GINGOLD THEATRICAL GROUP
presents
BERNARD SHAW’S
PYGMALION
Starring
CARSON ELROD, MARK EVANS, SYNNØVE KARLSEN,
TERESA AVIA LIM, LIZAN MITCHELL, MATT WOLPE
Design Team
Scenic Design • Lindsay G. Fuori
Costume Design • Tracy Christensen
Lighting Design • Jamie Roderick
Sound Design • Julian Evans
Property Design • Seth Tyler Black
Production Team
Casting • Geoff Josselson, CSA
Marketing • Kevin Sprague / Studio Two
Graphic Design • Maya Barbon
Press Representative • Emily McGill Entertainment
Production Stage Manager • Tyler Danhaus
Assistant Stage Manager • Tala Munsterman
Production Management • Aurora Productions
GTG Managing Producer • Isaiah Josiah
Directed and Adapted by
David Staller
Lead support for Pygmalion is provided by Pamela Singleton and the Weinberg Family Foundation.
CAST
CAST
CARSON ELROD … COLONEL HUGH PICKERING
MARK EVANS … HENRY HIGGIN
SYNNØVE KARLSEN … ELIZA DOOLITTLE
TERESA AVIA LIM … CLARA EYNSFORD-HILL
LIZAN MITCHELL … MRS. HIGGINS & MRS PEARCE
MATT WOLPE … FREDDY EYNSFORD HILL & ALFRED DOOLITTLE
WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST
WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST
CARSON ELROD (Colonel Hugh Pickering) Broadway: Peter and The Starcatcher, Reckless, Noises Off. Metropolitan Opera: The Merry Widow. Off-Broadway: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night, Seize The King (Classical Theatre of Harlem), The Alchemist (Red Bull), The Tempest, Measure for Measure, All’s Well That Ends Well (The PUBLIC: NYSF), The Liar, The Heir Apparent (Classic Stage Company). Important Hats of the 20th Century, The Explorer’s Club, Based On A Totally True Story, House, Garden, Comic Potential (Manhattan Theatre Club), Lives of The Saints, All in the Timing (Primary Stages), Cavedweller (New York Theatre Workshop). TV: EVIL, The Good Fight, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, The Medium, 30 Rock. Film: Wedding Crashers, Kissing Jessica Stein. MFA NYU Grad Acting. Executive Director of Arts Workers United
MARK EVANS (Henry Higgins)
BROADWAY: Tammy Faye, Mrs Doubtfire, Waitress, The Play That Goes Wrong, The Book Of Mormon (1st. Nat.) WEST END: Ghost, Wicked, Oklahoma!, Spamalot, Rocky Horror, 7 Brides…, High School Musical. OFF-BROADWAY: Titanique (Daryl Roth Theatre) I Married An Angel & Me And My Girl (Encores!), Finian’s Rainbow (Irish Rep). TV/FILM: The Night Agent, Instinct, The Tower of Silence, Lake Placid 3, Dead Hungry. DIRECTING: Associate Director of The Play That Goes Wrong Off-Broadway. Founder & Director of Mark Evans Studio IG: @markevansstudio @markevansactor
SYNNØVE KARLSEN (Eliza Doolittle) TV credits include: Clique seasons 1 and 2 (BBC), Medici seasons 2 and 3 (Netflix), The Midwich Cuckoos (Sky), Bodies (Netflix), Passenger (ITV/ Britbox), Miss Austen (BBC), Foundation season 3 (Apple TV +). Film credits include: Last Night in Soho (Universal Pictures/Focus Features: Directed by Edgar Wright), Black Cab (Sony: Directed by Bruce Goodison). Theatre credits include: The House Party (Chichester Festival Theatre, directed by Holly Race-Roughan) Synnøve trained at LAMDA and Guildhall School of Music and Drama.
TERESA AVIA LIM (Clara Eynsford-Hill) Broadway: Eureka Day(MTC), JUNK (Lincoln Center).
Other: Shakespeare in the Park’s all female production of Taming of the Shrew, Awake and Sing, Macbeth, and Call and Response (Public Theater). Teresa originated her roles in Galilee 34, Peerless, Water by the Spoonful, Edith Can Shoot Things and Hit Them, and Concerning Strange Devices From the Distant West. TV: “Bupkis” (Peacock); “Monsterland” (Hulu); “Ray Donovan” (Showtime); “The Code,” “Blue Bloods,” “Limitless,” “Unforgettable” (CBS); “Group”; “Law & Order: Criminal Intent” (NBC). Film: All Rise. Training: Yale School Of Drama.
