It’s not every day that a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright comes to Harper College,
but Beth Henley will be in the audience when the Harper Ensemble Theatre Company presents
her award-winning play, Crimes of the Heart.
Directed by Professor of Theatre Kevin Long, the production of Henley’s 1979 dark
comedy runs from March 8-17 in the Drama Lab Theatre, Building L, Room L109, on Harper’s
campus, 1200 W. Algonquin Road, Palatine. Crimes of the Heart focuses on the three Magrath sisters – Meg, Babe and Lenny – who are brought together
in Hazlehurst, Mississippi, because of their ailing grandfather. The three women discuss
the problems they’ve faced and reckon with the consequences of their “crimes of the
heart.”
'Crimes of the Heart'
When: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, March 8-9, 15-16; 2 p.m. Sundays, March 10 and 17
Where: Harper College Drama Lab Theatre, Building L, Room L109, 1200 W. Algonquin Road,
Palatine
Tickets: $15 for Harper students, $20 for non-Harper students, Harper employees and seniors,
and $25 for general admission
Call the Harper Box Office at 847.925.6100 or visit https://www.harpercollege.edu/services/arts/
boxoffice.php
For more information visit the Harper Theatre Calendar.
Born and raised in Mississippi, Henley now lives in Los Angeles where she is the President’s
Professor of Theatre Arts at Loyola Marymount University. The acclaimed writer will
be in the audience for Harper’s opening night and will also participate in events
on campus on March 8 and 9, including post-show audience talkbacks and meet-and-greet
receptions, during which Henley will sign copies of her work (available via the HarperStore).
Henley will also lead a playwrighting workshop and participate in a lunch with cast
and crew on March 9.
Long said he’s excited about Henley’s visit, especially the chance for students to
interact and learn from an artist of her stature.
“For me, my joy is that I can’t wait for these students to connect with a Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwright,” he said. “Just hearing them talk to her about the play
in a really intelligent way will be amazing.”
Henley won the 1981 Pulitzer for Drama for her hit Broadway play, which was later
made into a film starting Sissy Spacek, Jessica Lange and Diane Keaton (for which
Henley wrote the Oscar-nominated screenplay). She has penned more than a dozen other
successful plays and written a handful of film scripts, including collaborating with
Talking Heads frontman David Byrne and her then-partner Stephen Tobolowsky on 1986’s
True Stories.
Henley’s visit isn’t the first time Long has brought a celebrated writer to Harper.
Last year, playwright Boo Killebrew took part in events related to the college’s production of her play Lettie. In 2014, he invited Tony-winning playwright and Oscar-winning screenwriter Alfred
Uhry to campus in conjunction with Harper productions of all three works in his “Atlanta
Trilogy” (Driving Miss Daisy, Parade and The Last Night of Ballyhoo).
Long said he’s learned that it doesn’t ever hurt to ask, given the opportunities a
visiting playwright can provide to audiences and Harper students. Now in his 16th year of teaching and directing at Harper, Long’s passion for live theater, and the
educational opportunities Harper’s Theatre Arts program provides, is palpable.
“Look at the training available here. It’s conservatory training. It’s legit,” said
Long, who also works as an educator and artist at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater.
“What we provide is literally a direct connection to the professional world.”