitutionally-based arguments and evidence put forth by AFER’s renowned legal team, plaintiffs and expert witnesses.
The trial videotapes have been kept under seal due to a federal protective order. On August 29th, 2011, AFER’s legal team made a strong case for the full and unedited release of the trial recordings at a hearing before Chief Judge Ware at US District Court. While a swift decision is expected from Chief Judge Ware, there is no guarantee that the trial footage will ever be available for the public to see. This is precisely the reason Black wrote “8.”
Proceeds from the September 19th reading will go directly to the fight for full federal marriage equality and to support educational efforts on the freedom to marry nationwide.
For more information including how to buy tickets, visit: www.afer.org/broadway8
For information on how your local theater can produce “8,“ visit: www.BROADWAYIMPACT.com
Follow “8″on Twitter: @8theplay or on Facebook.
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