LIZAN MITCHELL (Mrs. Higgins & Mrs Pearce) has performed on stage on Broadway, Off Broadway, in regional theaters throughout the US, and overseas in Great Britain and South Africa. Her film credits include episodic television and movies. She has received the Obie award, Helen Hayes award, The Living Legend award from The International Black Theater Festival, and the Audelco Lifetime Achievement award. She is a member of The Quick Silver Theater Company.
MATT WOLPE (Freddy Eynsford Hill & Alfred Doolittle) Broadway/Off B’Way/Tours: Rock of Ages, Finding Neverland, Once, A Wonderful World, Beau. TV: We Crashed, SNL, Every Other Wednesday. Regional: Ogunquit, Weston, La Mirada, Sacramento Music Circus, Laguna, Kirk Douglas, Cape Playhouse, Gulfshore, Ensemble Santa Barbara. Wolpe is also an award winning songwriter and multi instrumentalist with 6 records out, including 2 with his band The Bedside Romeos. Love to Leah, Susie, Lenny, The Reads, Miss Trudy and BRS/Gage. Thanks to David and the entire Gingold team. MattWolpe.com @MattWolpe
PYGMALION by Bernard Shaw, 1912.
Some thoughts from director, David Staller.
PYGMALION by Bernard Shaw, 1912.
Some thoughts from director, David Staller.
By Deb Miller
October 21, 2025
Read the original article on DC Theater Arts here.
As the Founding Artistic Director of NYC’s Gingold Theatrical Group, named for British actress Hermione Gingold (his godmother) and created in 2006 to champion human rights and free speech using the work and humanitarian precepts of Irish playwright (George) Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), David Staller is the first person to have directed all 65 of Shaw’s plays, including his last unfinished work, Why She Would Not, for GTG, with the company’s full Off-Broadway productions of eleven of Shaw’s plays filmed by The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center. Staller also oversees the monthly series Project Shaw, now in its 20th year, at Symphony Space and New York’s legendary club The Players.
David Staller. Photo by David Staller.
Creating Gingold Theatrical Groups was not designed as a career move for Staller; as he put it, although he had never heard of himself, he was never out of work as an actor, director, or writer. He was, in fact, starring in a New York production of Shaw’s Mrs. Warren’s Profession opposite Dana Ivey when he and some friends decided to create an activist theatrical organization to “promote peaceful discussion and activism” with the work of GBS as their guide. He has also created academic partnerships with several NY schools, including the Barnard, Columbia, Marymount, The New School, Regis High School, the Broome Street Academy, and SUNY Stony Brook, in addition to GTG’s new play development program Speakers’ Corner, and has personally spent years researching all of Shaw’s published versions of plays and has adapted all of Shaw’s works, often using the playwright’s original hand-written manuscripts, letters, production scripts, notes, and in-person interviews with many of those who knew and worked with him, including Maurice Evans, Robert Morely, Wendy Hiller, Rex Harrison, and Deborah Kerr.
GTG’s latest production, directed by Staller, is Shaw’s most famous play of 1914, Pygmalion, a rollicking comedy set in pre-WWI London that lampoons the rigid British class system of the day with themes of identity, power, transformation, and women’s independence, which inspired Shaw’s 1938 Oscar-winning film adaptation and the 1956 Tony-winning musical My Fair Lady. During a busy week of rehearsals, David made time to answer my questions about the playwright, the show, and his production’s unique design.
How did you come to specialize in the work of Shaw?
George Bernard Shaw
David: Exploring the landscape of George Bernard Shaw’s contributions to society has unexpectedly become a sort of life’s work for me. My introduction to Shaw came from my godmother, the acclaimed if eccentric British actress Hermione Gingold, who had revered and even known Shaw. By the time I was ten, we were engaging in a robust correspondence in which she patiently responded to the usual questions children might ask until she finally wrote, “Darling, I love you but you have got to start asking more compelling questions.” This letter was accompanied by a copy of Shaw’s monumental Man and Superman. “Just read it,” she wrote, “Take your time and let me know where it takes you.” I still recall the joy of discovering how accessible and funny the play was, and how it triggered an endless number of new ideas. It was the beginning of my understanding of Shaw’s bold humanitarian precepts, the notion that challenging everything was not only acceptable but was a step toward forging our own unique opinions and points of view. I continued these Shavian exploration by reading all of Shaw’s works, which helped to broaden and deepen my exposure to Shaw’s core principles and ideas.

