MSMC Theatre

MSMC Theatre Presents Machinal

November 11, 2011 7:30 PM
Aquinas Hall Theatre

MSMC Theatre presents Machinal, a play written by American journalist Sophie Treadwell, and inspired by the 1928 conviction and execution of Ruth Brown Snyder for killing her husband, Albert Snyder.

The play will also run on Thursday and Saturday, November 10 and 12, at 7:30 pm.

This production is a collaborative effort, with a cast and crew made up of Mount students, faculty, alumni, and SUNY Orange students. The company hopes this effort will launch a partnership between SUNY and the Mount for future MSMC Theatre productions.

"The cooperative nature of this production has added depth and interest to the play," said James Phillips, assistant director of theatre at the Mount. "Our students saw faculty, alumni, and other students struggling to fully grasp and inhabit their roles. This offered them a view into the universality of the theatrical process."

There's even a Mount alumnus working as the assistant stage manager, under a student stage manager.

Machinal's 1928 Broadway première, directed by Arthur Hopkins, is considered one of the highpoints of Expressionist theatre on the American stage.

Tickets are $5 each or free with a Mount ID. Please call the box office at 845-569-3179 with any questions.

About the playwright

Sophie Treadwell (1885–1970): Though Sophie Treadwell never achieved the fame of many of her male colleagues, today she is considered one of the most accomplished writers and dramatists of the early twentieth century.

Educated at the University of California at Berkley in 1902, she earned a degree in French while pursuing interests in acting and writing. Following her tenure there, Treadwell began writing for the San Francisco Bulletin and other publications including Harper’s Weekly and the New York Tribune.

During World War I, she traveled to Europe as one of America‟s first female war correspondents and she was the only journalist permitted to interview Pancho Villa at his hideaway in Canutillo during the Mexican Revolution. Treadwell‟s first Broadway play, Gringo, debuted in 1922. Following its success, she went on to write a number of other plays including: O Nightingale, Machinal, Ladies Leave, Lone Valley and Plumes in the Dust.

Machinal, which is loosely based on the famous murder trial of Ruth Snyder and Judd Gray, is considered the best in her oeuvre. The play first opened on Broadway in 1928 and featured a young Clark Gable. Treadwell also penned the novels, Hope for a Harvest and One Fierce Hour and Sweet. In 1970, she died in Tucson Arizona, and the majority of her works and papers were donated to the University of Arizona.

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