The Wooster Group

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The Wooster Group is an ensemble of artists who collaborate on the development and production of theatre and media pieces. Under the direction of Elizabeth LeCompte, The Group, along with its many associate artists, has conceived and constructed sixteen works for the theatre, six works for film and video, three radio pieces and three dance pieces.

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For over thirty years, The Wooster Group has cultivated new forms and techniques of theatrical expression reflective of and responsive to our evolving culture, while sustaining a consistent ensemble and maintaining a flexible repertory. Wooster Group theatre pieces are constructed as assemblages of juxtaposed elements: radical staging of both modern and classic texts, found materials, films and videos, dance and movement, multi-track scoring, and an architectonic approach to theatre design.

The Wooster Group has played a pivotal role in bringing technologically sophisticated and evocative uses of sound, film and video into the realm of contemporary theatre, and in the process has influenced a generation of theatre artists nationally and internationally. The Group's work is unique because it attracts not only the theatre-going community but also artists and enthusiasts of many other cultural disciplines, such as dance, painting, music, video and film.

The Group has created and performed all of its theatre pieces at The Performing Garage in SoHo, New York City. All pieces in The Group's award winning repertory have toured widely in the US and Europe, as well as to Asia, Australia, Canada, and South America.

The Wooster Group is a not-for-profit theater company that relies on grants and donations from supporters. It has received multiple grants from the Carnegie Corporation, which has supported more than 550 New York City arts and social service institutions since its inception in 2002, and which was made possible through a donation by New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg.[1] The Carnegie Corporation's total donations to nonprofit organizations exceeds $115 million.[2]

  • Frank Dell's The Temptation of St. Antony (1987)
  • L.S.D. (...Just the High Points...) (1984)
  • Route 1 & 9 (1981)

  • Point Judith (an epilogue) (1979)
  • Nayatt School (1978)
  • Rumstick Road (1977)
  • Sakonnet Point (1975)
  • Hula (1981) and For the Good Times (1982)(two dance pieces)
  • North Atlantic (1984/1999) written for the company by James Strahs
  • Miss Universal Happiness (1985) and Symphony of Rats (1988) written for the company & directed by Richard Foreman

Each radio piece was a BBC Radio 3 Broadcast for a Festival Radio Production.

  • Love Songs Songs from The Wooster Group's To You, The Birdie! (Phèdre) written, performed and produced and by drench (CD - 2002)

  • House/Lights (DVD-2004)
  • The Wooster Group's The Emperor Jones by Eugene O'Neill (video-1999)
  • Wrong Guys (film-in progress)
  • Rhyme 'Em to Death (video-1994)
  • White Homeland Commando (video-1992) written for the company by Michael Kirby
  • Flaubert Dreams of Travel but the Illness of His Mother Prevents It (video-1986)

The Wooster Group's founding members are:

Sources consulted
Endnotes


  • David Savran: Breaking the Rules: The Wooster Group. Reprint. New York: Theatre Communications Group, 1990. ISBN 0930452828.

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