George Bernard Shaw
Central to my basic interest was by learning of Shaw’s early struggles in Dublin, as a troubled and lonely child who never finished school, and that Shaw determined never to allow anyone to diminish him. Shaw’s journey inspired me to face my teen years with an empowering confidence I might otherwise have lacked. By the 1970s, while still a questing teenager, Hermione and I were both living in New York City. Her Manhattan sitting room became a Sunday salon of actors and playwrights who gathered to discuss their fascination with Shaw’s plays and, even more compellingly, Shaw’s overt socio-political activism. Many had actually known and loved the man, sharing Shaw’s deeply rooted commitment to social welfare. At these Sunday afternoon gatherings, the group would allow me to choose a play, from which they’d claim roles to read aloud, and always featured in-depth discussions of the characters and their journey, even stopping in the midst of the readings with animated comments, questions, and observations. Though these little parties generally began at teatime, they’d often careen into cocktail hour with unexpected and robust approaches to performing the plays.
The first play I chose, to general delight, was Pygmalion. Hermione’s agent, the legendary Milton Goldman, called with the lighthearted report that many of his clients were interested in joining the party and he promised to send them over to lend a hand. On the appointed day as the clock tolled three, the doorbell rang and in walked Anita Loos, Lillian Gish, Helen Hayes, Garson Kanin, Ruth Gordon, Marian Seldes, Maureen Stapleton, and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Just as the roles were being claimed, Laurence Olivier and Joan Plowright waltzed in and gleefully announced that they would take the roles of Higgins and Eliza. Midway through, once the cocktails had arrived and glasses had been sufficiently refilled, the cast decided to enliven the proceedings by reversing their roles to spectacular effect – for example, Olivier as Eliza and Plowright as Higgins. This started a tradition of non-traditional casting in the group. Other readings lured many other luminaries, including Louise Rainer, George Rose, Rex Harrison, Wendy Hiller, Denholm Elliott, Robert Helpmann, Roddy McDowall, Claudette Colbert, Elaine Stritch, and even Myrna Loy. The greatest gift of this, for me, was the lesson provided that there was no right or wrong, no one way to approach any artist’s work, and that Shaw’s plays were a living organism open to any artist’s interpretation. To blow the dust off traditionally Victorian staging of these plays with fresh approaches became one of my greatest joys while working with them. Though I was already a professional in the theater, having danced in the apprentice company of the Joffrey Ballet Company, studied cello with Rostropovich, and performed on Broadway, I had always assumed I’d one day be a part of running an arts organization, guided by Shaw’s belief that artists have a responsibility beyond themselves, that serving the community was part of the gift they were given.
David Staller. Photo by Genevieve Rafter Keddy.
What are the main differences between My Fair Lady and Shaw’s original Pygmalion?
People seem to love to compare these two works, which stand wonderfully on their own independent terms. It helps to remember that the brilliantly crafted musical My Fair Lady is based on Shaw’s Oscar-winning 1938 screenplay for the film and not his play. The musical meticulously follows the film’s structure. Journalists are quick to point out and scoff at the ending of the musical, in which Eliza returns to Higgins for a less ambiguous final fade-out. This is, in fact, one of the three versions of the ending written by Shaw. It wasn’t his first choice, but he didn’t have final say in the film’s creation. All that considered, the most powerful difference between the two are the portrayals of the two major characters. As usually played in the musical, Higgins is a harsh, aloof, judgmental, unkind man of advanced years. As Shaw imagined him, Higgins is a quirky and eccentric 40, deeply passionate and excited about his work. He has, however, used this obsession to hide from him emotional life, being afraid of having to deal with people, women in particular. He’s like a little boy with a tremendously fertile and imaginative brain but has limited social skills. He gives Eliza the tools to become the person she longs to be through education; Eliza teaches Higgins to connect to his own humanity and heart.
