Gideon Productions

Gideon Productions

Gideon Productions

Gideon Productions is a New York based artistic theater company. It produces plays, primarily plays written by company co-founder Mac Rogers. Gideon is best known for producing a trilogy of science fiction plays by Rogers called The Honeycomb Trilogy about an alien invasion of Earth.

Gideon is run by artists Mac Rogers, Jordana Williams, Sean Williams, Sandy Yaklin, Rebecca Comtois, and Mikell Kober.

CONTACT INFO

Facebook: /gideonproductionstheater
Tumblr: gideonproductions.tumblr.com
Twitter: @GideonPTH
Website: www.gideonth.com

PRODUCTION HIGHLIGHTS

Kill Shakespeare, HERE Arts Center (2014)

Frankenstein Upstairs, The Secret Theatre (2013)

Sovereign (Part 3 of The Honeycomb Trilogy), The Secret Theatre (2012)

Blast Radius (Part 2 of The Honeycomb Trilogy), The Secret Theatre (2012)

Advance Man (Part 1 of The Honeycomb Trilogy), The Secret Theatre (2012)

Universal Robots, Manhattan Theatre Source (2009)

Viral, New York International Fringe Festival (2009)

The First Annual St. Ignatius Channukah Pageant, Manhattan Theatre Source (2008)

Hail Satan, Bleecker Street Theater (2007)

Fleet Week: The Musical!, New York International Fringe Festival (2005)

AWARDS, NEWS, & REVIEWS

Awards

Outstanding Premiere Production of a Play, New York Innovative Theatre Awards 2012, Advance Man

Outstanding Off-Off Broadway Show, Independent Theater Bloggers Association Award 2010Viral

Best Off-Off Broadway Play, Independent Theater Bloggers Association Award 2009Universal Robots

Outstanding Play, FringeNYC Overall Excellence Award 2009, Viral

Outstanding Musical, FringeNYC Overall Excellence Award 2005Fleet Week: The Musical!

News

Interview with Sean Williams, Gideon Productions Co-Founder, Full of IT (August 2012)

Reviews

The Approval Matrix, New York Magazine (2013)

Curtain Raisers: Even Mad Scientists Need a Good Story, Wall Street Journal (2013)

Repelling Alien Conquerors Is Easy; It’s Ruling That’s Hard, New York Times (2012)

Big Brother Is Watching, and He’s a Bug, New York Times (2012)