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CHEAP TIX You don’t have to be a cheapskate to appreciate a bargain, especially these days. We offer a LIMITED NUMBER of HALF-PRICE TICKETS ($27.50) for EVERY PERFORMANCE. FAQ: How many seats are available? About 10 per night, sometimes less—and once they’re gone, they’re gone. Do I get to choose where I sit? No. We assign your seats the night of the performance. But don’t worry, our theater only has 100 seats. Will I get to sit with my friends? Absolutely. We won’t ever split your party. 866-811-4111 or minttheater.org FEB. 4 THROUGH APR. 1, 2012 At the Mint Theater, 311 West 43rd St, 3rd floor NON- PROFIT U. S. POSTAGE PAID New York, NY Permit No. 7528 311 W. 43rd St. 3rd Floor New York, NY 10036 ARTISTIC DIRECTOR JONATHAN BANK GENERAL MANAGER SHERRI KOTIMSKY BY GITHA SOWERBY DIRECTED BY RICHARD CORLEY WITH: ROBERT HOGAN ELI JAMES ALLISON MCLEMORE JAMES PATRICK NELSON SANDRA SHIPLEY DALE SOULES SARA SURREY DAVID VAN PELT SETS VICKI R. DAVIS COSTUMES CHARLOTTE PALMER-LANE LIGHTS NICOLE PEARCE SOUND ELLEN MANDEL & JANE SHAW PROPS JOSHUA YOCUM CASTING AMY SCHECTER DIALECTS AND DRAMATURGY AMY STOLLER PRODUCTION STAGE MANAGER ALLISON DEUTSCH ASSISTANT STAGE MANAGER ANDREA JO MARTIN ASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR JESSE MARCHESE GRAPHICS HEY JUDE DESIGN, INC ADVERTISING THE PEKOE GROUP PRESS DAVID GERSTEN & ASSOCIATES The Spectator SPECIAL DISCOUNT OFFER! Save 30% February 4 & 5: Pay Only $38.50 Save 20% February 7 through March 4: Pay Only $45 (use code Mint45) (Regular Price $55. $2.75 per ticket service charge applies to all orders) ORDER YOUR TICKETS TODAY! PHONE: 866-811-4111 M-F 9am -9pm; S-S 10am - 6pm IN PERSON: 311 W. 43rd St, Ste 307 Call for hours: 212.315.9434 ONLINE: minttheater.org PERFORMANCES Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday at 7pm Friday & Saturday at 8pm Saturday & Sunday at 2pm No performance Tuesday, February 14th or Tuesday, February 28th. Special Matinee Wednesday, February 15th at 2pm. minttheater.org 866-811-4111 Monday, February 13th A Special EnrichMint Event Reading of A Man and Some Women by Githa Sowerby Join Sowerby biographer Patricia Riley for dinner at Etcetera Etcetera on West 44th St. Enjoy a delicious gourmet meal while Pat talks talk about Sowerby and her play A Man and Some Women. Then hear the play read at the Mint, followed by cookies and coffee with the cast. A Man and Some Women debuted in 1914 at the Gaiety Theater in Manchester. The play tells the story of a husband and the women dependent on him: his wife, his unmarried sisters and a family friend. Sowerby had hoped for a London transfer in 1914, but Britain’s escalating involvement in the First World War dashed those hopes. The Shaw Festival in Canada will be giving this play a full production this summer. DINNER: 6:00 PM $60 PER PERSON (INCLUDES DINNER AND READING) READING: 8:00 PM READING ONLY: $25 “Mint Theater Company, Resurrectionist Extraordinaire of Forgotten Plays” Ben Brantley, The New York Times Photo by Richard Termine. Pictured, Robert Hogan SAVE THE DATE: Mint’s Annual Spring Benefit: April 23rd, 2012 The Cosmopolitan Club

Rutherford & Son

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By Githa Sowerby

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Page 1: Rutherford & Son

CHEAP TIXYou don’t have to be a cheapskate to appreciate a bargain, especially these days. We offer a LIMITED NUMBER of HALF-PRICE TICKETS ($27.50) for EVERY PERFORMANCE.

