Monthly Archives: January 2013

WHEN THE RAIN STOPS FALLING Runs Feb. 8-March 16

Nick Rose. Photo by Deogracias Lema.

Nick Rose. Photo by Deogracias Lema.

WHEN THE RAIN STOPS FALLING
Presented by Know Theatre of Cincinnati
Feb. 8-March 16
Over-the-Rhine

Reviews: Enquirer | CityBeat |

Local media coverage: WVXU interview | Enquirer article |

Directed by Brian Isaac Phillips

Cast: George Alexander, Ian Bond, Sara Clark*, Jon Kovach, Brian Griffin, Miranda McGee, Nick Rose*, Adrianne Underhill, Kate Wilford*

*Member of Actor’s Equity Association

An intricate fabric of overlapping connections, When The Rain Stops Falling moves seamlessly through time and across continents between the years 1959 and 2039. In a world where the rain rarely stops falling, four generations searching for truth and hoping to mend broken connections discover the impossibility of escaping the past. We are all shaped by what has come before and we create the shadow of what comes next.

  • Fri-Sat, Feb. 8-9 at 8pm
  • Thu-Sat, Feb. 14-16 at 8pm
  • Thu-Sat, Feb. 21-23 at 8pm
  • Sun, Feb. 24 at 3pm
  • Thu-Sat, Feb. 28-March 2
  • Thu-Fri, March 7-8 at 8pm
  • Sat, March 9 at 3pm & 8pm
  • Thu-Sat, March 14-16 at 8pm

Official page with online ticketing | FaceBook event |

Leave a comment

Filed under On Stage

NET Presents O’Keefe World Premiere

Shuttle disasters serve as backdrop for
SLOW DESCENT FROM HEAVEN

Brian Berendts, Elizabeth A. Harris, Michael Hall & Sue Breving. Photo by: Mikki Schaffner.

Brian Berendts, Elizabeth A. Harris, Michael Hall & Sue Breving. Photo by: Mikki Schaffner.

New Edgecliff Theatre continues its transitional 15th season with the premiere of SLOW DESCENT FROM HEAVEN by NET’s Resident Playwright Catie O’Keefe. For this production, NET will travel to the Clifton Cultural Arts Center, where they’ve converted a double-sized classroom space into an intimate 88-seat studio theater.

SLOW DESCENT FROM HEAVEN features former NET Artistic Director Elizabeth A. Harris as Molly, a NASA scientist, whose story is told in reverse chronology, beginning with the Columbia disaster in 2003 and ending with the Challenger disaster 18 years earlier, in 1986. Rounding out the ensemble are Sue Breving, Brian Berendts and Michael Hall.

Ed Cohen, who previously directed “Death of a Salesman” for NET, returns to take on this compelling story. He says, “I love Catie’s use of the Space Shuttle program as a metaphor for relationships, which have the potential for spectacular, magical successes and equally spectacular, but paralyzing failures. Presenting the story in reverse chronological order allows the audience to see how the characters’ behavior – their confusions and doubts – developed out of past events.”

New Edgecliff Artistic Director Jim Stump is happy to see NET’s relationship with O’Keefe culminate with the premiere of a full length play. As he says, “When Catie joined New Edgecliff we were impressed with her work – a contemporary voice with a sense of intrigue that kept audiences looking forward to where the story would take them next. We chose one of her short plays, ‘Darker’, for our return to the Fringe Festival and it received wonderful critical and audience response. And the projects we’ve asked her to work on have always been spot on. I felt strongly that we needed to present a full-length piece by Catie as the next step both for her and for us.”

As for the playwright, O’Keefe says this play represents a very personal response in general to great disasters in human history because, as she puts it, “I feel they bring out some very resounding responses in human nature by which we are humbled in our own limits and existence. When the Columbia disaster occurred I remember watching and feeling so incredibly drawn to the trauma of the event – something that has stuck with me for some time. I’ve always wanted to be able to use that in a play.” Through the character of Molly, O’Keefe examines how our relationships are influenced by external events. “My work often follows the course of a relationship and how it changes and develops in relation to the environment. I felt that Molly was the perfect character to place in an experiment of love, career and life choices sandwiched between the Challenger and Columbia disasters in an attempt to capture the path of this one woman’s journey in relation to such monumental events.”

NET Executive Director and founder Michael Shooner adds, “We’re very excited to have Ed Cohen directing Catie’s very honest, human play in such an innovative and intimate setting. The folks at the Clifton Cultural Arts Center have been quite accommodating in allowing us to transform this space. All in all, it should make for a memorable night of theatre.”

Intended for mature audiences only.

SLOW DESCENT FROM HEAVEN
February 20–23 (Wed-Sat) and February 26–March 2 (Tues-Sat), 7:30pm.
Clifton Cultural Arts Center, 3711 Clifton Avenue
Tickets: $23 adults, $18 seniors, and $15 students
For more information or to purchase your tickets, visit newedgecliff.com or call (513) 399-6638

Leave a comment

Filed under Press Releases

DOUBT Runs Feb. 8-23

FT_DoubtDOUBT
Presented by Falcon Theatre
Feb. 8-23
Newport

Directed by Julie Jordan

Cast: Cathy Roesener as Sister Aloysius, Brittany Smile as Sister James, Terry Gosdin as Father Flynn & Brittany Grant as Mrs. Muller

This powerful play explores the ways in which suspicion can be just as dangerous as a crime and how easy it is to fall victim to it. Doubt is a gripping drama about suspicion, scandal and the elusive questions of moral certainty.