Eliza, as Shaw wrote her, is never a victim and very clearly is not looking for “someone’s head restin’ on my knee,” as sung in “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly.” She is no more than 20 and driven to rise in the world that has been closed to her given her socio-political circumstances. She desperately needs the tools to accomplish her dream of becoming “a lady in a flower shop.” She’s not looking for companionship and has absolutely no interest in dancing all night. She strives for the ability to create a life in which she can exist as a self-sustaining independent woman in a determinedly male-dominated society.
Using the title of the play, Pygmalion, as my guide in researching this work, I discovered that Shaw saw the Higgins journey as far more profound than Eliza’s. When we meet Eliza, she is already a fully formed, intensely bright and aware woman. All she needs are the tools of education to proceed. The Pygmalion myth introduces a brilliant sculptor in ancient Greece; afraid of life and connecting with anyone, he pours all of his passions into his work, finally sculpting the “perfect companion” in marble. Praying to the gods to bring her to life, they decided to have fun with him; they granted his wish, realizing that she would have her own will, her own thoughts, her own needs. This, they rightfully assumed, would force him back into the world.
Will your production be set in its original locale and will the cast be assuming English accents?
As Shaw’s Pygmalion is firmly set in London’s pre-WWI world, I’ve always felt the play resonates with its greatest impact by honoring that intent. So, yes, we’ll be telling Shaw’s story set in London, 1912, using all appropriate accents as he dictated.
Al Hirschfeld and David Staller. Photo courtesy of David Staller.
Can you tell us a little about the set design and how you decided on it?
The brilliant artist, Al Hirschfeld, was a lifelong pal of mine. Our shared passion was George Bernard Shaw. Al relished Shaw’s work and activist humanitarianism, drawing images of Shaw throughout the many years. It was Al’s notion of one day designing a production of Pygmalion that haunted me over the years. So, when we decided to celebrate Gingold Theatrical Group’s 20th anniversary by presenting this play, the idea of celebrating Shaw through Al’s work became a joyous possibility. As a result, our scenic designer Lindsay Genevieve Fuori has created a set as if drawn by Al. So, we have the honor of partnering with the Al Hirschfeld Foundation, courtesy of their Creative Director David Leopold, to use Al’s work in the production and our key art! It’s a loving tribute to both Hirschfeld and Shaw.
What do you hope people take away from the show?
Shaw wrote this play as a form of self-analysis. As a poor uneducated kid in Dublin who was completely disenfranchised and unwanted, with a speech impediment, he escaped his dreary life at 19, to arrive in London to create a new world for himself. He was, in fact, like his Eliza Doolittle; he desperately needed a mentor, a Henry Higgins. Not finding one, he became his own Higgins. He self-educated, studied everything possible, and created a persona as a protection to feel more confident. He called his persona G.B.S., and eventually the man and the persona became one. This duality explains a great deal about who he was and how he created his works. It’s generally assumed he wrote the play for his beloved actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell, which is not the case. He was an incredibly clever businessman and wisely pursued her, as she was a great star on the London stage at the time. Once she accepted the role, he continued to adapt the play around her and it became a great success. But he created the play as a gift to us, as a reminder not to shut ourselves off from life, to keep our heart open and never to hide, either from the world or from ourselves.
Thank you, David, for giving our readers a sneak peek at Pygmalion. I look forward to seeing it at Theatre Row!
Pygmalion plays October 22-November 22, 2025, at Gingold Theatrical Group, performing at Theatre Row, Theatre 5, 410 W 42nd Street, NYC. For tickets (priced at $36.50-92.50, including fees), go online.
GEORGE BERNARD SHAW 26 July 1856–2 November 1950 (Playwright). A free-thinking humanist, Shaw fought tirelessly for the rights of women, men, gays, children and even for animal rights. He was awarded both a Nobel Prize for his contribution to literature and an Oscar for his Pygmalion screenplay. He encouraged all people to forge individual paths in life, taking responsibility for their own choices. His humanitarian precepts are the key to what inspired the creation of Gingold Theatrical Group. “I rejoice in life for its own sake. Life is no ‘brief candle’ to me. It is a sort of splendid torch, which I have got hold of for the moment; and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible.” (Please click this link for more information on our website.)
