METHOD MACHINE HOST PANEL ON SUICIDE AND DEPRESSION
Medical community to participate in talkback following Sunday's Matinee performance of EDGE

Greetings from MuCCC! We had a big week here- opening night, a great review in City newspaper See

this week: please let ypur friends know how cool the show is!
Thursday night 3/19 8 pm is "Naz Night"- $15 tickets, $12 with student ID, $5 with Nazareth ID....
Fri and Sat 8 pm shows
Sun 2 pm matinee includes the following discussion:

Sunday March 22 @ 2 PM
Paul Alexander’s play EDGE is set on the last day in the life of the poet Sylvia Plath, in her kitchen, and reflects on her childhood, her husband-poet Ted Hughes and her work. Plath takes account of her actions as well as the actions of others and uses them to fuel her tragic flaw: passion. The prolific writer took her life on a cold February day in 1963, after being abandoned by the greatest thing and the worst thing that ever happened to her: her husband, Ted Hughes. The play examines the events that led up to her turning on that gas stove and passing into a sleep from which she would never wake.

On Sunday, March 22, Method Machine will be hosting a talk back following the matinee performance of EDGE. Edge provides the impetus for discussion by bringing to life the story of poet and novelist Sylvia Plath. The Talk Back provides an outlet to discuss the uncomfortable and often silent issues that often go unattended in the community. The panel consists of Drs. Ronke Lattimore Tapp, University of Rochester counseling center and Beth Winslow, of the Suicide Prevention Hotline. They will discuss various issues along with the community brought up in the play, such as spousal abuse, mental health, and suicide.