FAQ:How many seats are available?About 10 per night, sometimes less—and once they’re gone, they’re gone. Do I get to choose where I sit?No. We assign your seats the night of the performance. But don’t worry, our theater only has 100 seats.Will I get to sit with my friends?Absolutely. We won’t ever split your party.

866-811-4111 or minttheater.org

FEB. 4 THROUGH APR. 1, 2012At the Mint Theater, 311 West 43rd St, 3rd floor

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ARTISTIC DIRECTORJONATHAN BANK

GENERAL MANAGERSHERRI KOTIMSKY

BY GITHA SOWERBY DIRECTED BY RICHARD CORLEYWITH:

ROBERT HOGANELI JAMES

ALLISON MCLEMOREJAMES PATRICK NELSON

SANDRA SHIPLEYDALE SOULES

SARA SURREYDAVID VAN PELT

SETS VICKI R. DAVISCOSTUMES CHARLOTTE PALMER-LANE

LIGHTS NICOLE PEARCESOUND ELLEN MANDEL & JANE SHAW

PROPS JOSHUA YOCUM CASTING AMY SCHECTER

DIALECTS AND DRAMATURGY AMY STOLLERPRODUCTION STAGE MANAGER ALLISON DEUTSCHASSISTANT STAGE MANAGER ANDREA JO MARTIN

ASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR JESSE MARCHESEGRAPHICS HEY JUDE DESIGN, INC

ADVERTISING THE PEKOE GROUPPRESS DAVID GERSTEN & ASSOCIATES

The Spectator

SPECIAL DISCOUNT OFFER!Save 30% February 4 & 5: Pay Only $38.50

Save 20% February 7 through March 4: Pay Only $45 (use code Mint45)(Regular Price $55. $2.75 per ticket service charge applies to all orders)

ORDER YOUR TICKETS TODAY!

PHONE: 866-811-4111M-F 9am -9pm; S-S 10am - 6pm

IN PERSON: 311 W. 43rd St, Ste 307Call for hours: 212.315.9434

ONLINE: minttheater.org

PERFORMANCES Tuesday, Wednesday& Thursday at 7pm

Friday & Saturday at 8pm

Saturday & Sunday at 2pm

No performance Tuesday, February 14th or Tuesday, February 28th.

Special Matinee Wednesday, February 15th at 2pm.

minttheater.org866-811-4111

Monday, February 13th A Special EnrichMint Event Reading of A Man and Some Women by Githa Sowerby

Join Sowerby biographer Patricia Riley for dinner at Etcetera Etcetera on West 44th St. Enjoy a delicious gourmet meal while Pat talks talk about Sowerby and her play A Man and Some Women. Then hear the play read at the Mint, followed by cookies and coffee with the cast.

A Man and Some Women debuted in 1914 at the Gaiety Theater in Manchester. The play tells the story of a husband and the women dependent on him: his wife, his unmarried sisters and a family friend. Sowerby had hoped for a London transfer in 1914, but Britain’s escalating involvement in the First World War dashed those hopes. The Shaw Festival in Canada will be giving this play a full production this summer.

DINNER: 6:00 PM $60 PER PERSON (INCLUDES DINNER AND READING)READING: 8:00 PM READING ONLY: $25

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Photo by Richard Termine. Pictured, Robert Hogan

SAVE THEDATE:

Mint’s Annual Spring Benefi t: April 23rd, 2012 The Cosmopolitan Club

Page 2: Rutherford & Son

Set in the industrial north of England, RUTHERFORD AND SON tells the story of a father determined to do whatever it takes to ensure the success and succession of the family glassworks, started by his own father, but now in danger of shattering.

John Rutherford rules home and business with an iron fi st, a tyrant who inspires fear in his workers and hatred in his grown children. But a rebellion is brewing. His eldest son, working in secret has discovered a process that could save the fi rm, cutting costs by one third—but he refuses to share it with his father unless he “gets his price.”

