Award-winning Manhattan play 4000 Miles at Hawthorn Arts Centre for one night only Thursday 10 March
Hawthorn Arts Centre presents the award-winning stage production 4000 Miles on Thursday 10 March. Named Time Magazine's #1 Play or Musical (2012) and winner of the Obie Award for Best New American Play (2012), the critically acclaimed New York play stars young Australian talent Stephen Multari alongside stage and film actor Diana McLean.
Venue: Hawthorn Arts Centre
Address: 360 Burwood Road, Hawthorn
Date: Thursday, 10 March
Time: 7.30pm
Ticket: $45 Full, $38 Concession
Buy / Ticket: http://www.hawthornartscentre.com.au/buy-tickets/?eventId=100831856
Web: www.hawthornartscentre.com.au/event/4000-miles/
Address: 360 Burwood Road, Hawthorn
Date: Thursday, 10 March
Time: 7.30pm
Ticket: $45 Full, $38 Concession
Buy / Ticket: http://www.hawthornartscentre.com.au/buy-tickets/?eventId=100831856
Web: www.hawthornartscentre.com.au/event/4000-miles/
Hawthorn Arts Centre presents the award-winning stage production 4000 Miles on Thursday 10 March. Named Time Magazine's #1 Play or Musical (2012) and winner of the Obie Award for Best New American Play (2012), the critically acclaimed New York play stars young Australian talent Stephen Multari alongside stage and film actor Diana McLean.
4000 Miles unearths a surprising parallel between the two generations and reveals a funny, frustrating and, ultimately, life-changing relationship between a grandson learning to face his life and a grandmother who is starting to forget hers.
One of America's brightest playwrights, Amy Zerog, has crafted a compassionate and unsentimental drama that explores this relationship with disarming frankness and surprising candour. Behind the curtain, director Anthony Skuse (Best Director, Sydney Theatre Awards 2012) brings his tremendous experience to the production.
4000 Miles unearths a surprising parallel between the two generations and reveals a funny, frustrating and, ultimately, life-changing relationship between a grandson learning to face his life and a grandmother who is starting to forget hers.
One of America's brightest playwrights, Amy Zerog, has crafted a compassionate and unsentimental drama that explores this relationship with disarming frankness and surprising candour. Behind the curtain, director Anthony Skuse (Best Director, Sydney Theatre Awards 2012) brings his tremendous experience to the production.