DAVID STALLER (Director, Script Adaptation, GTG Artistic Director) is the founding artistic director of Gingold Theatrical Group, now in its 19th year. He directed the Off-Broadway productions of The Devil’s Disciple, Arms and the Man, Candida, Mrs. Warren’s Profession, Caesar & Cleopatra, Heartbreak House, Man and Superman, Major Barbara, You Never Can Tell and Widowers’ Houses. He oversees all of GTG’s programs, has produced and directed many plays and special events around the world and is frequently invited upon the international stage as a speaker about equal human rights and all things Shaw. Member: SDC, AEA, SAG/AFTRA.
LINDSAY GENEVIEVE FUORI (Scenic Design) is a Brooklyn based Scenic Designer. Some of her favorite collaborations include productions with Gingold Theatrical Group, Commonwealth Shakespeare Company, Creede Repertory Theatre, Gloucester Stage Company, and Florida Grand Opera. Lindsay was nominated for an AUDELCO Award for her work on Candida (Gingold Theatrical 2022) and an Elliot Norton Award for her work on Parade (Moonbox Productions 2019). She received a Henry Award from the Colorado Theatre Guild for her work on Hazardous Materials (CRT 2019). Many thanks to David and the Gingold team! Lindsayfuori.com
Tracy Christensen (Costume Designer) Collaborations with David Staller: Pearl Theatre’s Major Barbara (2014) and GTG’s Caesar and Cleopatra (2019), Arms and the Man (2023), and The Devil’s Disciple (2024) Credits include: Broadway revival Sunset Boulevard starring Glenn Close, High Society (Ogunquit Playhouse), Love Life (Encores), The Jonathan Larson Project (Orpheum), the premiere of Beaches, the Musical (Theatre Calgary), Ragtime 25th reunion concert, Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill (HBO film with Audra McDonald), Souvenir (Broadway), Sweeney Todd starring Emma Thompson, Scotland, PA (Roundabout), and the New York premiere of Kate Hamill’s Pride & Prejudice. Faculty: Purchase College SUNY.
JAMIE RODERICK (Lighting Design) Off-Broadway: Stalker, Empire, Make Me Gorgeous, Small, ¡Americano!, Disney’s Winnie The Pooh, Emjiland, Stranger Sings, Midnight at the Never Get (Drama Desk Nomination), Arms and The Man, Candida, Mrs. Warren’s Profession, Caesar & Cleopatra, Safeword., Accidentally Brave, We Are The Tigers, Red Roses, Green Gold, The Woodsman, Afterglow, A Dog Story. London: Afterglow, It Happened in Key West. Regional: Super You, Denis DeYoung’s Hunchback Of Notre Dame, The Bikinis!, Romeo & Juliet, Twelfth Night, Midsummer, Macbeth, Hamlet. JamieRoderick.com
Julian Evans (Sound Design) A proud member of USA829 and IATSE Local 700 (Motion Picture Editors Guild), Julian oscillates between theatrical and cinematic mediums, bringing cinematic language to the stage, and theatrical stylings to the screen. Off-Broadway: The Devil’s Disciple (Gingold); Desperate Measures (New World Stages), Forbidden Broadway (The York), Tick, Tick…BOOM! (Keen Company); Nutcracker Rouge; Cocktail Magique (Company XIV); The Artificial Jungle (TBTB). Original Cast Album (producer): Welcome to the Big Dipper. Regional: The End of War [2017 RTCC Winner: Outstanding Sound Design] (Virginia Repertory Theatre). Cruise: Scarlet Night (Virgin Voyages). BA: Carnegie Mellon. www.julianevans.info @SpliceSoundNYC “With great responsibility comes great inconvenience.”
Seth Tyler Black (Props Design) is a Brooklyn based interdisciplinary artist & designer, with roots in Buffalo & Philadelphia. Designing & prop mastering for theatre and film since 2011, Black always puts art and storytelling at the forefront. A few of Black’s credits include Nightmare Alley, A Quiet Place 2, and Gabriel’s Inferno in film, along with productions of Faust, The Price, In the Heights, Angels in America, Camelot, and others, along with devised pieces with other artists such as Amy Taravella and Gerry Trentham.
