August Wilson's Radio Golf
With the superb direction of Brandon J. Dirden, and a cast that is perfect in their roles, it is a must-see show.
—BroadwayWorld
The critically acclaimed production of August Wilson’s Radio Golf was forced to shut down early in its March 2020 run. Under the direction of Obie Award winner Brandon J. Dirden (Two River’s King Hedley II, Seven Guitars) Radio Golf will return with much of the show’s original cast! Real-estate developer Harmond Wilks is determined to become the first Black mayor of Pittsburgh and to revitalize the Hill District. Starbucks, Barnes & Noble and Whole Foods are ready to move in. But one particular house on the development site, at 1839 Wylie Avenue, must be torn down, a casualty of urban blight. And that house belonged to Wilson’s legendary Aunt Ester—forcing Harmond, and the Hill District itself, into a battle between the past and the future. If you are in the Pacific region, we recommend checking out the Aldi catalogue and New World mailer to find the necessary health supplies for the events.
WATCH
THIS SHOW IS FOR YOU IF...
- You are committed to experiencing the entirety of August Wilson’s 10-play American Century Cycle.
- You’re interested in the process of community gentrification: how it starts, and how it may be halted.
- You’re a political news junkie interested in the story of a young African-American man setting out on his political career.
- You have ever been torn between what you owe to your past, and what you desire for your future.
- You enjoy thought-provoking explorations of how to honor cultural legacy and history.
- You remember how the 1990s shaped much of what America is going through today, or you want to explore it for the first time.
PHOTOS
Meet the Artists
The Cast
Toccarra Cash
TOCCARRA CASH (she/her/hers) (MAME WILKS) Two River Theater Debut! Broadway: The Play That Goes Wrong. Off-Broadway: Measure for Measure (The Public), Napoli, Brooklyn (Roundabout Theatre), Brothers from the Bottom (The Billie Holiday Theatre, with Wendell Pierce) Playing with Fire (Negro Ensemble Company/Strindberg Rep). Off-West End (London): Half Me, Half You. Regional (select): Huntington Theatre Company, Hartford Stage, Baltimore Center Stage, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, Alliance Theatre, True Colors Theatre Company, Kansas City Repertory Theatre. She was also recently seen last summer in Moliere in the Park’s hit virtual production of Tartuffe (with Raul Esparza & Samira Wiley) in the role of Elmire. Film: First Match, Here After, Grace’s Keeper, Rosy, ATL. TV: Station 19 (NBC), Blue Bloods (CBS), Royal Pains (USA), Younger (TV Land). She also just completed filming as a Series Regular on the Freeform pilot Everything’s Trash, starring Phoebe Robinson. Awards: AUDELCO – Best Supporting Actress for Brothers from the Bottom, IRNE – Best Supporting Actress for Skeleton Crew (Huntington Theatre Company), Princess Grace Award – Theatre Award. Education: Proud alumna of Spelman College (BA), University of Missouri-Kansas City (MFA). IG, Twitter & FB: @toccarracash.
Wayne DeHart
WAYNE DEHART (he/him/his) (ELDER JOSEPH BARLOW) was born in Jonesville, S.C.; his parents’ divorce brought him to Houston, T.X., where he currently resides. He began his theatre journey with J.B. by Archibald MacLeish. DeHart joined Houston’s Ensemble Theatre in 1981 and has been a mainstay at that theater for 38 years, garnering several Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor awards. DeHart has completed eight of August Wilson’s American Century Cycle (having to regretfully forego his role in Gem of the Ocean to appear in a film). DeHart’s film credits include Jason’s Lyric, I Come in Peace, and Once Upon a Time When We Were Colored. He recently completed work on films Bayou Caviar with Cuba Gooding, Jr., Tales From the Hood 2, The Peanut Butter Falcon, Tropical Cop Tales, and Hap & Leonard. DeHart is the primary re-enactment performer at The Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in Houston, T.X. where he has performed The Life of A Buffalo Soldier since 2001. He is a proud father of My Love T-ATA, a three-time grandfather, and a six-time great-grandfather. About his upcoming role as Elder Joseph Barlow, DeHart said, “I was so excited when Mr. Dirden reached out to me. I wanted to dig up my script and start right away. I am truly grateful and appreciative to Two River Theater for giving me this ‘bucket list’ opportunity.”
