MICHAEL FOSBERG OF ARMENIAN DESCENT TO STAGE HIS ONE-MAN SHOW IN WAUKEGAN
PanARMENIAN.Net
June 14, 2011 - 18:31 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Michael Fosberg, born to an Armenian mother and now
retired Libertyville Realtor, Adrienne Pilibosian Fosberg, returns
to his hometown of Waukegan, Illinois, for three shows only of his
one-man play titled, Incognito, June 17, June 18, and Matinee June 19.
In a hybrid between the late-great satirical monologist Spalding Gray
and the vivid storytelling of Charlayne Woodard, Incognito is about
Michael Fosberg's emotion-packed personal journey for self discovery.
Writer/performer Michael Fosberg began a personal search for his
biological father at age 34 that turns up a whole lot more. Armed
with only the name of his father and the knowledge that he lived in
the Detroit area two decades earlier, Fosberg makes a miraculous call
which sets in motion a series of discoveries of family - of secrets
and lies, confrontation and reconciliation. Incognito balances humor
and emotion as it deals with race, prejudice and life's difficult
choices. Incognito has been seen from NYC to LA, at universities,
high schools, museums and theatres, TribLocal reports.
PanARMENIAN.Net
June 14, 2011 - 18:31 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Michael Fosberg, born to an Armenian mother and now
retired Libertyville Realtor, Adrienne Pilibosian Fosberg, returns
to his hometown of Waukegan, Illinois, for three shows only of his
one-man play titled, Incognito, June 17, June 18, and Matinee June 19.
In a hybrid between the late-great satirical monologist Spalding Gray
and the vivid storytelling of Charlayne Woodard, Incognito is about
Michael Fosberg's emotion-packed personal journey for self discovery.
Writer/performer Michael Fosberg began a personal search for his
biological father at age 34 that turns up a whole lot more. Armed
with only the name of his father and the knowledge that he lived in
the Detroit area two decades earlier, Fosberg makes a miraculous call
which sets in motion a series of discoveries of family - of secrets
and lies, confrontation and reconciliation. Incognito balances humor
and emotion as it deals with race, prejudice and life's difficult
choices. Incognito has been seen from NYC to LA, at universities,
high schools, museums and theatres, TribLocal reports.