SCENE FEED

Courage to carry on Come December, Shannon West will be a college graduate.

3 days ago

3 Comments

Brownies at home Brownies from the box are chewy and chocolatey, just like a good brownie should be.

4 days ago

Tulsa's Square 1 Theatrics to produce first John Grisham novel for stage

By MICHAEL SMITH World Scene Writer on Sep 18, 2013, at 2:26 AM  Updated on 9/18/13 at 3:30 AM


Ryan Tanner and Jay Krottinger are members of the Tulsa-based Square 1 Theatrics. The Tony Award-winning group will produce a stage version of John Grisham's novel "A Time to Kill." TOM GILBERT / Tulsa World file


The Arts

Artist Euripides 'Rip' Kastaris to showcase works at Tulsa Greek Festival

For the first time, an artist will attend the Tulsa Greek Festival to personally show and sell his art.

Pianist to use only one hand for recital Saturday in Tulsa with Signature Symphony

Thomas Lanners first became acquainted with the music he will play Saturday night in Tulsa via a TV show.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Michael Smith

918-581-8479
Email

Tulsa-based Square 1 Theatrics, Tony Award winners earlier this year for the Broadway revival of "Pippin," will produce a stage version of John Grisham's best-selling novel "A Time to Kill" for this fall, the company announced Tuesday.

Square 1, formed by Jay Krottinger and Ryan Tanner, will produce along with Daryl Roth, who has produced multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning plays including "August: Osage County," written by Tulsa native Tracy Letts.

This is the first work of Grisham's to be adapted for the stage. Previews are set for September on Broadway, with the official opening in October for this production adapted by Rupert Holmes.

"We knew we had to be a part of this effort," Tanner said in a press release. "There is no one involved with this project who does not believe in the power of this story and the importance of the questions it raises. Is there ever a right time to kill? What is justice?"

Grisham is quoted as saying, "It was my first book and the first that I have allowed to be adapted for the theatre. Rupert Holmes did an excellent job of translating it from the page to the stage."

The 1996 box-office-hit movie version of Grisham's book starred Matthew McConaughey as a lawyer defending a black man (Samuel L. Jackson) who took the law into his own hands after his daughter was raped and beaten. What follows is an explosive court case in a small Southern town divided by race and their ideas of justice.


Michael Smith 918-581-8479
michael.smith@tulsaworld.com

Original Print Headline: Tulsans turn novel by Grisham into play
The Arts

Artist Euripides 'Rip' Kastaris to showcase works at Tulsa Greek Festival

For the first time, an artist will attend the Tulsa Greek Festival to personally show and sell his art.

Pianist to use only one hand for recital Saturday in Tulsa with Signature Symphony

Thomas Lanners first became acquainted with the music he will play Saturday night in Tulsa via a TV show.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Michael Smith

918-581-8479
Email

COMMENTS

Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories. You can either sign in to your Tulsa World account or use Facebook.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free. To comment through Facebook, please sign in to your account before you comment.

Read our commenting policy.


Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free.

Read our commenting policy.

By clicking "Submit" you are agreeing to our terms and conditions, and grant Tulsa World the right and license to publish the content of your posted comment, in whole or in part, in Tulsa World.