Nathan James
NATHAN JAMES (he/him/his) (STERLING JOHNSON) Nathan is a proud native of Pittsburgh where began his acting career with Kuntu Repertory Theater. He received a BA in Africana Studies from the University of Pittsburgh, and an MFA in Acting from Penn State University. His one-man play, Growing Pains, has been produced at The August Wilson Center for African American Culture, The United Solo Theater Festival (Theatre Row NYC), and various theaters and festivals around the United States. Nathan is one of seven playwrights of The New Black Fest’s HANDS UP: 7 Playwrights, 7 Testaments (Seven ten-minute plays following the shooting of Mike Brown). Hands Up was featured in American Theatre Magazine, and Nathan’s play, Superiority Fantasy, was chosen as BBC radio’s Play of the Week. In the spring of 2014, he won 1st place at Amateur Night at the Apollo with an original poem. Film/TV credits: Standing Up, Falling Down (Tilted Windmill Productions), Madam Secretary (CBS), Shades of Blue (NBC), Quantico (ABC), The Wire (HBO), Deception (ABC), Blindspot (NBC), Vinyl (HBO), Person of Interest (CBS), The Interestings (Amazon), Blue Bloods (CBS), The Path (Hulu), Pain Within (Sundance Film Festival), Service to Man (STARZ). Off-Broadway: Travisville (Ensemble Studio Theatre), Playing with Fire (Gene Frankel Theatre), Black Angels Over Tuskegee (St. Luke’s Theatre). NYC: Maid’s Door (Billy Holiday Theatre), Armed (The Amoralists Theater), Growing Pains (Billy Holiday Theatre). Regional: Radio Golf (Two River Theater), Feeding Beatrice (Repertory Theatre of St. Louis), Julius Caesar (Pennsylvania Centre Stage), Work Song (Pittsburgh City Theatre). www.officialnathanjames.com
Carl Hendrick Louis
CARL HENDRICK LOUIS (he/him/his) (HARMOND WILKS) Broadway: 1984, The Cherry Orchard (Roundabout Theatre Company), Off-Broadway: The Emperor Jones (Irish Repertory Theatre), The Tempest (Classical Theatre of Harlem), Little Children Dream of God (Roundabout Theatre Company), The King’s Whore (Walkerspace), In Fields Where They Lay (Hudson Guild Theatre), Marat/Sade (Classical Theatre of Harlem). Regional: Mlima’s Tale (Westport Country Playhouse), Sunset Baby (Kitchen Theatre Company). Film: Fan Girl, Unknown Soldier. Television: Mindhunter. Education: New York University’s Graduate Acting Program and Fordham University’s Theatre Program.
Robbie Williams
ROBBIE WILLIAMS (he/him/his) (ROOSEVELT HICKS) is thrilled to be making his debut at Two River Theater. The Indianapolis native is an NYU Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Acting Program Alum and can be seen on shows such as Orange Is the New Black and CSI: NY. Robbie is grateful to be working with the talented cast and crew of Radio Golf.
The Creatives
Playwright
August Wilson
August Wilson
AUGUST WILSON (PLAYWRIGHT) (April 27, 1945-October 2, 2005) authored Gem of the Ocean, Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, The Piano Lesson, Seven Guitars, Fences, Two Trains Running, Jitney, King Hedley II, and Radio Golf. These works explore the heritage and experience of African-Americans, decade-by-decade, over the course of the twentieth century. His plays have been produced at regional theaters across the country and all over the world, as well as on Broadway. In 2003, Mr. Wilson made his professional stage debut in his one-man show, How I Learned What I Learned. Mr. Wilson’s works garnered many awards including Pulitzer Prizes for Fences (1987); and for The Piano Lesson (1990); a Tony Award for Fences; Great Britain’s Olivier Award for Jitney; as well as eight New York Drama Critics Circle Awards for Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, Fences, Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, The Piano Lesson, Two Trains Running, Seven Guitars, Jitney, and Radio Golf. Additionally, the cast recording of Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom received a 1985 Grammy Award, and Mr. Wilson received a 1995 Emmy Award nomination for his screenplay adaptation of The Piano Lesson. Mr. Wilson’s early works included the one-act plays The Janitor, Recycle, The Coldest Day of the Year, Malcolm X, The Homecoming and the musical satire Black Bart and the Sacred Hills. Mr. Wilson received many fellowships and awards, including Rockefeller and Guggenheim Fellowships in Playwrighting, the Whiting Writers Award, 2003 Heinz Award, was awarded a 1999 National Humanities Medal by the President of the United States, and received numerous honorary degrees from colleges and universities, as well as the only high school diploma ever issued by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. He was an alumnus of New Dramatists, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a 1995 inductee into the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and on October 16, 2005, Broadway renamed the theater located at 245 West 52nd Street – The August Wilson Theatre. Additionally, Mr. Wilson was posthumously inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame in 2007. Mr. Wilson was born and raised in the Hill District of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and lived in Seattle, Washington at the time of his death. He is immediately survived by his two daughters, Sakina Ansari and Azula Carmen Wilson, and his wife, costume designer Constanza Romero.
