Step into an infinite world of stories
4.2
Lyric & Poetry
When a small town relies on tourists flocking to its baths, will a report of dangerously polluted waters be enough to shut them down? Henrik Ibsen weighs the cost of public health versus a town’s livelihood and skewers the complicity of the masses in his classic and still timely play.
Includes an interview about the Deepwater Horizon, man-made environmental disasters, climate change, and the state of the world’s water supply with Joel K. Bourne Jr., former senior environment writer for National Geographic.
This play is part of L.A. Theatre Works’ Relativity Series featuring science-themed plays. Lead funding for the Relativity Series is provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, bridging science and the arts in the modern world.
Recorded before a live audience at the UCLA James Bridges Theater in April 2014.
Director: Martin Jarvis Producing Director: Susan Albert Loewenberg An L.A. Theatre Works full-cast performance featuring: Rosalind Ayres as Catherine Stockmann Gregory Harrison as Peter Stockmann Richard Kind as Dr. Thomas Stockmann Alan Mandell as Morten Kiil Jon Matthews as Billing Alan Shearman as Captain Horster Josh Stamberg as Hovstad Emily Swallow as Petra Tom Virtue as Aslaksen With various roles played by: Sam Boeck, Julia Coulter, Jeff Gardner, William R. Hickman, Adam Mondschein
Associate Producers: Anna Lyse Erikson, Myke Weiskopf. Sound Designer, Recording and Mixing Engineer: Mark Holden for The Invisible Studios, West Hollywood. Sound Effects Artist: Jeff Gardner. Editor: Wes Dewberry.
© 2014 L.A. Theatre Works (Audiobook): 9781580819602
Release date
Audiobook: July 15, 2014
Listen and read without limits
Enjoy stories offline
Kids Mode (child-safe environment)
Cancel anytime
Listen and read as much as you want
1 account
Unlimited Access
Offline Mode
Kids Mode
Cancel anytime
English
International