The Guthrie season announced Wednesday gives the theatergoing public its first glimpse at some of the work that interests the Minneapolis theater's new artistic director, Joseph Haj.
The nine-play 2015-16 subscription season includes pieces that had been in the pipeline and some contributions from Haj, who takes over from Joe Dowling on July 1.
The slate pushes more challenging work on the proscenium stage and then balances that with familiar chestnuts on the larger thrust stage. This is somewhat consistent with Dowling's programming.
In interviews following his appointment in February, Haj said diversity would be a goal in his administration. With two contemporary plays — plus a couple of older warhorses — that discuss racial themes, the new season reflects that desire to a degree, although it also includes projects previously planned for 2015-16.
"The coming season will offer our patrons an exceptionally rich variety of theatergoing experiences, and I can't wait to get to know our Guthrie community this fall," Haj said in a statement. He remains at his post as producing artistic director at PlayMakers Repertory Theatre in Chapel Hill, N.C., until July 1.
He will direct two productions. Shakespeare's "Pericles," which he staged at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival this year with Wayne Carr as the lead, will run Jan. 16-Feb. 21 on the Guthrie's thrust stage. Haj will then direct Rodgers and Hammerstein's "South Pacific" on the thrust stage June 18-Aug. 28, 2016.
The thrust stage will open with "To Kill a Mockingbird" Sept. 12-Oct. 18, directed by John Miller-Stephany. "Harvey," playwright Mary Chase's Pulitzer-winning play that has become a staple of community and academic theaters, will run there April 9-May 15.
Proscenium stage
That leaves five shows for the proscenium stage. The season opens there with a WorldStage Series presentation of "The Events" by Scottish playwright David Greig, Sept. 30-Nov. 1.