Sometimes it only takes a monologue to start a dialogue.
PRC2 — a series of plays produced solely for PlayMakers Repertory Company’s second stage — specializes in intimate and interactive performances woven with conversations between the audience and performers.
Staged in Kenan Theatre, a much smaller space than the mainstage Paul Green Theatre, PRC2 shows typically feature smaller casts and a dialogue with the cast and crew following each performance.
The series of performances was conceived in 2007 with two aims in mind: to produce plays that are both challenging for artists and good sources for audience discussion, said Hannah Grannemann, managing director for PlayMakers.
Each season, three performances are reserved for the PRC2 stage.
PRC2’s emphasis on discussion not only enriches the theater and performance experience for the audience, but also for the actors, said Ray Dooley, a UNC professor of dramatic art and actor in PRC2’s opening show, “A Number.”
“It doesn’t change the technical aspect of being a performer, but it does add an exciting relationship as a community member,” he said.
Jeffrey Meanza, associate artistic director for PlayMakers, said that “A Number” was a title that he had been interested in for a long time.
“It asks so many unanswered questions,” he said. “It keeps people talking.”