Fallen Angel Theatre Company
New York City

http://fallenangeltheatrecompany.blogspot.com
FALLEN ANGEL BLOG
 
Playwright, Barbara Hammond
Director, John Keating
Actress Aedin Moloney (photo by Neil Hoos)
Fallen Angel, Theatre, Theater, Casabe, CACHE
Fallen Angel Theatre and CACHE at Casabe

Fallen Angel Theatre Company

Invite you to the world premiere of a new play!

EVA THE CHASTE

by Barbara Hammond

Directed by John Keating

Performed by Aedin Moloney

 

What the Press  have to say about Fallen Angel Theatre
& Eva the Chaste.
 
"Aedín Moloney gives a powerful performance as Eva...Barbara Hammond's monologue is similar in structure to James Joyce."
Patricia Contino
Flavorpill (editors pick)
 
, ".....Barbara Hammond sows it with evocative turns of phrase...directed by John Keating with an eye toward Beckett...Moloney delivers
with impressive clarity and nuance, to almost hypnotic effect...Moloney’s Eva is a memorable creation"
Adam Feldman,
TIME OUT New York
 
 
"Moloney's Powerful in Eva"
 Joseph Hurley,
Irish Echo
 
"...Performed by Aedin Moloney in a feat of naturalism that looks bone deep...Eva the Chaste is a remarkably introspective play..."
Cahir O'Doherty
Irish Voice
 
"A magnificent play with one of the best actresses in New York City, or anywhere else for that matter -- this is the rising wave." - Colum McCann
 
July 6th - July 24th, 2011
The Clurman Theatre
Theatre Row
410 West 42nd Street
New York City

FALLEN ANGEL ARE DELIGHTED TO PRESENT A SERIES OF Aftershow PANEL DISCUSSIONS for Eva the Chaste audience

on JULY 12TH, 17TH & 19TH

WE ARE HONORED TO HAVE THE FOLLOWING PANELISTS BE A PART OF THIS PRODUCTION

 

Writing Women’s Lives    Tuesday July 12th, 2011

Colum McCann

Susan Jonas

Belinda McKeon

Honor Molloy

  On July 12th, Colum McCann (National Book Award/IMPAC Award for Let the Great World Spin), Honor Molloy (playwright, Maiden Voyages; curator, “Future of Working Theater” Reading Series), Susan Jonas (NYU faculty; founder, 50/50 by 2020) and Belinda McKeon (curator, “Imagine Ireland”; novelist) will discuss the role of women in literature and drama.  From Shaw’s St. Joan to Albee’s Martha, from Medea to Madame Bovary, the conceptions we commonly hold of the Great Female Character and the Strong Female Role have often been shaped by men.  Does this still hold true today?  Who are the women writing women, and why does it matter that their voices are heard?  What does it take, beyond questions of gender, to write a truly lasting and complex character?

 

 Mothers and Daughters  Sunday July 17th, 2011 

Annabel Clark

Toni Dorfman

Barbara Hammond

Yolanda Sanchez

  On July 17th, Toni Dorfman (Director of Undergraduate Theatre Studies, Yale University; playwright; director), Annabel Clark (photojournalist; author, Journal: A Mother and Daughter's Recovery from Breast Cancer) and Yolanda Sanchez (founding member, National Latinas Caucus, C.A.C.H.E. and Casabe Houses in East Harlem) will participate in a panel titled “Mothers and Daughters”. Yolanda Sanchez joins this panel with a current, very real perspective on what can be and is currently being done to help guide at risk teenagers on the path to womanhood.  How is the relationship between mother and daughter portrayed in the theatre?  Whom and what can take on the role of mother in situations where a biological connection is missing? In the shadow of the father/son preoccupations of Shepard, O’Neill, and Miller, where can we find equally poignant and truthful portrayals of the intimacy, love and pain of being a mother or a daughter?    

 

    Great Roles for Women  Tuesday July 19th, 2011 

Tanya Barfield

Estelle Lasher

Deb Margolin

Aedin Moloney

Charlotte Moore

  On July 19th, Tanya Barfield (playwright, Blue Door, Defacing Patriotic Property), Estelle Lasher (founder, Principal Management, a bi-coastal talent and literary management agency) and Aedin Moloney (Artistic Director & Producer, Fallen Angel Theatre Company; actor) and Charlotte Moore (actor/director and Artistic Director of The Irish Repertory Company) will discuss “Great Roles for Women”.  Go behind the scenes of tour-de-force performances with writers, directors, actors and talent management.  What makes a role great, and why are they in shorter supply for women?  Expect anecdotes from the trenches.

 

 

THE DISCUSSIONS WILL TAKE PLACE DIRECTLY AFTER THE PERFORMANCE OF EVA THE CHASTE

Evat the Chaste playwright, Barbara Hammond with Fallen Angel Theatre Production Manager, Ruth Kavanagh and Artistic Director, Aedin Moloney. Photo by Ira Peppercorn

What the Press have to say about

Fallen Angel Theatre Company

and

Eva the Chaste!

 

 

The Adrian Flannelly Radio Show

http://media01.ultratek.com:81/player.php?clid=5&mid=1049

                                   http://www.irishradio.com/

 

 

New York Theatre Review

http://newyorktheatrereview.blogspot.com/

 

Irish Echo

 http://irishecho.com/?p=65539

 

New York Irish Arts

http://newyorkirisharts.blogspot.com/2011/07/aedin-moloney-in-eva-chaste-begins.htm

 

Irish Emigrant

http://www.irishemigrant.com/ie/go.asp?p=story&storyID=9406

Barbara Hammond is a 2010 Edward Albee Fellow, a Yale Playwright�s Festival mentor playwright, and is a member of the Dramatists Guild and the League for Professional Theatre Women.  Her plays and film have been seen and won awards from the far-flung -- Berlin, Dublin, London, Paris, Big Sur and Queensland, Australia -- to New York City, where she is a long-time resident of the Lower East Side.

She received the Special Jury Award at the 1st Irish 2009 Theatre Festival, the Directors� Special Recognition Award at the 2007 San Francisco International Short Film Festival, and was a finalist at the Tennessee Williams One-Act Play Festival and the Kerouac Project. Please visit www.barbarahammond.com for full bio as well as clips and photos from previous work and tours. Eva the Chaste is the first play in The Eva Trilogy.  Enter the Roar and Elevations to follow in 2012.

 

Edward Albee with playwright, Barbara Hammond & actress Aedin Moloney, at a special reading of Eva The Chaste - Guildhall, East Hampton

Aedin Moloney reads Molly Bloom's Soliloquy

from Ulysses by James Joyce