Nominated for the 2022 Tony Award® for Best Revival of a Play, this thrilling Broadway premiere of Paula Vogel’s Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece How I Learned to Drive reunites the two original stars with their award-winning director for a new production. Tony Award® winner Mary-Louise Parker (Proof) and Tony nominee David Morse (The Iceman Cometh) are joined by Tony Award® nominee Johanna Day, Alyssa May Gold, and Chris Myers in this remarkably timely and moving memory play about a woman coming to terms with a charismatic uncle who impacts her past, present and future life. Directing is Mark Brokaw (Heisenberg).
By: Paula Vogel
Director: Mark Brokaw
Producer: Manhattan Theatre Club, Daryl Roth, Cody Lassen, and The Dodgers, in association with the Vineyard Theatre
Cast list: Mary-Louise Parker (as Li’l Bit) and David Morse (as Uncle Peck)
Design: Rachel Hauck
Lighting: Mark McCullough
Costume: Dede Ayite
Sound: David Van Tieghem
Other info: Video
Design: by Lucy Mackinnon and Dialect Coaching by Deborah Hecht
Elevator access, wheelchair access, assisted listening devices, on-demand closed captioning, open captioning, audio description, Braille and large print Playbills
Park yourself in a seat and brace yourself for the twists and turns of Paula Vogel’s play How I Learned to Drive. Her award-winning work is making its Broadway debut, stirring New York audiences with the story of an adolescent girl sexually abused by her uncle. How I Learned to Drive tickets are available now. Get How I Learned to Drive Broadway tickets on TodayTix.
How I Learned to Drive is a play narrated by a woman nicknamed Li’l Bit. Now 35 years old, she recounts various, non-chronological memories from her youth. A Greek chorus of three people populates various family members in her memories, but the most dominant presence is her suave Uncle Peck, who, under the guise of driving lessons, pursued a sexual relationship with her. Vogel uses driving as a metaphor to tackle themes of manipulation and trauma. For Li’l Bit, driving becomes a source of confusion, as the young girl wonders how harmful her uncle could be when he has taught her such a valuable lesson. However, it also becomes a means of freedom, ultimately allowing Li’l Bit to take control and move on from her past.
The play first premiered to acclaim at the Vineyard Theatre in 1997 and quickly became Vogel’s most awarded play. The production received four Lucille Lortel awards, four Obie Awards, three Drama Desk awards, a Drama Critics’ Circle Award, and an Outer Critics Circle Award, and Vogel earned the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Now, for the Broadway production at Manhattan Theatre Club, Mary-Louise Parker and David Morse are reprising their roles of Li’l Bit and Uncle Peck, which they originated in the 1997 premiere. Mark Brokaw, who directed the premiere production, is set to helm How I Learned to Drive once more.
The show also features set design by Rachel Hauck, costume design by Dede Ayite, lighting design by Mark McCollough, original music and sound design by David Van Tieghem, and video design by Lucy Mackinnon.
Get How I Learned to Drive Broadway tickets on TodayTix now.
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