Cast
(in order of appearance)
Vivian Bearing, Ph.D. . . . . . . . . Marilyn
Weiher
Harvey Kelekian, M.D. . . . . . . .Jim Hannigan
Jason Posner, M.D. . . . . . . . . ..Rich
Kropp
Susie Monahan, R.N. . Stacey Mazzulla McCargo*
E. M. Ashford, D. Phil.. . . . . . . Paulette
Sarussi
Mr. Bearing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Marion Reis
Lab Techs, Clinical Fellows, Students, Code
Team
. . . . .Karen Arnold
. . . . .Karen Bellovich*
. . . . .Tom Gess
. . . . .Jackie Schwab*
. . . . .Jackie Weiher Siwek
*new to our stage
Production Credits:
Production Credits
Director, Jack Phillips
Technical Director, Thad Hallstein
Stage Manager, Denny Wise
Assistant Stage Managers:
Darla Goudeau, Mari Lamp
Costume Designers:
Mary Ellen Druyan, Katie Pecis
Costume Crew:
Linda Auer, Lori D’Asta, Danna Durkin,
Nell Fisher-Agnew, Jim Hannigan, Karla Hudson,
Laura Leonardo Ownby, Stephanie Rachford
Stomberg, Carol Suda
Dramaturg, Sarah Vanikiotis
Hospitality Chair, Carol Clarke
Hospitality Crew:
Dorothy Attermeyer, Rosemary Beale, Jan
Benedict, Carole Borg, Phillip Conway, Rob
Cramer, Mike DeKovic, Tom Frohnapfel, Karla
Hudson, Ann Marie and Harry Hultgren, Andrea
and Roland Imes, Donna Marie, Eleanor and
Rich Kanak, Martha Kirchman, Bridgett Murray,
Diane Oppenheim, Adam and Margo Rickert
Bill and Pat Rotz, Margaret Schlegel, Virginia
Welch
Lighting Designer, Linda Bugielski
Lighting Crew:
John Mueller, Paul Roach, Betsy Stiles,
Cathy Van Horne
Makeup Designers: Julie Knoch, Sue Valenta
Makeup Crew:
Eileen Crow, Charlie Eagen, Susan Mauer,
Diane Oppenheim, Linda Roberts, Fred Sauers
Properties Designer, Tim Feeney
Properties Crew, Philip Conway, Bill FitzGerald,
Jason McCargo, Mary Pavia, Kevin Slattery
Set Construction Chair, Harry Hultgren
Set Construction Crew:
Grace Abrahamson, Cindy Blaszak, Linda Bremer,
Mike Huth, Pat Huth, Ann Marie Hultgren,
Elyse Hultgren, Andrea Imes, Donna Marie
Kanak, Art Kelly, Jon Mills, John Mueller,
John Otto, Arlene Page, Amanda Ragan, Irv
Sarussi
Set Designer, Art Kelly
Set Painting Chairs: Jim Kopp, Kelli Kopp
Set Painting Crew:
Carol Clarke, Rob Cramer, Larry Horn
Sound Designers:
Ed Barrow, Darla Goudeau, Peggy Solick
Sound Crew:
Terri Smartz, Betsy Stiles
Box Office Chair, Mary Ellen Schutt
Box Office Crew:
Cindy Blaszak, Linda Bremer, Lori B. Proksa,
Patti Roeder, Donna Sauers
House Manager Chair, Bill Wilson
House Managers:
Linda Auer, Dave Bremer, Carol Clarke, Peggy
Carlson, Penny Choice, Rob Cramer, Mike
DeKovic, George Dempsey, Karla Hudson, Roland
Imes, Mike Janke, Donna Marie Kanak,, Heinz
Karplus, Diane Oppenheim, Arlene Page, Rick
Pavia, Don Strueber
Promotional Graphics, Joe Petrolis
Group Sales Chairs:
Mary Ellen Schutt, Terri Smartz
Poster Distribution, Kathleen Kusper
Production Coordinator, Jon Mills
Program Advertising, Peggy Carlson
Program Production:
Ed Barrow, Marion Reis
Publicity Chair, Jeff Miklos
Actives Website, Judy DiVita
Higher
resolution photos available through
Peter Bosy Photography
More photos on Page
2
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Setting:
Primarily a patient room in the University
Hospital Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Director’s Corner
By Jack Phillips
At first glance it seems author Margaret
Edson is lashing out against researchers
and the medical system. As we examine the
play, we see that she is really talking
about the need for compassion from everyone.