Juanita Santafe Sabogal (Stunt Coordinator) is a Colombian actor, dancer, and fight coordinator based in New York City. She holds a degree in Performing Arts from Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá, trained at HB Studio’s Hagen Institute, and trains with Sordelet Inc. in stunt coordination and stage combat. Her work explores physical storytelling, movement, and expressive performance.
Tyler Danhaus (Production Stage Manager) Off Broadway: CATS: The Jellicle Ball; Pretty Perfect Lives; Fish; Russian Troll Farm; Scene Partners; This Land Was Made. Other NYC: AZAD (the rabbit and the wolf); The Cause; KIN; Smart Blonde; The Imbible; Titanique; Gun & Powder; Fish In A Tree; Women on Fire; You, Me, I, We. Regionally: Weston Theater Company, Lyric Rep, Hangar Theatre Company, Geva Theatre, The Rose Theater, and Chester Theatre Company. BFA: UW-Milwaukee. @tydanhaus
Tala Munsterman (Assistant Stage Manager) They/Them is an AEA Stage Manager currently based in NYC with 13+ years of experience from coast to coast. Their recent credits include; Off Broadway: Celino V. Barnes and A Guide For The Homesick. NYC Select Works: Desires of the Astronaut, The Red Rose, Torched!, Aloha Boricua, Harlem Hellfighters On A Latin Beat (Pregones/PRTT), The Golden Cage New works Premier Festival, And Into The Woods New York Film Academy. Regional: Matilda The Musical, Mama Mia, Sweeny Todd, Legally Blonde, Annie, and The Little Mermaid with The Fort Wayne Civic Theater (Indiana). Company, Ordinary People, and Building On Sand with Good Luck Macbeth Theater (Nevada).
GEOFF JOSSELSON, CSA (Casting Director). Broadway credits include: Into the Woods (Artios Award), Sweeney Todd, Spamalot, The Velocity of Autumn. Off-Broadway includes: Kinky Boots, Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors, Altar Boyz, Southern Comfort, Yank! Select Regional and Off-Broadway Theatre companies: Alley Theatre, Arena Stage, Baltimore Center Stage, The Civilians, The Irish Repertory Theatre, Kennedy Center, Long Wharf Theatre, Old Globe, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Paper Mill Playhouse, Pasadena Playhouse, Pittsburgh CLO, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Signature Theatre, Studio Theatre, Village Theatre, Woolly Mammoth Theatre, and the York Theatre Company.
Aurora Productions (Production Management): Art; Back To The Future (Tour); Beetlejuice; The Book of Mormon; Frozen (Germany, Korea); Little Bear Ridge Road; Operation Mincemeat; Powerhouse: International; The Play That Goes Wrong. Aurora has been providing technical supervision and production management to the entertainment industry since 1989.
Emily McGill (Press Rep) is a spiritual psychologist and multi-disciplinary artist, with an M.A from Columbia University’s Spirituality Mind Body Institute. Called “persuasive” by The New York Times, her first tarot deck, The Hirschfeld Broadway Tarot, is available from Running Press. She sits on the Al Hirschfeld Foundation board and has credits on 20 Broadway shows, including as a co-producer for Othello with Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal, and as press rep for Tony Award winners A Raisin in the Sun, Memphis, Billy Elliot, and Disney's The Lion King, among many others. For more, visit IvyLeagueWitch.com. IG: @emilyannemcg ačiū ačiū
Isaiah Josiah (Managing Producer, Gingold Theatrical Group) is thrilled to bring Pygmalion back to New York, his second production with Gingold following The Devil’s Disciple (2025 Drama Desk Nomination, Best Adaptation). He has worked on Broadway productions including Into the Woods (2022 Revival), Is This a Room, Dana H., and Pass Over, and supported operations on Hadestown, Moulin Rouge!, and Funny Girl (2022 Revival). Off-Broadway, he has contributed to productions and readings of Shaw, Wilde, and Coward across NYC. Isaiah has also brought live broadcasts, special events, and fundraisers to life with Lincoln Center, The American Theater Wing, and The Broadway League. He loves helping stories come to life—and making sure the people telling them have everything they need to shine.
