Clybourne Park Show Poster

Clybourne Park Cast & Creative

Who are the people in your neighborhood? In 1959, a white family moves out. In 2009, a white family moves in. In the intervening years, change overtakes a neighborhood, along with attitudes, inhabitants, and property values. Loosely inspired by Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun, Bruce Norris' pitch-black comedy takes on the specter of gentrification in our communities, leaving no stone unturned in the process.

This show is closed.

Performances ended on Sep. 2, 2012.

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About Clybourne Park

What Is the Story of Clybourne Park?
At the heart of this Pulitzer Prize-winning play is a house. In act one, the house is being sold in 1959. Following a family tragedy, a white couple is selling their home in a suburban Chicago neighborhood, and their neighbors was dismayed to learn that the buyers are African-American. In act two the same house is again being sold. But now, in 2009, a white couple is purchasing the home from an African-American couple, and they butt heads over showing respect for a neighborhood that has become largely African-American. These two racially charged transactions tell the story of a home and a neighborhood, as well as the sense of history and entitlement people hang on to, even in the ever-shifting physical boundaries of the American cultural landscape.

Cast

Crystal Dickinson
Francine/Lena
Brendan Griffin
Jim/Tom/Kenneth
Damon Gupton
Albert/Kevin
Betsy/Lindsey

Creative

Written by
Bruce Norris
Director
Pam MacKinnon
Set Designer
Dan Ostling
Costume Designer
Ilona Somogyi
Lighting Designer
Allen Lee Hughes
Sound Designer
John Gromada
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