“A real, rare, theatrical discovery.”In 1912, a new play by an unknown author took London by storm. RUTHERFORD AND SON by K.G. Sowerby was called: “One of the very best, strongest, deftest, and altogether most masterly family dramas that we have had for a long time from any one, however famous.” The production moved from the Royal Court to the West End and then across to the States. The acclaim continued in New York: “Undoubtedly one of the most powerful dramas that New York has seen in many a day…It is a never-to-be-forgotten treat of the fi rst water.”

Cursed with predictions of immortality, the play slowly faded into obscurity.

Finally, in 1994 the National Theatre gave Githa Sowerby’s powerhouse drama a production that would “grant RUTHERFORD AND SON the classic status it so richly deserves.”

In 1999 RUTHERFORD AND SON was honored by the National Theatre with a place on their list of One Hundred Plays of the Century.

“It is far better than most of Shaw and easily stands comparison with another Edwardian masterpiece, Harley Granville Barker’s The Voysey Inheritance…Every line, every emotion, rings satisfyingly true. A great play has been reclaimed.” Daily Telegraph

“This is a real, rare theatrical discovery…And the subject is change and revolt—revolt against material values, against absolute parental power and female submission to dictatorial males.” The Evening Standard

“…a major rediscovery...”Spectator

“This acute play shows how, by striking hard bargains and always winning, a man may lose everything…The play is as skillful as blown glass. It is a subtle meditation on ownership, justice and loyalty.” Observer

ENRICHMINT EVENTSSaturday February 11 and Sunday February 12, after the matineesPatricia Riley, Author, Looking for Githa

The details of Githa Sowerby’s life were a mystery until Pat Riley wrote Looking for Githa, the fi rst Sowerby biography, in 2009. During her research, Riley uncovered previously unknown documents in England and Canada and conducted several interviews with Sowerby’s elderly daughter Joan. The project was funded by the Arts Council of England.

Ms. Riley has degrees in law, social science, and management. On retirement from a career in government, she began a degree in theatre studies, deepening her life-long love of theatre. During her coursework, she was introduced to a powerful play by an early twentieth century feminist playwright no-one seemed to know anything about—Rutherford and Son by Githa Sowerby. Curious to discover what kind of a woman had been brave enough in 1912 to write this play, Ms. Riley began the research that ended with the publication with Looking for Githa.

Three leading scholars from the Ivy League—Princeton, Columbia, and Cornell—join us for discussions on RUTHERFORD AND SON and playwright Githa Sowerby. Sunday, February 19, after the matineeDr Michael Cadden, Princeton University

Michael Cadden is currently Director of the Program in Theater and Dance at Princeton University, where he has been teaching for 25 years. In 1993, Michael was awarded the University’s President’s Award for Distinguished Teaching. In 2003, he helped inaugurate Princeton’s new Roger S. Berlind Theater.

Sunday, February 26, after the matineeDr. Martin Meisel, Columbia University

Martin Meisel is the Brander Matthews Professor Emeritus of Dramatic Literature at Columbia. He is the author of Shaw and the Nineteenth-Century Theater (Princeton and Oxford), as well as numerous essays and articles on drama and the visual arts. He has been the recipient of two Guggenheim Foundation Fellowships, an American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, residential fellowships at the National Humanities Center, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities (among others.) In 2003 he received the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching at Columbia.

Saturday March 3, after the matineeDr. J. Ellen Gainor, Cornell University

J. Ellen Gainor is Professor of Theatre and Associate Dean of the Graduate School at Cornell. A specialist in British and American drama of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and women’s dramaturgy, she is the author of the award-winning studies Shaw’s Daughters: Dramatic and Narrative Constructions of Gender and Susan Glaspell in Context: American Theater, Culture and Politics 1915-48. Most recently, she co-edited The Norton Anthology of Drama. She has edited two infl uential essay collections, Imperialism and Theatre and Performing America: Culture Nationalism in American Theater. With Linda Ben-Zvi, she co-edited The Complete Plays of Susan Glaspell, the fi rst complete anthology of Glaspell’s plays.

