Underneath the Lintel

Underneath the Lintel

Promotional poster of US actor Richard Schiff in the 2007 West End production
Written by Glen Berger
Characters The Librarian
Date premiered 2001 (2001)
Place premiered Los Angeles
Original language English
Genre Monodrama

Underneath the Lintel is a play by Glen Berger that premièred in 2001. The sole character—the Librarian—embarks on a quest to find out who anonymously returned a library book that is 113 years overdue. A clue scribbled in the margin of the book and an unclaimed dry-cleaning ticket then take him on a mysterious adventure that spans the globe and the ages.

Plot synopsis

The play begins with the Librarian appearing on stage, which is sparsely furnished with a whiteboard and marker pens, a magnetic bulletin board, and a table. The Librarian carries with him a battered suitcase. He informs the audience that he is giving a lecture for only one day about a discovery he has made.

The Librarian then opens his suitcase and begins to show the audience what he calls his "scraps": pieces of evidence each marked with numbered tags that provide evidence of a person whose identity is gradually revealed over the course of the play.

He starts with a copy of a Baedeker travel guide that was anonymously returned 113 years overdue to the library in the small Dutch town where he used to work. Tracking down the loan records of the book, he finds that the book was borrowed by one "A." who provided a post office box as his address. Inside the book, he finds a 73-year-old dry-cleaning ticket for an unclaimed piece of clothing in a London laundry shop. Intrigued, he takes leave from work to visit London. He finds that the laundry shop is still in business and, using the ticket, redeems a pair of trousers that has not been cleaned because of its poor condition.

Eventually, the audience learns that the person to whom all of the Librarian's items relate may be Ahasuerus the Wandering Jew, a mythical figure from medieval Christian folklore.

Production history

Underneath the Lintel was first produced in 2001 in Los Angeles by The Actors' Gang theatre company. Brent Hinkley directed and Brian T. Finney played the Librarian.[1] It was produced later that same year in New York at the Soho Playhouse. Scott Morfee, Tom Wirtshafter and Dana Matthow were the producers, with Randy White directing. The play ran for 450 performances, and was voted among the Top Ten Plays of the Year by Time Out NY magazine.[2] T. Ryder Smith played the Librarian, and received a Drama Desk Award nomination that year as Outstanding Solo Performer.[3]

The Canadian premiere was produced in Edmonton by Shadow Theatre in 2002. The play received an Elizabeth Sterling Haynes Award as the outstanding production of the year, as well as awards for actor Andy Curtis and director James DeFelice.[4]

The Seattle premiere was at the Empty Space Theatre in March 2003 starring Todd Jefferson Moore.[5]

The Metropolitan Baltimore-Washington premier was at Round House Theatre in July 2003 directed by Jane Beard starring Jerry Whiddon.[6][7]

The Lantern Theater Company of Philadelphia presented the play in 2003, with Peter DeLaurier as the Librarian, who won a Barrymore Award as Leading Actor in a Play. He reprised the role at the same venue in 2015.

Orlando Theatre Project presented the US southeastern premiere of this play in May 2004, featuring Kristian Truelsen as the Librarian and directed by Doug Truelsen.

Cesear's Forum, Cleveland's small minimalist theatre at Kennedy's Down Under, Playhouse Square, OH, presented the play in an April/May 2004 production.

The play received a 2005 production at the George Street Playhouse in New Brunswick, New Jersey, with US actor Richard Schiff as the Librarian. It was then staged again at Indiana Repertory Theatre in Indianapolis, Indiana, between 21 March and 6 May 2006. Robert K Johansen played The Librarian, directed by John Green.[8]

First Presbyterian Theater of Fort Wayne, Indiana produced Lintel at the end of its 2005-2006 season in July 2006 with Joel D. Scribner as the Librarian, directed by Thom Hofrichter.

The Irish premiere was produced by Landmark Productions in September 2006 as part of the Dublin Fringe Festival, directed by Joshua Edelman and starring Philip O'Sullivan, receiving nominations for Best Production and Best Male Performer in the festival. The production subsequently played at the Assembly Rooms as part of the 2010 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.[9]

Schiff reprised the role at the Duchess Theatre in London's West End from 7 February to 31 March 2007. This production was directed by Maria Mileaf. A radio version of the play, performed by Richard Schiff, was broadcast by BBC Radio 4 on 5 January 2008.

The eastern Canadian premiere of the play opened at the 2007 Fringe Festival of Toronto at the Factory Theatre in July 2007. The performance was produced by the Book Productions and Celeste Sansregret and starred Canadian actor John D. Huston as the Librarian.[10]

In the winter of 2013, Kingbaby Productions mounted the play on Bowen Island, British Columbia starring David Cameron as the Librarian.

Original off-Broadway director Randy White directed a new production of the play in Bloomington, Indiana in May 2013 for his company, Cardinal Stage Company, starring Mike Price as the Librarian.

In May 2013, Duncan Henderson played the role of the Librarian in a production directed by D. James Newton in Brighton, UK.

In 2013, Mick Mize played the role of the librarian in a production performed at the Live Oak Theater in Berkeley, CA.

In 2013, the American Conservatory Theatre in San Francisco presented David Strathairn as the Librarian.[11]

In 2014, the local theater Vendsyssel Teater in Hjørring, Denmark presents the play under the name of Rejsen ("The travel"). The Librarian is presented by local actor Asger Reher, and is directed by Peter Schrøder. The play premieres on September 4, 2014.[12]

In 2014, the Triad Stage in North Carolina, presented the play. The Librarian is played by New York-based actor, Kate Goehring, and is directed by Triad Artistic Director Preston Lane. The play premiered on September 20, 2014.[13]

Publication

Underneath the Lintel is published by Broadway Play Publishing Inc. in both the original version and one in which The Librarian is female.

Notes

  1. Roger Armbrust (2001-11-16). "'Lion King' leads Ovation Awards". BackStage (reproduced on AllBusiness).
  2. Bruce Weber (2001-10-24). "Theater review: A librarian as a sleuth in hot pursuit". The New York Times. Alexis Soloski (2001-10-30). "One fine day". The Village Voice. Macey Levin (2001-12-07). "Underneath the Lintel". CurtainUp. Retrieved 2008-04-03. "Underneath the Lintel". Thisistheatre.com. 2008-01-02. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
  3. "Apparition: An Uneasy Play of the Underknown: T. Ryder Smith". The Splinter Group. 2005. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
  4. "James DeFelice". Playwrights Guild of Canada.
  5. http://emptyspace.org/0506/aboutthespace/pastseasons.html
  6. Horwitz, Jane (February 15, 2005). "For Jerry Whiddon, An Exclamation Point". The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
  7. "Round House Theatre: 2002/2003 Season". Retrieved 21 August 2010.
  8. "Production History : Underneath the Lintel". Indiana Repertory Theatre. 2006. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  9. "The Times review Aug 25 2010". Retrieved 2010-09-22.
  10. http://www.fringetoronto.com/about/07archives.html
  11. Hurwitt, Robert (2013-10-30). "Underneath the Lintel review: Librarian on quest". The San Francisco Chronicle.
  12. ""Rejsen - En søgen efter egen identitet" at Vendsyssel Teater". Vendsyssel Teater. 2014-08-03.
  13. http://www.news-record.com/go_triad/one-woman-show-starts-as-comedy-moves-into-mystery/article_82b13158-3f5e-11e4-9732-0017a43b2370.html?mode=jqm. Missing or empty |title= (help)

One-woman show starts as comedy, moves into mystery

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