MTSU Theatre students are challenging audiences to face their own beliefs about human connections when they present “Six Degrees of Separation,” the Tony Award-winning drama that’s as relevant in 2020 as its 1990 Broadway premiere.
Curtain times are 7:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, Feb. 20-22, and there’s a 2 p.m. matinee Sunday, Feb. 23, at MTSU’s Tucker Theatre.
Tickets, available now at www.mtsu.edu/theatreanddance, are $10 general admission and $5 for seniors 55 and older and K-12 students. MTSU students will be admitted free at the box office with a current ID.
Theatre professor Kyle Kennedy is directing this MTSU Arts production of playwright John Guare’s “based on a true story” play, which follows the trail of connections made and destroyed by a young man gifted in changing his persona to fit his audience.
“The man who sought true human connection and his own brand of fame did indeed find it, but not in the way he expected,” Kennedy says.
The young man, claiming he was the son of actor Sidney Poitier and a college friend of a wealthy couple’s children, ingratiated himself into New York society and charmed at least a dozen people, including celebrities, into giving him money, shelter and access to other potential victims.
Guare heard about the man from friends who’d been conned and wrote the play, turning it into an observation on how every human is linked to each other, no matter the physical or other perceived distance, through their mutual acquaintances, friends and family.
“I read somewhere that everybody on this planet is separated by only six other people. Six degrees of separation, between us and everybody else on this planet,” the character Ouisa Kittredge muses after the con is discovered.
“Six Degrees of Separation” won the Tony for best director and multiple Obie Awards in its initial theater run. Guare also was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and the 1993 film version, featuring actors Will Smith and Stockard Channing, earned Oscar and Golden Globe nominations.
MTSU junior Caleb Mitchell of Nashville portrays Paul, the charming con man. First seen at MTSU as the lead in 2018’s “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” and most recently in last fall’s “Kiss Me, Kate,” Mitchell won the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival’s Region IV Music Theatre Initiative Competition earlier this month and will represent MTSU at the national festival in Washington, D.C., in April.
Alexa Pulley, a senior from Cunningham, Tennessee, who was part of last fall’s MTSU production of “Everybody,” is the trusting Ouisa in “Six Degrees.” Nate Bumpus, a senior from Cumberland Furnace, Tennessee, who was part of last fall’s “Noises Off!” cast, is her husband, Flan.
A complete list of the “Six Degrees” cast and crew is included in the show program, available here.
Tickets also will be available at the Tucker Theatre box office one hour before curtain times. For more information about the show and tickets, visit www.mtsu.edu/theatreanddance.
— Gina E. Fann (gina.fann@mtsu.edu)