  • Fri-Sat, Feb. 8-9 at 8pm
  • Fri-Sat, Feb. 15-16 at 8pm
  • Fri-Sat, Feb. 22-23 at 8pm

Official page | Online ticketing | FaceBook event |

1 Comment

Filed under On Stage

TDW Stages Regional Premiere of JERRY FINNEGAN’S SISTER

Nate Netzley as Brian Dowd & Bonnie Emmer as Beth Finnegan in TDW's JERRY FINNEGAN’S SISTER, Jan. 18-27.

Nate Netzley as Brian Dowd & Bonnie Emmer as Beth Finnegan.

(Cheviot, Ohio) The Drama Workshop, the award-winning community theater based at Cheviot’s Glenmore Playhouse, is preparing for the regional premiere of Jack Neary’s comedy, JERRY FINNEGAN’S SISTER. Show dates are January 18, 19, 25, and 26 at 8 pm. Matinee performances will be offered on January 20 and 27 at 2 pm. The production is being directed by Ray Persing and is co-produced by Ray Persing and Gretchen Gantner.

JERRY FINNEGAN’S SISTER recounts the long relationship between Brian Dowd and his best friend’s sister, Beth Finnegan. Ever since the Finnegan family moved in next door, Brian has wrestled with an unrequited “something” for Beth. But each and every time he’s spoken with her for more than 30 seconds, he’s ended up with his foot planted firmly in his mouth. But now, Brian’s time is about to run out. With recent news that Jerry Finnegan’s sister is getting married, the time has come for him to put up or shut up.

This two-person show features Nate Netzley, from Westwood, and Blue Ash resident Bonnie Emmer.

“It’s a show I feel a lot of people will be able to relate to,” said Netzley. “We’ve all been in that situation where we really like someone, bordering on another ‘L word,’ but we can’t muster the courage or find the words to say how we truly feel.”

“The show really speaks to overcoming personal insecurities,” adds in Persing. “We get to see relationship develop between Brian and Beth, beginning from when the characters are children and how that relationship progresses until they are in their early 20’s. Like many of us, Brian simply needs to get out of his own way. Nate and Bonnie have done a fantastic job in portraying the changes in how boys and girls relate to each other as they grow up.”

Bonnie Emmer plays the title character, “One of the things I love about JERRY FINNEGAN’S SISTER is that we get to play Beth and Brian at several different ages,” she said. “We get to play toddlers, tweens, teens and adults. The show is set in present day so the year Beth was 6, I was also 6. This allows me the unique opportunity to relive my childhood and build a character from it. Rehearsing this show has brought back some really great childhood memories.”

Nate and his family have been long-time members of The Drama Workshop, but Nate has been absent for an extended period as he attends college at Northern Kentucky University, pursing a BFA in Acting. “It’s been fun coming back to my home group after three years. It’s a completely different environment. It’s the most free I’ve felt on stage in a long time.”

Tickets may be ordered through the TDW ticket line at 598-8303, or online at www.thedramaworkshop.org. All seats are $15.00. Because of the limited run nature of this production, reservations are strongly encouraged.

For more information, contact Ms. Gretchen Gantner at 513-470-5516, or groose1876@aol.com.

THE DRAMA WORKSHOP was founded in 1954. TDW is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization dedicated to advancing education and promotion of theatrical arts. Based at the newly renovated Glenmore Playhouse in Cheviot, The Drama Workshop is widely recognized as one of greater Cincinnati’s most accomplished community theater organizations, garnering dozens of awards annually from the Association of Community Theaters. TDW productions have been regularly selected to represent the Southwest Ohio region at the Ohio Community Theater Association annual conference. Prospective members, and individuals or businesses interested in helping to advance TDW’s mission are encouraged to contact the group through our website at http://www.thedramaworkshop.org or by phone at 513-598-8303.

Leave a comment

Filed under Press Releases

AFRICAN CHILDREN’S CHOIR to Perform at MU Feb. 7

MUPAS_African Childrens ChoirOxford, Ohio – The African Children’s Choir, an amazing musical experience from Uganda, is back at Miami University due to popular demand. They will provide outreach in the community prior to their 7:30 p.m. performance on Thursday, February 7th at Hall Auditorium, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.

In 1984, in the midst of Uganda’s bloody civil war, human rights activist Ray Barnett was called on to help the thousands of orphaned and starving children who were abandoned and helpless, left to feed and protect themselves. Inspired by the singing of one small boy, they formed the first African Children’s Choir. That first Choir was selected from orphaned and vulnerable children in Uganda. They were trained to perform and readied for living in new and different cultures. The children then traveled from Uganda to tour amongst the North American Church communities. They immediately impressed audiences with their outstanding musical talent and quickly became a voice for the plight of the many thousands of vulnerable children like them in Uganda.

The African Children’s Choir travels the world, acting as the ambassador for Africa’s most vulnerable children. Their goal is to raise awareness and show that despite the desolate circumstances they come from, they have beauty, dignity, hope, and unlimited potential.

To date, over one thousand vulnerable children have been through the African Children’s Choir program and the funds they have generated have provided the opportunity of education and hope for many more thousands like them in some of the most desperate areas of Africa. Come experience their musical message of hope.

The African Children’s Choir is presented by the Miami University Performing Arts Series and is sponsored by Brett & Laura Smith and the Western College Alumnae Association. Tickets are $18 for adults, $17 for seniors, and $9 for students and youth. For tickets or more information, go online to www.MiamiOH.edu/PerformingArtsSeries or call the Miami Box Office at (513) 529-3200.

Leave a comment

Filed under Family-Friendly, Press Releases