The Rosenberg/Strange Fruit Project |
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John Jiler |
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Lee Odom |
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Cast
Creative Team
Margarett Perry
Jessica Parks
BRIAN SNYDER
PATRICIA DOHERTY
JILL NAGLE
NICK SIMONE
JAMES LOCKHART
RACHAEL MALLOY
GABOR BARABAS
SUZANNE BARABAS
DEE DEE IRWIN
NJRep Staff
Gabor Barabas, Executive Producer
SuzAnne Barabas, Artistic Director
Evan Bergman, Associate Artistic Director
Dee Dee Irwin, Managing Director
Joel Stone, Literary Manager
Jessica Parks, Production Manager andResident Scenic Designer
Patricia Doherty, Resident Costume Designer
Jill Nagle, Resident Lighting Designer
Nick Simone, Resident Sound Designer
Brian Snyder, Technical Director and Facilities Manager
Kristin Marie, Production Stage Manager
James Lockhart, Master Electrician
Rachael Malloy, Assistant Stage Manager
Janey Huber, Assistant Lighting Designer/Assistant Covid Monitor
Karen Wharmby, Volunteer Coordinator
Dee Cantalice, Director of Finance
Robert Baird, Director of Education
John Pietrowski, Covid Compliance Officer
John Pocalyko, Head of Finance Committee
Mare Akana, Gallery Curator
Andrea Phox, Photography Curator
Gail Winar, Artistic Associate
Donna Stiles, Scenic Artist/Assistant Properties
Blake Robinson, Assistant Properties/Set Design
Gisela Nucciarone, Carpenter
Meet the Company
John Jiler
JOHN JILER (Playwright, Actor) is a writer of both drama and prose. He was the recipient of both the Richard Rodgers Award and the Kleban Librettists' Award for his musical Avenue X, which played in New York at Playwrights' Horizons and in some fifty cities around the world. He was a runner-up for the Weissberger Prize for his first full-length play Sour Springs. His work has been seen coast to coast, from the Eugene O'Neill National Playwright's Conference to the Kennedy Center to Seattle Rep and many places in between. His most recent book, Sleeping With The Mayor, was named a New York Times’ “Most Notable Book.” His first, Dark Wind, was called by the Village Voice “a classic.” As a journalist he has also written for the NY Times, The Nation, and the Village Voice, where the stories that led to Avenue X and Sleeping With The Mayor first appeared. Among his current theatrical projects are Big Red Sun a World War Two era story with composer Georgia Stitt, recently seen at the NAMT Festival and shortly to appear at the York Theatre; Channel, a new play at the Labyrinth Theatre’s Barn Series; and Sirocco, ink still wet. His first one-man show, Explicit Vows, was seen at both Playwrights Horizons and the Flea Theatre; his new one, Ripe, also workshopped at Playwrights Horizons, was performed at Theatre For The New City and hailed by the New York Times as “classic.” In his former life as an actor he appeared at the New York Shakespeare Festival, the Hartford Stage Company, and Chicago’s Body Politic, where he won the Chicago Drama Critic's Best Actor Award. He has just completed his first novel, North Of Here.
Lee Odom
LEE ODOM (Clarinetist) is a composer and band leader whose musical spectrum includes gospel, free-improvised music, jazz, R &B, Hip-Hop and classical. instrumental spectrum includes the clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor, alto and soprano saxophone, flute and oboe. A native of North Carolina, studying clarinet performance at Appalachian State University, Boone NC, Lee later moved to New York City where she decided to pursue her musical career. Lee has performed with many outstanding groups such as the Western Piedmont Symphony, Hickory NC, various theatre musical productions throughout NC and New York, The Karl Berger Improv Orchestra, Canaan Baptist Church Music Ministry, Matt Lavelle’s 12 Houses Free Improv big band, the Makanda Project Boston, MA, UpSurge NY poetry ensemble, also with Keith “The Captain” Gamble and the Nu Gypsies, the Zodiacs Saxophone Quartet, and with many outstanding musicians such as Don Byron, JD Parran, Warren Smith, Craig Harris, and David Murray. Lee also performs as band leader, as Sweet Lee Music, performing at various venues and festivals throughout New York, Boston, & Connecticut. She has been featured artist for Craig Harris’ Harlem Jazz Box, and also participated in “Women Composers” produced by Abby London, where she featured original compositions. She also appeared as a guest artist with artists through the Jazz Foundation NY. Lee was also the featured alto saxophone player for Bang on A Can “The Shape of Jazz to Come.” The New York Times described her sound as “prayerful and ever searching.” Lee was honored to be an Artist-in-Residence at Holmes Presbyterian Camp, Holmes, NY and at Art Omi in Hudson NY, where she created and cultivated many musical experiences, and Teaching Artist for Poly Prep Summer Art Camp. Lee is currently a Teaching Artist for the Jazz House Kids in Paterson NJ. The music by Sweet Lee and her accompanying bands has been sending lighting vibes throughout the boroughs of New York. With a fusion of Gospel, Jazz, Hip-Hop, Classical, and free improvisation, “Sweet” Lee keeps the groove groovin’.
Margarett Perry
Jessica Parks
BRIAN SNYDER
PATRICIA DOHERTY
JILL NAGLE
NICK SIMONE
JAMES LOCKHART
RACHAEL MALLOY
GABOR BARABAS
SUZANNE BARABAS
DEE DEE IRWIN
Photos

We Thank the Following for Their Support
The Shubert Foundation, The Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, New Jersey State Council on the Arts, SBA Shuttered Venues Program, The Stone Foundation of New Jersey, New Jersey CRF, NJEDA, JENNJOE Fund, The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey, OceanFirst Foundation, Princeton Area Community Foundation, Manasquan Bank, Community Foundation of New Jersey, Monmouth County CARES, Jewish Communal Fund, Darien Family Fund, Vasi Laurence, Linda Mitchell, Caroline Huber and Caryl Sills.
Next Up
THE SHOT
by Robin Gerber, directed by Michelle Joyner
Starring
Sharon Lawrence
Before Katharine Graham became the famed publisher of the Washington Post, she protected a horrifying secret.
April 6 - 23, 2023
OUR SHRINKING SHRINKING WORLD
by Richard Dresser, directed by Joe Cacaci
Dr. Lyman Hidalgo-Nyquist is a psychotherapist with a climate-induced apocalyptic complex, a loose grasp of therapeutic technique, and a looser grasp of professional ethics. When his long-suffering clients decide to see a new, young therapist who's just moved to town, Lyman's professional jealousy spikes—along with his fear of losing income — and he decides to meet the new therapist head-on to set things straight, the results of which he does not anticipate.
May 4 - May 28, 2023










