MC's Crimson Masque will be performing Moliere's "Tartuffe"
Release Date:
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From left, Mike Wilmoth (Damis), Shannon Fitzjarrald (Elmire), Lisa Adams (Madame Perneille) and Charlie Pippenger (Cleante). In the background are Kat Koelbl (Flipote) and Lindsey Markel (Dorine). |
The curtain will open at
“’Tartuffe’ represents
the wit and humor of a playwright in his prime,” said director Bill Wallace,
professor of communication and theater arts at Monmouth. “Filled with broad
physical comedy as well as sophisticated plays on words, the show is a
fast-paced, enjoyable evening at the theater.”
Orgon, played by freshman Gregory Malak of Orland Park, is taken in by Tartuffe, a religious
“con man” played by Josh Sonnenburg, a sophomore from
Portland, Ore. Tartuffe professes to be a moral and upright person, but he is
really only interested in free food and drink as well as anything else he can
get his hands on. The rest of Orgon’s household sees
through Tartuffe’s hypocrisy, but it isn’t until the intervention of the King that
everything is happily resolved.
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From left, Greg Malak (Orgon), Charie Pippenger (Cleante) and Shannon Fitzjarrald (Elmire). |
According to Wallace,
“Tartuffe” blends a mix of MC theater veterans and newcomers. Appearing as
Madame Perneille, Orgon’s
mother, is Lisa Adams, a freshman from McHenry; Flipote,
her zany maid, is played by Kat Koelbl, a sophomore from Roscoe; Elmire, Orgon’s long-suffering
wife and an object of Tartuffe’s affections, features Shannon Fitzjarrald, a
senior from Decatur; and Orgon’s children, daughter Mariane and son Damis, are played
by Michelle Anstett, a freshman from
Other characters in “Tartuffe,”
many based on the stock comic characters of the Commedia, include the wily
servant Dorine, played by Lindsey Markel, a sophomore
from Sidell; the young lover Valere,
played by Chris Walljasper, a freshman from Donnellson, Iowa; and the resident intellectual
Cleante, played by Charley Pippenger,
a freshman from Hawthorn Woods. Holly Trotter of Elk Grove Village, a freshman
playing a comic turn as the bailiff, and transfer student Bruce Needham of
Monmouth, who brings eventual order to the chaos as the police officer, round
out the cast.
The scenery and lighting
is being designed by Doug Rankin, professor of communication and theater arts.
Amanda Caldwell, a senior from Stronghurst, is
designing costumes, with Naylene Sager, a sophomore
from
The MC production of
“Tartuffe” is set in the 1920s and, according to Wallace, has afforded several
unique opportunities.
“This fall, the Prairie
Players in
One other feature of the
MC production is a proposed reunion of the 1988 “Tartuffe” cast and crew.
Invitations have been sent to 1988 participants, and the hope is that on Nov. 8
both groups can share dinner and a reception after the show.
Tickets for “Tartuffe”
are $4 for MC students and staff, $5 for other students and senior citizens and
$6 for adults. Tickets can be reserved by contacting Wallace at 309-457-2374 or
by e-mailing him at billw@monm.edu.