The Breath of Life was first presented at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, London, on Oct. Deborah works as a substitute teacher throughout different districts in the Gorge, is an avid gardener, and loves to cook, but her greatest role now is being a Grandmother!! In CGOA’s 2016- 17th season, Deborah directed The Death of A Salesman and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? with CAST in 2014. Favorite roles were Mary in Long Day’s Journey Into Night, Regina in Little Foxes, Martha in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Lady in Orpheus Descending, Ella in The Curse of the Starving Class, and Dorine in Tartuffe. She was co-founder and leading actress of the Durham Stage Company and leading lady with the Edwin Booth Theatre, both resident theatres in New Hampshire. Favorite shows include Death of a Salesman, Two Rooms, Jake’s Women, The Gin Game, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Oleanna, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Dial “M” for Murder, A Streetcar Named Desire, Dracula, Bus Stop, The Vagina Monologues, If We Are Women, The Seagull, Private Lives, Six Degrees of Separation, Top Dog/Underdog, That Championship Season and many more.ĭeborah Langlois, director, actress and educator, has spent many years in the theatre.
#SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION MONOLOGUES PROFESSIONAL#
Judie has worked in Professional (Equity) and non-pro theatre in Canada and the U.S, both as an actor and director. Judie Hanel has loved working on this beautifully written show by Sir David Hare. Joe thanks his family, especially April, for their constant support. He has performed locally in Macbeth, Doubt, Art, Next to Normal, Good People, and Chicago, and directed Noises Off in 2019. Joe Garoutte While earning a BA in theatre at EOSC (nka EOU) in LaGrande, OR didn’t land him a position as a college professor, it did give Joe the opportunity to perform in Guys and Dolls, The Secret Garden, A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Julius Caesar. It’s something in between… I wanted to describe two women at exactly that moment a long past behind them, but the expectation of a considerable future in front of them.” Of the central theme of the play, Hare wrote “You can no longer call it middle age, and you certainly can’t call it old age. Over the course of one day and one night, the two women reflect on their lives and the relationship with the central, yet offstage, male character. Only 50 seats available so RESERVE your tickets early.ĭescription of the play: It tells the story of a woman who is confronted by the wife of her lover. This will be presented in a park-like setting outdoors at a private residence. Rejoice, Rewind, Restart with a ‘fun’draiser for Columbia Center for the Arts! Enjoy an evening of meeting up with friends for a Greek meal, wine and delicious dessert, along with a Staged Reading of The Breath of Life, featuring Deborah Langlois and Judie Hanel.