Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Bridget Regan - Sex and the City (The Movie)

Bridget Regan was cast as a waitress in Sex and the City the Movie, originally released on May 30, 2008.



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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Bridget Regan - New Amsterdam - Keep the Change

Bridget was cast as Daphne Tucker on FOX's New Amsterdam. The episode, Season 1 Episode 5 titled "Keep the Change", originally aired on March 24, 2008. Bridget's character, Daphne Tucker, the wife of a city councilman is entangled in a homicide and the shows star, John Amsterdam, figures out what happened and gets her to confess.


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Bridget Regan - Project Shaw - Geneva

Bridget was cast as Begonia Brown in Geneva, a play by George Bernard Shaw presented by Project Shaw on January 21, 2008. Bridget's character, Begonia Brown, is the "pretty young secretary, left to run the International Committee for Peace office alone".

The play is set in 1938, as an aristocratic German Jew who has fled Nazi Germany arrives in Geneva asking for help. Eventually, Hitler, Franco, and Mussolini all converge there for a peace trial.
The play ran for one night only.


For more information:
  • http://www.projectshaw.com/08Productions.php
  • http://www.fracturedatlas.org/site/marketing/release/382

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Bridget Regan - Is He Dead?

Bridget Regan was cast as Cecile Leroux on Broadway's Is He Dead?, an adaptation of Mark Twain's play of the same name.

The following comes from Wikipedia.org :

Is He Dead? is a play by Mark Twain. It was first published in print in 2003, after Mark Twain scholar Shelley Fisher Fishkin read the manuscript in the archives of the Mark Twain Papers at the University of California at Berkeley. ... The play was long known to scholars but never attracted much attention until Fishkin arranged to have it published in book form. She later played a primary role in getting the play produced on Broadway.

Written in 1898 in Vienna, the play focuses on a fictional version of the great French painter Jean-Francois Millet as an impoverished artist in Barbizon, France who, with the help of his colleagues, stages his death in order to increase the value of his paintings. Combining elements of burlesque, farce, and social satire, the comedy relies on such devices as cross-dressing, mistaken identities, and romantic deceptions to tell its story, which raises questions about fame, greed, and the value of art. A detailed synopsis of Mark Twain's original manuscript of the play--along with synopses of most of Mark Twain's writings--can be found in Critical Companion to Mark Twain (2007) by R. Kent Rasmussen.

Adapted by David Ives, a former Guggenheim Foundation Fellow in playwriting, and directed by Michael Blakemore, Is He Dead? had its world premiere at the Lyceum Theatre. The Broadway production began previews on November 8 and was set to open on November 29, 2007, but due to the 2007 Broadway stagehand strike, it was postponed to December 9, 2007.

It received favorable reviews in the New York Times and Variety, but closed on March 9, 2008, after 105 performances.

Original Broadway Cast:
  • Jean-François Millet-Norbert Leo Butz
  • Bastien André-Byron Jennings
  • Papa Leroux-John McMartin
  • Agamemnon Buckner (“Chicago”)-Michael McGrath
  • Marie Leroux-Jenn Gambatese
  • Hans von Bismarck (“Dutchy”)-Tom Alan Robbins
  • Cecile Leroux-Bridget Regan
  • Phelim O’Shaughnessy-Jeremy Bobb
  • Madame Caron-Marylouise Burke
  • Madame Bathilde-Patricia Conolly
  • Basil Thorpe, Claude Rivière, Charlie, The King of France-David Pittu[6]

All Images Courtesy their respective owners... mostly Playbill.com, Aubrey Reuben

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Online Reviews:

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