Did you see 7 Lessons on Suicide at the Capital Fringe this year?
Did you like it enough to vote for it at http://dctheatrescene.com/?
Go to the right hand side of the page and vote away. Haven’t seen the show yet? One more chance at 3:30 today.
Did you see 7 Lessons on Suicide at the Capital Fringe this year?
Did you like it enough to vote for it at http://dctheatrescene.com/?
Go to the right hand side of the page and vote away. Haven’t seen the show yet? One more chance at 3:30 today.
With three more performance remaining of 7 Lessons On Suicide (get your tickets here!), the reviews are starting to pour in. Here are links to all three, all very thoughtful and well written:
Three more shows remain this Wednesday @ 10 pm, Saturday @ 10 pm, and Sunday @ 3:30 pm. Come see this “morbidly fascinating” show for yourself.
Meet the whole cast!
Playwright: Stephen Spotswood
Director: Tess Pohlhaus
Cast, in order of appearance:
HANNAH: Aileen Brenner
BEA: Maggie Brevig
EUNEY: Molly Weeks Crumbley
STANLEY: Mike Meagher (for the first four shows)/Andrew Yanek (for the last three)
CHARLES: Rachel Loose
MR. NODDY: Kevin Brotzman
Remember, 7 Lessons opens tonight at the Capital Fringe Festival! Buy your tickets here!
In the meantime, meet the director of the show!
Tess is a 2003 graduate of Washington College, with a BA in Drama and Secondary Teaching Certification (so she is employable). She currently lives in Bel Air, MD and teaches theatre at Rising Sun High School in “nearby” Cecil County. (She realizes that Cecil County is actually nowhere nearby to pretty much anything.) At RSHS, Tess has directed a plethora of plays and musicals including (in no particular order) Little Shop of Horrors, You’re A Good Man Charlie Brown, Kiss Me Kate, and The Importance of Being Earnest. She has also appeared in Amadeus as Constanze Weber, Dracula as Lucy Seward, Father Joy as Abigail at the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and in Zero Hour Theatre’s production of The Frustrations of Stoker Pratt as Mrs. Troeffel at the 2008 Capital Fringe Festival. Tess has no free time, but if she did she would probably sleep and read lots of good books.
7 Lessons opens tomorrow, so remember to buy your tickets here.
Here’s what the press has to say so far–from the Washington College News site:
Molly Weeks Crumbley ’07 knew she would miss her drama family, the tight-knit group of Washington College theater majors and professors she spent all those hours with in Tawes Theatre building sets, rehearsing, critiquing. “The department fostered a real sense of community,” she says. “We all did a little bit of everything while we were there. And upon graduating, we realized very quickly that there just wasn’t a place like that in the real world.”
So Crumbley and several drama friends created their virtual “place like that”—a new theater troupe that would bring like-minded people together to stage new works or reinterpret older plays. She and 2003 graduate Tess Pohlhaus would share the role of artistic director, and ’07 Sophie Kerr Prize winner Liam Daley would write the script their first production. The Board would include technical director Mike Meagher ’04, marketing director Kevin Brotzman ’04, and business director Michael Ridgaway ’05. They would all keep their day jobs and fit theater into evenings, weekends and summer vacations.
Three years later, Zero Hour Theatre is producing its third play for the Capital Fringe Festival in Washington, D.C., and the connections to Washington College couldn’t be stronger. The dark comedy 7 Lessons on Suicide, which opens Friday at Goethe Institut-Gallery, in D.C.’s Chinatown, was written by Stephen Spotswood, Washington College class of 1999. The playwright and Zero Hour held a workshop reading of the play in April on the Chestertown campus, where they encouraged their former professors and other audience members to critique and improve it for the next draft.
The play is directed by Pohlhaus, and six of the seven actors on stage are Washington College alums, too: Crumbley, Brotzman and Meagher are joined by Rachel Loose ’07, Aileen Brenner ’09, and former student Andrew Yanek. The seventh part is taken by Maggie Brevig, a Boston College grad and a good friend of Molly. There’s a Wellesley grad serving as dramaturg, but she’s engaged to ZHT business director Ridgaway 05. It’s not really deliberate, all this Washington College-ness, says Pohlhaus, “Last year, only three of seven actors were Washington College alums.”
Crumbley describes 7 Lessons as “a pitch-black comedy that asks, ‘In a world where everyone is clamoring to end it all, why bother living?’ ” Though it bills itself as a show about suicide, it is ultimately a show about choosing life, she adds. “It’s a very, very dark comedy,” director Pohlhaus confirms. “It deals with very serious issues in a deeply comedic way and with a lot of heart. We want the audience to leave the theater with a lot to think and talk about.”
