Berkshire Playwrights Lab announces a staged reading workshop

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. – Berkshire Playwrights Lab announces that its Co-Artistic Director Jim Frangione will direct a staged reading workshop production of As Is - No Warranty by Jaene Leonard on Wednesday, August 12, 2009, 8pm at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center (14 Castle Street, Great Barrington, Mass.).

Admission is free. To reserve tickets, call the Berkshire Playwrights Lab office at 413.528.2544 or the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center box office at 413.528.0100.

As Is - No Warranty concerns a character named Mac, who is a used car manager at Bristol Buick. The playwright describes Mac as “a ‘car dog’ through and through, a man who always gets what he wants. Right about now, he's sittin' pretty—with a strong sales team, excellent numbers, and a real shot at getting his own dealership. He's also got Heather: a honey who sells as good as she... looks.” The play poses the question: Can Mac, who loves the thrill ride, keep it together long enough to get what's coming to him?

Jaene Leonard trained in acting at Atlantic Theater and with original Group Theater member Bobby Lewis. In addition to As Is  - No Warranty, Leonard wrote Chic Band, chronicling the trials and tribulations of an all-girl band, and Burned, a trailer trash love story. The first of her Arizona Plays Trilogy, about the effects of 9/11 and the Afghanistan/Iraq Wars on a teenage boy and his family, was a semi-finalist for the ’09 O’Neill Playwrights Conference. Leonard’s screenplay Yoga Bitches is currently under consideration at several different places.

Jim Frangione just returned from the American Repertory Theater, where he directed Seriously Funny, a collection of short plays by David Mamet, Shel Silverstein, and Harold Pinter. He also recently directed Mamet's play, Romance, at the Wellfleet Harbor Actor's Theater. He has performed in the New York premiere, as well as the national tour, of several Mamet plays, including The Old Neighborhood and Oleanna, and most recently, Romance, at New York’s Atlantic Theater Company and subsequently in Los Angeles at the Mark Taper Forum. Other acting credits include Mamet’s American Buffalo opposite Chris Noth at Berkshire Theatre Festival and numerous productions at the Atlantic, as well as appearances at Long Wharf Theatre and Merrimack Repertory Theatre. Frangione was a founder and artistic director of The Stage Company of Boston, where he directed and acted in many plays, by, among others: David Mamet, Athol Fugard, and Harold Pinter. On TV, he has appeared in episodes of Brotherhood, The Unit, Law & Order (original, SVU, & CI), New York Undercover, Another World, and All My Children. His film appearances include Transamerica, Spartan, Heist, State and Main, The Spanish Prisoner, Homicide, Suits, Claire Dolan, Maryam, Frozen Impact, Rubout, Little Kings, and The Last Days of May.

The cast for the reading of As Is - No Warranty includes Bob Jaffe, Amy Van Nostrand, and seven additional actors TBA.
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Pittsfield Council Passes $232.7M Budget

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council unanimously approved a $232.7 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year. 

It is a modest, almost 2.9 percent increase from FY26. 

"I do want to give the community kind of a heads up as we move forward on budgets. What we see coming out of the federal government that's trickling down to the states, it's going to be harder and harder for us as a community to meet our needs under the Proposition 2 1/2," Councilor at Large Alisa Costa said. 

"We're going to have challenges, as we've seen communities across the state trying to override the Proposition 2 1/2, because we have dwindling amounts of money coming from the state and federal government." 

She pointed out that, at the same time, utility bills are going up for both residents and the city, as are the costs of pavement and other items. 

The amended budget of $232,777,720, down from the $232,782,090 originally proposed, includes cuts to the Department of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and the restoration of funds for councilors to attend the annual Massachusetts Municipal Association conference. 

The Pittsfield Public Schools' $86,855,061 budget includes $68,886,061 in state Chapter 70 funding and $18 million from the city. With $345,000 in school choice and Richmond tuition revenues, it totals $87,200,061 and is an approximately $300,000 increase from the Pittsfield Public Schools' FY26 budget of $86.9 million. 

The district's budget will fund 13 schools, as Morningside Community School will retire in the fall, and includes the middle school restructuring. 

Councilors also approved the use of $2 million in certified free cash to reduce the tax rate, and appropriated $450,551 for parking-related expenditures. 

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