En Garde Arts


En Garde Arts is a New York City-based theatre company with a focus on site-specific theatre. It was founded in 1985 by artistic director Anne Hamburger. Self-described as an artist-centric company, the company supports playwrights, directors, composers, and designers in creating new work from the ground up. En Garde's productions have earned six Obie Awards, two Drama Desk Awards, the Special Outer Critics Circle Award, and the Edwin Booth Award.

En Garde Arts in the 1980s and 1990s

From 1985 to 1999, Hamburger commissioned playwrights, directors and composers to create theatrical pieces for architectural sites and neighborhoods. The roster of En Garde's alumni artists includes playwrights Charles L. Mee, Mac Wellman, María Irene Fornés; composers David Van Tieghem, Jonathan Larson; directors Michael Engler, Tina Landau, Anne Bogart, Reza Abdoh, Jim Simpson and Bill Rauch; and actors Carl Hancock Rux, Fiona Shaw, Fisher Stevens, Tyne Daly and Jefferson Mays. Audiences followed their work to a variety of locations, including Central Park, the Meatpacking District, Penn Yards, East River Park, Pier 25, the Chelsea Hotel, the Victory Theater, and the intersection of Wall and Broad Streets in Lower Manhattan.
In 1989, En Garde produced a series of three plays at the Dairy, Belvedere Castle and Bow Bridge in Central Park. Obie Awards for Best New American Play and Best Director were given to Bad Penny playwright Mac Wellman and director Jim Simpson. The following year, Wellman's play Crowbar became the first legitimate theatrical production to be held in 42nd Street's Victory Theatre in 60 years. Crowbar was produced prior to 42nd Street's redevelopment, so a group of volunteers cleaned the interior to make way for Mac Wellman's new play. Directed by Richard Caliban with music by David Van Tieghem, Crowbar won Obie awards for En Garde Arts and actor Elżbieta Czyżewska, and was granted a special award by the Outer Critics Circle.
En Garde continued to produce work throughout the 1990s. Reza Abdoh and Mira-Lani Oglesby's work Father Was a Peculiar Man took place over nine distinct locations through the Meatpacking District. In an abandoned Victorian hospital on West 106th Street, Charles L. Mee's Another Person Is a Foreign Country confronted the social marginalization of unconventional people. Director Anne Bogart's cast included a blind choir with seeing-eye dogs, a group of emotionally disturbed rock musicians, and a man and woman, both 3’ tall, all staged against the Gothic, empty Towers Nursing Home.

In another piece, Hamburger used the New York Stock Exchange as a backdrop for JP Morgan Saves the Nation by composer Jonathan Larson.

