![]() I wasn't that good, but every kid's got that dream." "I thought I was going to be a major league baseball star. "I went to college to play baseball," he told us. Long before Captain Chontosh put on a marine uniform, he had dreams of wearing a different uniform entirely. "He's always been fearless," said his mother. His mother, Robin Chontosh, says she sensed her son's courage early on. Six feet tall and two hundred pounds, with chiseled facial features, the Rochester, New York, native is no stranger to peril. Chontosh, thirty-one, served as leader of his Combined Anti-Armor Team platoon (CAAT) for Third Battalion, Fifth Marine Regiment, First Marine Division, First Marine Expeditionary Force. That was certainly the case March 25, 2003, when then-Lieutenant Brian R. But above all, they would learn that in war, just as in life, sometimes the only way through danger is to "push forward." They would find themselves closer to death than at any other time in their lives, forcing them to puttheir fate into each others' hands. They would be outnumbered almost thirty to one. Like the swipe of a match across the strike plate, the marine captain's words ignited actions that would forever change the lives of five men. "Push forward!" Captain Brian Chontosh yelled. It took us two hundred years to get it halfway right. All the challenges and everything-they're not going to be perfect in a day. We're watching what America looked like right from the get-go that we weren't around to see over two hundred years ago. Marine Sergeant Robert Kerman SILVER STAR For $35-$40 ticket information, call (212) 831-2000.Marine Corporal Armand McCormick SILVER STAR He was Freddy in My Fair Lady with Richard Chamberlin, and was Prior Walter in the national tour of Angels in America. Sella originated the role of Clifford off Broadway and on in Side Man, and played the Emcee in the new Cabaret revival. Producer Hy Juter is raising money to transfer Jazz Singer to a commercial Off-Broadway run in 2000. He recently directed and wrote the book for the JRT hit musical, The Jazz Singer, in October and November. Sabellico was Arthur Laurents' assistant director on the Tyne Daly Gypsy. His recent play, Jolson Sings Again, is said to be a possibility for New York City in 2000.Īlthough Home of the Brave appears in anthologies of the best work of the 1940s, it never received a major New York revival, despite its availability.ĭirector Sabellico staged the national tour of State Fair starring John Davidson and was responsible for the direction, book and choreography of the hit Off-Broadway revival of the Marx Brothers musical, The Cocoanuts, which played at the American Place Theatre for over a year. The George Street Playhouse in New Jersey recently revived Do I Hear a Waltz? (the Stephen Sondheim Richard Rodgers tuner based on Laurents' The Time of the Cuckoo) and Lincoln Center Theatre has Cuckoo on its slate for spring 2000. In the 1999-2000 season, Laurents, 81, is seeing revivals of three of his works in the New York City area. Other plays include Heart-Song, A Clearing in the Woods, The Enclave and Invitation to a March. The writer would go on to musical theatre legend as librettist for West Side Story and Gypsy, among other shows, and as a director ( La Cage aux Folles) and screenwriter ("The Way We Were," "The Turning Point"). The drama, which may have been too dark and jarring for an audience that wanted to heal the wounds of war, was Laurents' first play. There is a hope Home of the Brave might extend and finally find its wider audience, Sabellico told Playbill On-Line. Designers for the JRT staging are Richard Ellis (set), Gail Boldoni (costumes), Richard Latta (lighting) and Josh Bender Dubiel (sound). The decade also saw the anti-Semitism-themed film, "Gentleman's Agreement" (1947). A 1949 film version concerned a black soldier facing racism in the ranks. It was cited in Burns Mantle's The Best Plays volume that year. The ground-breaking play cast a light on anti-Semitism in American life, but failed to find a wide audience in its original production at Broadway's Belasco Theatre. The playwright has reconsidered some lines in the script, about camaraderie, betrayal and anti-Semitism in a World War II military unit in the South Pacific. Chalfy, Deklin, Kunken and Wilson play the solider's wartime comrades. In the play, a psychiatrist (Talbott) attempts to unlock the secret to why a physically unharmed Jewish soldier (Sella) cannot walk following a harrowing mission. The ensemble cast includes Dylan Chalfy, Mark Deklin, Stephen Kunken, Jeff Talbott and C.J. 26, is directed by Richard Sabellico and has Laurents himself as creative consultant. ![]() ![]() The Jewish Repertory Theatre production, which began previews Dec. Robert Sella, late of Cabaret and Side Man, will play the anguished, wounded Jewish soldier, Coney, in the first New York City revival of Arthur Laurents' 1945 drama, Home of the Brave, opening Dec. ![]()
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