The cast of the Fredonia Department of Theatre and Dance production of âThe Wolvesâ includes, from left, Avery Norris, Lauren Teller, Kate Fitzpatrick, Madison Fulton, Elle Nunzio, Mazal Karlick, Gemma Vodacek, Alexa Kartschoke and Noelya Richardson-Simo.
The 2019-20 Walter Gloor Mainstage Series continues in December with a work that was a finalist for the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in Drama.
The Department of Theatre and Dance presents six performances of Sarah DeLappeâs âThe Wolvesâ from Dec. 5 to 8 in Bartlett Theatre.
Dates and performance times are Dec. 5 and 6 at 7:30 p.m. and Dec. 7 and 8 at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available through the Fredonia Campus Ticket Office in the Williams Center, by phone at 716-673-3501 and online.
The play, which made its off-Broadway debut in 2016, follows the members of a girls indoor soccer teams as they ânavigate big questions and wage tiny battles with all the vim and vigor of a pack of adolescent warriors.â
Director Jessica Hillman-McCord, a member of the theatre and dance faculty, said âThe Wolvesâ is a very contemporary work that is relevant to current events.
âI think young women are experiencing a major cultural shift right now in terms of power and ownership,â she said. âItâs an important play for the times we are in.â
With mature language and situations, the director said âThe Wolvesâ is a work to which older teens and adults will be able to relate.
âThe play deals with a segment of the population that doesnât always get a lot of attention, outside of some clichĂ©s and stereotypes,â Ms. Hillman-McCord said. âItâs a three-dimensional portrait of 16 and 17 year-old girls that we basically donât ever see.â
In a review of the play, the Village Voice described âThe Wolvesâ as a âdelightful meditation on society, sex, and soccer. DeLappeâs dialogue is hilarious and idiosyncratic. She offers us 90 minutes in a smart, sympathetic, female world.â
âItâs a brilliant play. (DeLappe) has done an amazing job in capturing these characters,â Hillman-McCord said. âItâs exciting, moving and thought provoking. These are real, three-dimensional portraits.â
Hillman-McCord explained âThe Wolvesâ makes use of overlapping dialogue, which may be a new experience for some audience members.
âYou wonât hear every word â but youâre not expected to hear every word,â she said. âItâs a different perspective on how to be a spectator in a theater. You could see the play multiple times and hear something different each time.â
Still, Hillman-McCord said the story is easy to follow.
âItâs very clear what is going on when you are watching,â she said.
What this technique does is allow the audience to have the feeling of being dropped in as observers in the world of the characters.
âThe audience is immersed in the world of these girls,â Hillman-McCord said. âItâs a window into a world that adults may be closed out of.â
âThe Wolvesâ is presented as part of the 2019-20 Lake Shore Savings Season.