'Newsroom's' Alison Pill to star in 'Wait Until Dark' at the Geffen - Los Angeles Times
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‘Newsroom’s’ Alison Pill to star in ‘Wait Until Dark’ at the Geffen

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<i>A correction has been added to this post, as indicated below.</i>

Alison Pill is finding herself in the dark these days -- for play rehearsals, anyway.

Pill, who plays eager TV news staffer Maggie Jordan on HBO’s “The Newsroom,†is to star in a new adaptation of Frederick Knott’s thriller “Wait Until Dark†opening at the Geffen Playhouse next month.

Pill will be filling the role made famous by Audrey Hepburn as a blind woman being manipulated by con men in Greenwich Village. The final scene immerses the audience in the perspective of Pill’s character -- it’s staged entirely in the dark.

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Matt Shakman, founder and artistic director of L.A.’s Black Dahlia Theatre, is directing the production, which will be set in the mid-1940s -- as opposed to the 1960s, the time period the original was set against.

“I love a good thriller and remember seeing ‘Wait Until Dark’ at my hometown community theatre when I was 5 or 6,†Shakman said in a statement. “It scared me to death but I loved its pressure-cooker environment, the slow build of the con game, and Susan’s great reversal from ultimate victim to ultimate survivor.â€

Brighid Fleming, Rod McLachlan, Matt McTighe, Adam Stein and Mather Zickel also are appearing in Jeffrey Hatcher’s adaptation.

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Pill, whose film appearances include “Midnight in Paris†and “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,†has worked on the stage in New York and was nominated for a Tony Award for 2006’s “The Lieutenant of Inishmore.†Her other Broadway credits include “The House of Blue Leaves,†“The Miracle Worker†and Mauritus.â€

The original version of the play, directed by Arthur Penn, opened on Broadway in February 1966 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre. The film version opened a year later, directed by Terence Young and starring Hepburn. She was nominated for an Academy Award for the role.

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Opening night is planned for Oct. 16 in the Gil Cates Theater at the Geffen. Previews begin Oct. 8.

[For the record, 6:45 p.m., Sept. 10: A previous version of this post misspelled Audrey Hepburn’s last name as Heburn.]

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Twitter.com: @debvankin

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