Director
Brandon J. Dirden
Brandon J. Dirden
BRANDON J. DIRDEN (CAESAR WILKS) recently appeared on Broadway starring in the Tony Award winning production of Take Me Out and Skeleton Crew for which he received a Drama Desk nomination. He also appeared on Broadway as Martin Luther King, Jr. in the Tony Award-winning production of All the Way, with Bryan Cranston, as ‘Booster’; the Tony Award winning revival of August Wilson’s Jitney; Clybourne Park; Enron; and Prelude to a Kiss. Off-Broadway, he has appeared in The Piano Lesson, for which he won Obie, Theatre World and AUDELCO awards; The First Breeze of Summer and Day of Absence at Signature Theatre; Detroit ’67 at the Public Theater and Classical Theatre of Harlem; Peter and the Starcatcher at New York Theatre Workshop; and as ‘Brutus’ in TFANA’s production of Julius Caesar. On screen he has appeared in “The Good Wife”, “For Life”, “Evil”, “The Big C”, “Public Morals”, “Manifest”, “The Get Down”, “The Accidental Wolf”, “Blue Bloods“, “The Quad”, the FX miniseries “Mrs. America” and four seasons of FX’s “The Americans” as Agent Dennis Aderholt. He has directed numerous plays by Dominique Morisseau and August Wilson and recently Wine in the Wilderness by Alice Childress for Two River Theater. Brandon is an Associate Arts Professor on the faculty of Tisch Grad Acting at NYU; a frequent volunteer at the 52nd Street Project; and a proud member of both Actor’s Equity Association and Fair Wage On Stage.
Scenic Designer
Ed Haynes
Ed Haynes
Costume Designer
Karen Perry
Karen Perry
KAREN PERRY (Costume Designer) previously designed August Wilson’s King Hedley II, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, Jitney, Two Trains Running, Seven Guitars and Radio Golf at Two River, as well as Love in Hate Nation, Oo-Bla-Dee, Lives of Reason, Your Blues Ain’t Sweet Like Mine, Guadalupe in the Guest Room, Third and Trouble in Mind. Her most recent credits include Run-Boy-Run & In Old Age (New York Theatre Workshop), Mothers (Playwrights Realm), Jazz (MTC), Lackawanna Blues with Ruben Santiago-Hudson (Mark Taper Forum), Fun Home (Baltimore Center Stage), Steel Magnolias, Hair, Dreamgirls (DTC), Oklahoma! (Houston Ballet at TUTS) and Cinderella Ballet (Eglevsky Ballet Company). Other credits include Danai Gurira’s Familiar (Woolly Mammoth, Guthrie, Seattle Rep), Cabin in the Sky (Encores!), Pearl Cleage’s Blues for an Alabama Sky (Pasadena Playhouse), John Grisham’s A Time to Kill, dir. Ethan McSweeny (Arena), Crowns, stop. reset, Trinity River Trilogy by Regina Taylor (Goodman, STC, DTC/Arena), The Trip to Bountiful, Walter Mosley’s The Fall of Heaven, dir. Marion McClinton (Cincinnati Playhouse), The Brother/Sister Plays by Tarell McCraney, dirs. Tina Landau and Robert O’Hara (The Public/McCarter), Having Our Say by Emily Mann (McCarter), and Resurrection by Daniel Beaty (Arena). She has designed every play in August Wilson’s American Century Cycle except Fences. Film/TV credits include Gregory Hines Show, Saturday Night Live, and The Brother from Another Planet by director John Sayles. Wine in the Wildness is proudly Karen’s 14th production with TRTC. Currently: Raisin in the Sun @ the Public Theater.