Gingold Theatrical Group now in its 20th year, creates theater that supports human rights, freedom of speech, and individual liberty using the work of George Bernard Shaw as our guide. Through full productions, staged readings, new play development, and educational programs, GTG brings Shaw’s humanist ideals to inspire peaceful discussion and activism. GTG’s past productions include Man and Superman (2012), You Never Can Tell (2013), Major Barbara (2014), Widowers’ Houses (2016), Heartbreak House (2018), Caesar & Cleopatra (2019), Candida (2022), Arms and the Man (2023), and The Devil’s Disciple (2024). Founded in 2006 by David Staller, GTG has carved a permanent niche for the work of George Bernard Shaw within the social and cultural life of New York City, and, through the Project Shaw reading series, made history in 2009 as the first company ever to present performances of every one of Shaw's 65 plays (including full-length works, one-acts and sketches). GTG brings together performers, critics, students, academics and the general public with the opportunity to explore and perform theatrical work inspired by the humanitarian and activist values that Shaw championed. All comedies, these plays boldly exhibit the insight, wit, passion and all-encompassing socio-political focus that distinguished Shaw as one of the most inventive and incisive writers of all time.
OPENING NIGHT: NOVEMBER 2, 2025
STAFF FOR PYGMAILION
Artistic Director
David Staller
Managing Producer
Isaiah Josiah
MARKETING
STUDIO TWO
Kevin Sprague
CASTING
Geoff Josselson, CSA
HOUSE MANAGERS
Joe Grisanzio, Kate Schwartz
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Arts FMS
Production Stage Manager: Tyler Danhaus
Assistant Stage Manager: Tala Munsterman
Assistant Costume Designer: April Hahn
Wardrobe Supervisor: Dan Bass
Accountant: Mary Sormeley
Legal: Ethan Litwin, Shinder Cantor Lerner LLC
Rehersal Studio: A.R.T/NY
Production Photography: Carol Rosegg
Videographer: Maya Barbon
House Manager: Joe Grisanzio
ARTISTIC COUNCIL
Lynn Aherns, Reed Birney, Brenda Braxton, Blair Brown, Charles Busch, Michael Cerveris, M. Graham Coleman, Tracy Christensen, Machine Dazzle, Colman Domingo, George Dvorsky, Stephen Flaherty, Santino Fontana, Alison Fraser, Jayne Houdyshell, Katharine Houghton, Nikki M. James, Daniel Jenkins, Christine Toy Johnson, Simon Jones, Anne Keefe, Charlotte Moore, John-Andrew Morrison, Kate Mulgrew, Christine Pedi, Mary Beth Peil, Tonya Pinkins, Martha Plimpton, Maryann Plunkett, Harold Prince (in memoriam), Daphne Rubin-Vega, Jay O. Sanders, Stephen Schwartz, Thom Sesma, Stephen J. Sondheim (in memoriam), Sharon Washington, Karen Ziemba
GTG BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Pamela Singleton, Chair
Richard G. Weinberg, Vice Chair
Richard Terrano, Treasurer
Fareeda Ahmed, Secretary
Maggie Buchwald
James A. Fenniman
Mary Henninger
Ethan E. Litwin
Kathleen Masterson
David Revere McFadden
David Staller
GTG ADVISORY BOARD
Barrett Brown-Fried, Stephen Brown-Fried, Danny Burstein, Tyne Daly, Andrew M. Flescher, Andrew Hamingson, Lisa Rimelli Litwin, Brian Saltzman, Frank Skillern, Fran Smyth, Marylee Martin Terrano, Tom Viola
SPECIAL THANKS
A.R.T./NY, Eric Colton and the team at artsFMS, Buchwald Family Foundation, Department of Cultural Affairs in NYHerman Goldman Foundation, Marta Heflin Foundation, Golden Globe Foundation, Sir Michael Holroyd, Ethan E. Litwin, National Endowment for the Arts, The New York State Council of the arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul & the NY State Legislature, Dr. Brian Saltzman, The Shubert Foundation, Mary Pamela Singleton, Mary & Frank Skillern, Ted Snowdon, Michael Tuck Foundation, Weinberg Family Foundation, Material for the Arts and all of our many invaluable volunteers.
VISIT gingoldgroup.org online
This production would not be possible without the gift from the Merle Debusky Foundation.
The Actors and Stage Managers employed in this production are members of the Actors’ equity association, the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States.
United Scenic Artists Local USA 829
of the I.A.T.S.E represents
The Designers & Scenic Artists
For the American Theatre