Playwright Spotswood, who earned his MFA in playwriting at Catholic University, received the first Washington College Alumni Horizons Ribbon last fall in recognition of his early career accomplishments. He says working with the Zero Hour crew on 7 Lessons allowed him to get down to business faster. “When working with any theater company, there’s this feeling-out period that takes place, coming to an understanding about how the process will work and how each side sees their role,’’ he explains. “Basically, learning how to work with and communicate with each other. With Zero Hour, not only do we know how to communicate and work with each other already, we’ve all had the same theater training. We all come from a background that emphasizes collaboration and role-sharing instead of compartmentalization.”
The cast and crew have been rehearsing in homes and won’t be able to set up even the first light or prop until the afternoon of opening day. That’s the nature of the Capital Fringe Festival, where dozens of productions happen simultaneously in creative venues all over the city. Pohlhaus, who teaches drama at Rising Sun High School in Cecil County, says the Washington College theater curriculum prepared her and her colleagues well for such rigors. “We are all so used to working in all facets of the theater, from script writing to set design and acting, that we really understand the process and can adapt pretty fast. For thesis productions, we were staging a show a week,” she continues. We couldn’t build the set until Sunday, and we had our first rehearsal in front of faculty on Monday. That gave us a few days to make improvements and react to their suggestions, then we staged the plays Friday night and Saturday.”
Zero Hour Theatre will stage Stephen Spotswood’s 7 Lessons on Suicide at the Goethe Institut-Gallery, 812 7th Street N.W., Washington, DC 20001 on the following dates and times: Friday, July 16, 9 p.m.; Saturday, July 17, 4:30 p.m.; Sunday, July 18, 7 p.m.; Tuesday, July 20, 8:30 p.m.; Wednesday, July 21, 10 p.m.; Saturday, July 24, 10 p.m., and Sunday, July 25, 3:30 p.m. For more information about Zero Hour Theatre and the current production, visit the website (designed, of course by a Washington College alumnus, Kate Amann ’06): http://www.zerohourtheatre.com.
The role of Euney will be played by Molly Weeks Crumbley.
Molly Weeks Crumbley is one of the Artistic Directors of Zero Hour Theatre. Most recently, she served as dramaturg for The Foley Artist and The Frustrations of Stoker Pratt, both previous ZHT shows at the Capital Fringe. She has acted in numerous plays at her alma mater Washington College (favorite roles include Abby from Arsenic and Old Lace, Cheryl from The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told, and Fabian from Twelfth Night) and also directed a show (Father Joy) at the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland. In her real life, she is a Public Services Librarian and a contributing editor for the literary mag Crunchable. She lives in southern Maryland with her fabulous husband and their pug.
In Zero Hour’s upcoming production of 7 Lessons On Suicide, the part of Hannah will be played by Aileen Brenner:

Aileen Brenner is a 2009 graduate of Washington College, summa cum laude, with departmental honors in drama, and a minor in creative writing with a literary fellowship. A member of Phi Beta Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa, Aileen currently works for the American Land Title Association. She recently appeared as Cecily in the Jewish Theatre Workshop’s production of The Importance of Being Earnest, and co-starred in Tick My Box for the grand opening of the Daniel Z. Gibson Fine Arts Center. She is currently in production for the independent film “Dreamless.”
Tickets are now officially on sale for our latest show, 7 Lessons On Suicide!
You can buy them online here, or in person at the Capital Fringe box office in Washington D.C. We look forward to seeing you there!


You'll kill yourself to get into this party..
At long last, we have received our venue and performance dates for the Capital Fringe Festival. This year, we will be playing in Goethe Institut–Gallery, located in lovely Chinatown, on the following days:
Thank you to everyone who came out for our reading at Washington College on the 10th! All of your feedback and insights are very much appreciated as our trusty playwright works on his final draft.
By the end of this week, we should have our venue and date assignments for this summer’s Capital Fringe performance, so stay tuned for details!

Readers & Playwright

Playwright Stephen Spotswood

Dramaturg At Work