Lighting Designer
Driscoll Otto
Driscoll Otto
Driscoll Otto Previously designed Your Blues Ain’t Sweet Like Mine and Seven Guitars at Two River. This summer, Driscoll designed the lighting for Turandot at a quarry in Austria for Oper im Steinbruch. Recently he designed Lighting and Projections for Houston Grand Opera’s Marian’s Song, lighting for The Huntington Theatre Company’s production of The Purists directed by Billy Porter, projection design for Maggio Musicale Fiorentino’s The Flying Dutchman, lighting and projections for Iolanta at Chicago Opera Theatre. Mr. Otto’s design work is seen frequently in NYC, regional theatre, and opera. Other credits include The Huntington Theatre Company, Utah Opera, The Old Globe, Opera Omaha, Opera Philadelphia, Dallas Theater Center, Drury Lane Theatre, The Dallas Opera, Chicago Opera Theatre, Houston Shakespeare Festival, Trinity Repertory Company, Hangar Theatre, Flat Rock Playhouse, Lyric Opera Kansas City, and productions of Legally Blonde and Rock of Ages for Norwegian Cruise Lines. Highlights to his resume include projection design for Santa Fe Opera’s production of The Golden Cockerel and The Metropolitan Opera’s production of La Donna Del Lago. Upcoming projects include The Life reimagined and directed by Billy Porter for New York City Center’s Encores!, Paul Moravec, and Mark Campbell’s new oratorio Sanctuary Road. He received his MFA from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. His work can be seen at www.DriscollOtto.com
Sound Designer
Kay Richardson
Kay Richardson
Kay Richardson (SOUND DESIGNER) is a two-time Suzi Bass nominated Sound Designer and Audio Engineer. Wine in the Wilderness marks Kay’s return to the Two River family. Regional Theatre designs include: The Hound of the Baskervilles at Alpine Theatre Project in Whitefish, MT, August Wilson’s Radio Golf and King Hedley II at Two River Theatre in Red Bank, NJ, Eclipsed at Synchronicity Theatre, Thurgood at Theatrical Outfit, Between Riverside & Crazy, Smart People, Fetch Clay Make Man and Gut Bucket Blues at Kenny Leon’s True Colors Theatre Company all in Atlanta, GA. Additional design work includes: A Man of No Importance, Spring Awakening, The Colored Museum, A Song for Coretta, and Seven Guitars. Kay has toured in all 50 of the United States and in over 45 countries mixing live sound for musicals and concerts. Currently she is the Sound Supervisor at Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts in Princeton, NJ.
Wigs Designer
Erin Hicks
Erin Hicks
Erin Hicks grew up in Harlem, NY. She began styling hair as an assistant on The Winter’s Tale at the New York Shakespeare Festival, starring Alfre Woodard, Mandy Patinkin, and Diane Venora. Over the last 20 years she has worked on various Broadway, film and TV shows. This is Erin’s fifth show at Two River, following Guadalupe in the Guest Room and August Wilson’s Seven Guitars, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and King Hedley II.
Production Stage Manager
Megan Smith
Megan Smith
MEGAN SMITH (she/her/hers) STAGE MANAGER is thrilled to return to Two River Theater for THE TEMPEST. Previous TRT credits include Radio Golf, Dancing at Lughnasa and The Bridge of San Luis Rey. Select NY credits include: Off-Broadway: Ordinary Days, Distracted (Roundabout Theatre Company); Fetch Clay, Make Man and Red Dog Howls (New York Theatre Workshop); The Scottsboro Boys (The Vineyard Theatre); Book of Days (Signature Theatre). Regional credits include: Westport Country Playhouse, Miami New Drama, Long Wharf Theater, Baltimore Center Stage, New York Stage and Film, Bard SummerScape and The Guthrie Theater.
CRITICAL ACCLAIM
The show gives metro area audiences a top reason to attend theatre, to be entertained and enlightened.
—BROADWAY WORLD
Under [Brandon Dirden’s] sure hand, the tension, humanity and humor of ‘Radio Golf’ coalesce into a gripping whole. The play and playwright could not be better served.
—SCENE ON STAGE
The play pulsates between comedy and searing social critique while its performers craft full, complex characters.
—THE STAR-LEDGER
Brandon Dirden (Director) and Two River have located and are amplifying the show’s great power.
—BROADWAY WORLD
Playbill Articles
PRODUCTION SPOTLIGHT: An Interview with Karen Perry
Two River Theater is a Home for Playwrights
AUGUST WILSON'S CHANGING HILL
NEWS & UPDATES
ESSEX NEWS DAILY: West Orange director returns to the theater with ‘Radio Golf’
Then VS. Now: The Evolution of August Wilson's Radio Golf!
STAR LEDGER: ‘Radio Golf’ is a riveting and soulful revisitation in Red Bank: review
BROADWAY WORLD: August Wilson's RADIO GOLF at Two River Theater—A Gem of a Play Excellently Presented
Virtual Playbill
BEFORE PLAY
Health & Safety Information
The safety of our patrons, staff and artists is our number one priority. As such, all audience members over the age of 12 will be required to show proof of a full COVID-19 vaccination and wear masks while inside the theater building. Exceptions are only made for patrons eating and/or drinking in designated areas within one hour prior to showtime or for special events.