Neil Simon’s ‘Chapter Two’ Opens Tomorrow Night at Reston Community Players

Reston Community Players concludes its 47th season with Neil Simon’s sparkling comedy, Chapter Two, which opens tomorrow night-April 25th at Reston Community Center’s CenterStage.

 Jeff Breslow (George Schneider) and Greg Lang (Leo Schneider). Photo by Traci L. Brooks Studio.
Jeff Breslow (George Schneider) and Greg Lang (Leo Schneider). Photo by Traci J. Brooks Studio.

In Simon’s semi-autobiographical comedy, George, a recent widower is having a hard time handling the dating game. After being set up on a series of wildly unsuccessful blind dates, his younger brother, Leo, introduces him to a “keeper” . . . but Jennie has her own hesitation about dipping her toes into the dating pool again.

“It’s a bumpy and hilarious journey as George and Jennie seek happiness the second time around,” Reston Players president Joshua Redford said. “Chapter Two is full of Simon’s trademark whimsical, snappy dialogue, as well as relatable characters and real-life emotions that will leave you smiling as you leave the theatre.”

Director Adam Konowe said he thinks audiences will gain a new perspective on Neil Simon after seeing Chapter Two. “This play is really about learning to say goodbye and hello, as well as recognizing that we all have to play the imperfect hand we’re dealt,” Konowe said. “Fallibility and even loss ultimately can create opportunity.”

“As a New Yorker, I appreciate Neil Simon’s rapid-fire dialogue, but this show has more gravitas than is often associated with typical Simon plays,” Konowe said. “Moreover, all four characters have enough complexity, including some very human shortcomings, to interest the entire production team and hopefully our audiences.”

Jeff Breslow plays widower George Schneider and Lori Brooks is Jeannie Malone. They are set up by Greg Lang as Leo Schneider and Kristin Poling as Faye Medwick.

2A06CBED3-F741-2E45-2746E1A32948C0B3Lang, who is known to Washington audiences for his work on stage and screen, said Chapter Two teaches about love and loss and how hard it is to move on when tragedy occurs. “People should come to see Chapter Two because it provides an outside look into real-life situations and helps people realize that life isn’t perfect, but it is what we make of it,” Lang said. “This play will make them laugh and might even make them cry, but by the time they walk out of the theater, they will understand that love isn’t something we choose, it’s something that chooses us.”

Breslow, who has won Washington Area Theatre Community Honors for his work as both actor and director, plays the recently widowed George. “George is caught between wanting to move ahead but being unable to let go,” Breslow said. “But no matter where he is on this emotional roller-coaster, he faces it all with his trademark charm and dry, acerbic wit.”

Poling, who plays the floundering soap opera actress Faye Medwick, noted, “Chapter Two is witty, deeply moving, absolutely hilarious, and thoroughly delightful. You’d be crazy to miss it!”

 Jeff Breslow (George) and Lori Brooks (Jennie Malone). Photo by  Traci J. Brooks Studios.
Jeff Breslow (George) and Lori Brooks (Jennie Malone). Photo by Traci J. Brooks Studios.

Chapter Two is directed by Adam Konowe. It is produced by Bea and Jerry Morse.

Chapter Two plays from April 25-May 10, 2014 at Reston Community Players at CenterStage-at the Reston Community Center -2310 Colts Neck Road, in Reston, VA. CenterStage is handicap accessible and offers listening devices for the hearing impaired. Tickets can be purchased online, or by calling the CenterStage box office at (703) 476-4500 x 3. Performances are April 25th and 26th and May 2nd, 3rd, 9th, and 10th at 8:00 p.m., with a 2:00 p.m. matinee on May 4th.

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Diane Jackson Schnoor
Diane Jackson Schnoor is delighted to be back in the DC metro area after nearly two decades away. She earned her BA at The American University, with a minor in theatre arts, and holds a master's and doctorate in elementary education from the University of Virginia. A lifelong devotee of the arts, Diane's reviews and arts feature stories have been published in The Millbrook Independent and DC Metro Theatre Arts. As an actress, Diane has performed with the Cape Fear Regional Theatre, the Fort Bragg Playhouse, TriArts Sharon Playhouse, and in musicals and dance shows in Millbrook, NY, Amenia, NY, and Lakeville, CT. Her day job career has run the gamut from adjunct college faculty to preschool director to public relations director and back again, but her primary occupation these days is as chauffeur to the two young actresses who inhabit her home in Winchester, VA.

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