Christopher J. Domig, Artistic Director;

APRIL 25, 2026 @ 7PM

SEA DOG THEATER
209 EAST 16TH STREET
NEW YORK, NY 10003

TEAM

Performer
K. Lorrel Manning
Trevor McGhie

Playwright & Director
Dean Poynor

The Second Avenue Subway is about a father and son who ride the New York City subway together—over many years and countless stops—as they navigate the shifting tracks of belief, responsibility, and love. What begins as a simple childhood adventure becomes a profound journey through memory, faith, and the struggle to pass on what is good in a broken world. Told with humor, intimacy, and aching honesty, The Second Avenue Subway is both a family story and a meditation on legacy—what we inherit, what we question, and what we hope to leave behind.

DEAN POYNOR

Dean Poynor (Writer & Director) is a New York–based playwright whose work explores spiritual questions, human connection, and the quiet beauty within everyday life. His plays have been developed and produced across the country and internationally, including with The Kennedy Center, The Lark, and the Piccolo Spoleto Festival. A graduate of Carnegie Mellon’s MFA Dramatic Writing program, Dean has received numerous honors, including the Helford Prize for Drama and support from the Shubert Foundation. His writing often centers on intimate relationships and moral complexity.

TREVOR McGHIE

Trevor McGhie (Actor) Off-Broadway: As You Like It (The Public/Shakespeare in the Park), Ralph in Awake and Sing! (Sea Dog Theater). Regional: Two Bit in the World Premiere of The Outsiders (La Jolla Playhouse), Fly (Capital Repertory Theatre), Gypsy (Harbor Lights). Training: NYU Tisch – The Meisner Studio, Stonestreet Studios, RADA (Royal Academy of Dramatic Art). Owner of McGhie Productions, a film production company.

K. LORREL MANNING

K. Lorrel Manning (Actor) K. Lorrel Manning is an award-winning writer, director, actor, and musician whose work spans film and theatre. His solo show Lost...Found premiered at The Barrow Group in 2024 and later had a critically acclaimed run at the 2024 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. He also wrote, directed, and starred in the Off-Broadway world premiere of Awake at The Barrow Group, and has multiple new plays in development.

Manning’s most recent short film, The Red Shoe, won the Hearts, Minds & Souls Grand Prize at the Rhode Island International Film Festival and was just released online via Crafty Films. He is currently developing his second feature film, Sheila & The Punk Rock.

He teaches advanced acting, screenwriting, and filmmaking at Sarah Lawrence College, Fordham University, Columbia University, and The Barrow Group.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Sea Dog Theater would like to thank: Calvary- St. Georges Episcopal Church for their hospitality and for allowing us to be artist-in-residence.

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Support our 2026 Season of Workshops, Readings, Spotlight Series Solo Shows, and Special Events in Residency at The Parish of Calvary-St. George’s in Gramercy Park.

  • June 27th, 7pm: A developmental presentation of King Lear by William Shakespeare

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ABOUT SEA DOG THEATER

At Sea Dog Theater, we gather around stories, shared meals, and honest conversations to explore questions of alienation and reconciliation. Through intimate and innovative theater productions, we invite artists and audiences into a shared search for meaning, one encounter at a time.

We treat the work of producing plays as a way of practicing community.

  • Extended Hospitality: We turn ordinary spaces into places of shared presence and care. Our post-show gatherings offer food, wine, and intentional conversations that invite honest reflection. We share stories and create space to linger, nurturing a sense of belonging.

  • Attentive Listening: We value the unscripted, the hesitant, the rough and the unfinished. We listen with openness, welcome new ideas, and honor the stories our artists and audiences carry, both in the creative process and in conversations after.

  • Reparative Reconciliation:  We name what’s been broken. Through our plays and conversations, we explore how alienation takes root, naming injustice, acknowledging complicity, and inviting one another into the work of repair and reconciliation. While not always synonymous, we remain committed to both whenever possible.

  • Courageous Collaboration: We step into discomfort: artistically, relationally, and philosophically. We choose work and collaborators that stretch us, challenge assumptions, and open us to new perspectives.

  • Creative Renewal: We rehumanize what has been cast aside. We honor the small, the struggling, the unexpected, and the unseen—trusting that beauty takes root in the most unlikely places.

SUPPORT SEA DOG THEATER

Join our vibrant community as a Sustaining Donor and support the creation of meaningful theater experiences and sustained community engagement. Membership begins at $25+/month and includes:

Priority access to our free reading events, two free tickets to our full productions, and invitations to insider special events.

Donations support our programming and off set the hospitality costs at our shared table. Help us continue to cultivate a welcoming space where audiences and artists thrive while exploring our culture’s most pressing questions of alienation and reconciliation. We can’t do it without you! seadogtheater.org/support

Sea Dog’s Reading Series is made possible in part by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.