We see the main character, Vivian Bearing,
slowly realize that she wants from the hospital
staff the kind of caring that she has been
unable to give to her own students. Vivian
has isolated herself in the world of academe.
She is extremely bright and has challenged
herself in a difficult discipline. As a
teacher she has become famous for how hard
her class is and how much her students have
to work. She discovers in her illness that
her intelligence doesn’t help. The
play is the story of Vivian’s search
for grace and courage. She needs to find
the tools to help her through this unusual
time. When that help comes, it comes from
unexpected sources.
The play is presented from Vivian’s
point of view. We see things as she remembers
them. We often don’t follow standard
medical protocol, but experience it as Vivian
does. The story is told as she remembers
parts of her past that she finds important
now.
Dramaturg’s Diary
By Sarah Vanikiotis
Why is this play called Wit? What is the
significance of this word, or this literary
device? Margaret Edson chose the title carefully
and some of the definitions of wit shed
light on that choice.
The natural ability to perceive and understand;
intelligence
Clearly, this is Vivian Bearing’s
strength. Her power and how she defines
herself rely greatly on her academic prowess
and her position as an authority on the
writings of John Donne.
Keenness and quickness of perception or
discernment; ingenuity
During the play, Vivian often begins speaking
while another character is speaking, especially
when that character is explaining something
that directly relates to her. Her mind races
forward to make connections, to discern
the meaning of what is being said, and what
that meaning’s implications have.
She jumps from one thought to another in
a pace that may remind members of the audience
of their more effective literary essays
in college or high school. This is characteristic
of her academia-focused life, which is defined
by taking a piece of literature and dissecting
it to find the most basic points, which
then lead to extrapolations of what the
author “really means.” It isn’t
enough for Vivian to hear what is; she must
also immediately discover what that reality,
or “is,” really means for her.
The ability to perceive and express in
an ingeniously humorous manner the relationship
between seemingly incongruous or disparate
things
As a professor, Vivian’s career and
life’s work is the analysis of John
Donne’s writings. She says, “Wit
provides an invaluable exercise for sharpening
the mental faculties, for stimulating the
flash of comprehension that can only follow
hours of exacting and seemingly pointless
scrutiny…. Donne’s wit is a
way to see how good you really are. After
twenty years, I can say with confidence,
no one is quite as good as I.” The
thing that is surprising in this play, which
at first glance is about cancer, pain, and
inevitable death, is that there is humor.
Vivian finds that her talent, wit, cannot
save her from death. It is a realization
that is difficult for her. The phrase “at
wit’s end” means at a loss,
at the limit of one’s mental faculties.
In her last moments, she embraces that connection.
And she embraces the truism shared by her
mentor that sparked her entire career in
the real-life circumstance she is in: that
between life and death, there is only a
pause. A comma. “And death shall be
no more, Death thou shalt die.” Vivian
realizes that in her dying, death itself
is vanquished. And when death is vanquished,
the only logical thing a person of great
wit can conclude is that the opposites of
death, life and love, persist beyond all
comprehension, beyond all definitions, beyond
wit.
Acknowledgments
Special thanks to:
I would like to offer special thanks to
Jim Hannigan. His advice and consultation
about medical practices and protocol proved
invaluable. We appreciate even more his
understanding that this is a play and not
a medical handbook. Any procedural mistakes
are the author’s and ours, not Dr.
Hannigan’s. I am also grateful that
he is skilled enough as an actor to portray
an oncologist who is not at all like him.
–Jack Phillips, Director
The Fruit Store, Western Springs and Hinsdale,
for providing apple cider at cost with free
delivery.
Produced with special permission from
Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
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