Production history

YearProductionCredits
1985The Ritual Project writer Nancy Beckett, composer Kim Sherman, and sculptor Michael Berkowicz. Directed by Michael Engler, performed by Kate Fugeli as the Girl, and sung by three opera singers
1986Terminal Bar written by Paul Selig, directed by Michael Engler, starring Fisher Stevens
1987Naked Chambers written by Dick Beebe, starring Richard Gottlieb
19883 Pieces for a Warehouse by María Irene Fornés, Anna Cassio and Quincy Long
1989Plays in the Park. Krapp's Last Tape Plays including Bad Penny written by Mac Wellman and directed by Jim Simpson
Krapp's starring and directed by Paul Zimet of The Talking Band
1990Father Was a Peculiar Man directed by Reza Abdoh, co-written by Reza Abdoh & Mira-Lani Oglesby
1991Another Person Is a Foreign Country ''Occasional Grace Another Person written by Charles L. Mee, Jr., directed by Anne Bogart
Grace directed by Bill Rauch
1992Vanquished by Voodoo written and directed by Laurie Carlos, featuring Carl Hancock Rux and Viola Sheely
1993Orestes adapted by Charles L. Mee Jr., directed by Tina Landau, starring Jefferson Mays and Theresa McCarthy
1994Marathon Dancing Stonewall: Night Variations Marathon written by Laura Harrington, directed by Anne Bogart, music by Christopher Drobny, choreography by Alison Shafer
Stonewall directed by Tina Landau
1995J.P. Morgan Saves the Nation book and lyrics by Jeffrey M. Jones, music by Jonathan Larson, directed by Jean Randich, choreography by Doug Elkins
1996The Trojan Women: A Love Story The Waste Land Trojan Women written by Charles L. Mee Jr., directed by Tina Landau, starring Sharon Scruggs
Waste Land directed by Deborah Warner, starring Fiona Shaw
1997Sweet Thereisenstradt based on the diary of Willi Mahler, directed by Damien Gray
1998Mystery School Secret History of the Lower East Side Mystery School written by Paul Selig, directed by Doug Hughes, music and sound design by David Van Tieghem, starring Tyne Daly
Secret History written by Carlos Murillo, Alice Tuan and Peter Ullian, directed by Matthew Wilder
2014Basetrack Live created by Edward Bilous, co-adapted by Jason Grote & Seth Bockley & Anne Hamburger, Directed by Seth Bockley, Music Composed by Michelle DiBucci, Edward Bilous and Greg Kalember.
2016Wilderness Written by Seth Bockley & Anne Hamburger, Directed by Seth Bockley, Movement by Devon DeMayo & Patrick McCollum, Music by Kyle Miller & Towr's, Kyle Henderson & Desert, Noises and Gregory Alan Isakov, Video by Michael Tutaj, Sound by Mikhail Fiksel, Lighting by Scott Bolman.
2018Red Hills Written by Asiimwe Deborah Kawe and Sean Christopher Lewis, directed by Katie Pearl; with actors Christopher McLinden and Patrick J. Ssenjovu; composition and live music by Farai Malianga and singer Sifiso Mabena; set design by Adam Rigg; lighting design by Brian Aldous & Adam Macks; costume design by Angela M. Fludd; and dramaturgy by Morgan Jenness.
2020Fandango for Butterflies Written by Andrea Thome, directed by José Zayas, original music by Sinuhé Padilla; with actors Carlo Albán, Jen Anaya, Silvia Dionicio, Sinuhé Padilla, Andrés Quintero, Frances Ines Rodriguez, Roberto Tolentino, and Tania Mesa; scenic and projection design by Johnny Moreno; lighting design by Lucrecia Briceno; sound design by Marcelo Añez; costume design by Fabian Fidel Aguilar; and choreography by Alexandra Beller.
2021A Dozen Dreams conceived by Anne Hamburger, John Clinton Eisner and Irina Kruzhilina; written by Sam Chanse, Erika Dickerson-Despenza, Emily Mann, Martyna Majok, Mona Mansour, Rehana Mirza, Ellen McLaughlin, Liza Jessie Peterson, Ren Dara Santiago, Caridad Svich, Lucy Thurber, and Andrea Thome; visual and environment design by Irina Kruzhilina; sound design by Rena Anakwe, video/projection design by Brittany Bland, and lighting design by Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew. Downtown Live co-produced with The Tank and presented by the Downtown Alliance.
2022Downtown StoriesSidewalk Echoes by Rogelio Martinez, directed by Johanna McKeon, with actors Sheher Azaad, Lakpa T. Bhutia, Chris Crofton, Ashley Noel Jones, and Jacob Rodriguez. Lighting design by Chris Brown, costume design by Val Ramshur, sound design by UptownWorks, and creative consultation by John Clinton Eisner. Performed at John Street Methodist Church and 1 Battery Park Plaza from June 8 to 25.
Uncovering Downtown: A Magical Expedition of Unrecorded Dreams by Mona Monsour and Jessica Holt, directed by Holt. Performed by Michelle J. Rodriguez, costume design by Azalea Fairley, and sound design and engineering by Andrew Lynch. Performed around Bowling Green Park from June 8 to 25.
We the People written and performed by Eric Lockley, developed and directed by Morgan Green. Costume design by Azalea Fairley, and sound design and engineering by Andrew Lynch. Performed in Manhattan's financial district from June 8 to 30.
2023Helen'' by Caitlin George, directed by Violeta Picayo, presented by En Garde Arts, and La MaMa. A new work of the SuperGeographics, led by artistic director Jonathan T. Taylor. With actors Lanxing Fu, Constance Strickland, Grace Bernardo, Melissa Coleman-Reed, Jackie Rivera, Jonathan T. Taylor, and Jessica Frey. Lighting design by Jackie Fox and Connor Sale, set and costume design by James Schuette, sound design by Darron L West, dramaturgy and production by Megan E. Carter, production stage management by Caroline Englander, assistant stage management by Alison Greene, and production management and technical direction by Gabriela Gutierrez. Performed from October 13 to 29.

Awards

: Bad Penny 1990; Bad Penny 1990; En Garde Arts 1991; Orestes 1994; The Trojan Women 1997
Drama Desk Awards : The Waste Land 1997
Outer Critics Circle Awards : Crowbar 1989-90
Edwin Booth Award, 1995