ON THE ISSUES

Dr. Donald J. Jonovic, an internationally respected family business consultant, will discuss the play’s portrayal of family business and intergenerational confl ict.

Sunday, March 4, after the matineeDonald J. Jonovic, Founder, Family Business Management Services, Inc.

Donald J. Jonovic has been an advisor to family business owners since 1973, focusing on the unique issues related to management development, growth, and ownership transition, particularly ownership transition of the successful owner-managed business. His professional consulting practice has included industrial and agricultural clients throughout North America, ranging in size from $5 million to $2 billion.

EnrichMINT Events are supported in part by a grant from The New York Council for the Humanities and the Michael Tuch Foundation.

All events take place immediately after the performance and usually last about fi fty minutes. They are free and open to the public. Speakers and dates subject to change without notice.

When RUTHERFORD AND SON premiered at the Royal Court in 1912, critics were astounded that a play of such depth and exquisite stagecraft could be penned by a fi rst-time playwright. The London Times predicted a future “full of promise” for this preternaturally talented writer—known at this point only as “K.G. Sowerby.”

What did “K.G.” stand for? No one knew for sure until the author—Katherine Githa Sowerby—came forward. That a woman had written such a brilliant, brutal drama made headlines on both sides of the Atlantic. The Times referred to Githa as a “girl-dramatist” and observed:

“She is the last person in the world one would expect to fi nd as the author of so grim, powerful and closely-thought out a drama of business. Instead of looking as if she wrote this play, she is a young, pretty, fair-haired girl, refi ned of speech and dainty in dress, who seems far better suited to a drawing room than to the dramatist’s work room.”

The press painted her as an English rose who’d stumbled into playwriting—and Githa, a private person who dreaded interviews, did little to correct them. Her diffi dent answers only added to the misconception. Keble Howard, writing for The Sketch, asked how she had come to write such a startling play. Githa breezily replied, “I wrote most of it in a boat up the river. Just scribbled it with a pencil, you know”—while expressing regret that “some of her characters should be so horrid to one another.”

The Manchester Guardian praised her accurate portrayal of Northern England. Githa, in a rare moment of directness, revealed she had grown up in Northumberland. “You cannot live in these industrial towns without feeling how life revolves around the great

industries, and how they dominate the thought and aspirations of the community,” she said.

Indeed, Githa was neither as naïve, nor as young, as the press assumed. Thirty-fi ve years old, she’d supported herself for years as an author of children’s books. Her knowledgeof “great industry” came fi rsthand. Her familyhad once owned one of the largest glassworks in Europe; their history inspired her play.

Githa kept her history private—and it nearly went with her to her grave. Shortly before her death in 1970, Githa burned her personal papers. By that time, both her and her work had been forgotten. None of her plays after RUTHERFORD AND SON had achieved acclaim; even RUTHERFORD disappeared from the repertory.

When the National Theatre revived RUTHERFORD in 1994, inspiring new interest in Githa, her biography remained a mystery. It was only two years ago, with the publication of Looking for Githa by Patricia Riley, that concrete details of Githa’s life and family history emerged. Riley interviewed Githa’s daughter, Joan, several times and uncovered previously unknown Sowerby family documents in England and Canada. Now, on the centenary of RUTHERFORD AND SON, thanks to Patricia Riley’s research, we can fi nally begin to understand Githa Sowerby.

“Rutherford and Son is a gripping, insightful drama.” Mail on Sunday

In September, 2001 Mint Theater produced RUTHERFORD AND SON.The New York Times declared that:

“The Geiger counter that the Mint Theater Company waves over theater history in search of long-unperformed treasures has identifi ed a still-ticking nugget.”

Ten years after Mint fi rst introduced it to New York audiences, RUTHERFORD AND SON returns. “There are magic moments,” The New York Post wrote in 2001, “when a gifted, ready company takes up a lost but exciting play from the past. So now the Mint Theater has come up with a 1912 play by Githa Sowerby, a shy woman from the north of England who’d earlier written only children’s books. It is a marvelous play, alive with human passions and tyrannies.”

Make plans today to attend this marvelous play!