| Celebrate the life and work of one of the South’s greatest writers in this once-in-a-lifetime theatrical event. Return to a small town in eastern North Carolina and the Avery family that captivated audiences in Triad Stage’s second season. In honor of Reynolds Price, we present the entire New Music trilogy in a special two-part extended run—Part I: August Snow and Night Dance and Part II: Better Days. See the two parts separately or see them together during weekend marathon performances on February 25, February 26, March 10 or March 11. |
New Music
Part I: August Snow and Night Dance
A Family Trilogy
by Reynolds Price
directed by Preston Lane
February 12 – March 17, 2012
Come home.
August 1937. One year into their troubled marriage, Taw Avery gives her husband, Neal, an ultimatum – he must put his past behind him or she will leave him forever. With less than a day to decide, they each make a journey of self discovery to find the meaning of commitment and sacrifice. Their story continues at the end of World War II. The battle may be over, but the loss of lives and dreams continues in its wake. Neal and Taw must carry on, searching for a way to keep hope and love at the heart of their family.
"You haven't seen anything remotely like New Music anywhere this season... [It] breaks ground, celebrates a master of Southern literature and, perhaps even more important in the long run, redefines modern regional theatre."
–Lynn Jessup, CVNC
"Price's vigorous, vivid writing takes us on quite a journey and this production proves something I've known from long experience: The night skies aren't empty above small towns. Neither are the people who live in them. New Music provides a nuanced, vibrant reminder."
–Byron Woods, Indy Week
The New Music trilogy is presented in collaboration with Greensboro Public Library's "One City, One Author" program.
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*New Music, Part II: Better Days is presented as a special event and is not included in 2011-2012 Season Pass packages. However, Season Passholders have the exclusive opportunity to order advance Flex Tickets to Better Days at the reduced rate of $15 each with their Season Pass purchase or renewal.
On a snow drenched, blizzard cold Saturday afternoon in Chicago during a disappointing first year in college, I wandered into a bookstore and picked up a copy of a novel named Kate Vaiden. Several hours later, I stopped reading long enough to buy the book and head back to my dorm room. Winter snow and cruel wind was completely forgotten in the words that brought me right back home to North Carolina.
I will never forget the discovery of that book and its amazing writer, Reynolds Price. Although he was from the other side of my home state, I recognized something familiar in his stories and characters and I quickly began to devour more of his fiction, non-fiction and poems. Years later, I was delighted to discover his plays. As a young actor, I used a monologue from August Snow at auditions, and when I shifted my focus to directing, I eagerly anticipated the opportunity to direct the play.
My chance came here at Triad Stage in our second season. That production of the play was one of the dream productions where the entire company fit together, seamlessly celebrating in our collaboration. When Reynolds Price himself came to see the play (more than once) and proved to be as generous and as kind as any gentleman could ever be, I made the promise that we would stage the entire New Music trilogy.
I meant every word of that promise, but somehow I hadn’t got around to it. Budgets, season selections and time kept pushing back the idea of the trilogy. The sadness and loss on hearing of his passing last year was compounded by the regret that I would never be able to share a complete production of New Music with a writer who gave me so much pleasure in his words.
I am thrilled now to present all three plays as a tribute to a deeply gifted writer, a legendary teacher and a North Carolina native son. I welcome you to a world of family ties, desperate hopes and bitter losses in this intricately woven story of three decades in a particular place filled with such compelling people. The New Music trilogy is one of the most audacious pieces of American theater from the last 25 years and it deserves to be recognized as an American classic.
To return to the story of the Avery family is an honor and to share it with our audience is a celebration of Triad Stage’s core values to foster a Unique Southern Voice. Welcome home.






