Yearly Archives: 2013

Wonderettes Sock Hop is THIS SATURDAY in Washington Park

ETC_RosieLET’S GO TO THE HOP! 

Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati Partners with ArtsWave to present an All-Ages Sock Hop
Washington Park, Saturday, April 13, 5-7 pm
700 WLW’s Jim Scott Serves as Emcee

Poodle skirts, saddles shoes, and hair grease, oh my! It is time to twist and shout with your favorite 50’s gals from Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati. Join the Marvelous Wonderettes and ArtsWave to wrap up the 2013 Macy’s Arts Sampler with an all-ages sock hop in Washington Park.

Dress up, get down, and ready your dancing shoes for a free and open-to-the public sock hop! ETC’s very own Marvelous Wonderettes will perform famous songs from the era and Pones, Inc. will be on hand to lead the dancing festivities.

The public is encouraged to dress for the 50s-60s time period, as we will be crowing a King and Queen of the Sock Hop, who will each win a pair of tickets to the opening night of The Marvelous Wonderettes: Caps & Gowns, the sequel to Ensemble Theatre’s best-selling show of all time!

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CCM Drama Presents EXECUTION OF JUSTICE April 18-20, 2003

A chilling examination of the trial of Dan White for the murder of Harvey Milk and George Moscone, this gripping docu-drama will challenge audiences and actors alike as the final production of CCM’s 2012-13 Studio Series.

CCM_Execution of Justice1CINCINNATI, OH – The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) proudly presents the final installment of the 2012-13 Studio Series with a production of Emily Mann’s powerful docu-drama Execution of Justice, directed by CCM Professor of Drama Michael Burnham. Execution of Justice runs April 18-20 in UC’s Cohen Family Studio Theater. Admission is free, but reservations are required. This production contains mature subject matter.

A chilling examination of the trial of Dan White for the murder of Harvey Milk, San Francisco’s first openly gay Supervisor, and Mayor George Moscone, Execution of Justice puts the trial on trial and measures the distance between “politics,” “action” and “the law.”

Execution of Justice is a story fraught with strife and complications. “There is an issue,” Burnham explains, “and behind the issue, there are people.” In order to help his cast better inhabit their roles, Burnham decided that instead of each tackling one character, as is customary, each student would play at least four critical roles throughout the show. During each performance, every student will act as the man on trial, Dan White; his wife, Mary Ann White; the prosecuting attorney, Thomas Norman and the defense attorney, Douglas Schmidt. This approach challenges the audience, forcing them to identify with the real person – not the actor playing the role.

“There are more possibilities than we allow ourselves to think,” observes Burnham. Not only is this a fantastic learning experience for the actors, requiring them to commit to a character for sometimes only a single line at a time; it is the presentation of a constellation of stories that raises difficult questions about social justice.

Following the run of Execution of Justice, CCM will bid farewell to professor, director and mentor Michael Burnham as he moves on to retirement.

Learn more about Burnham’s 30 years at CCM here.

Performance Times:

  • 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 18
  • 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 19
  • 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 20 

Location
Cohen Family Studio Theater, CCM Village
University of Cincinnati

Reserving Tickets
Admission to Execution of Justice is free, but reservations are required. Tickets become available at noon on Monday, April 15. Visit the CCM Box office or call 513-556-4183 to reserve. Limit two tickets per order. This production contains mature subject matter.

Parking and Directions
Parking is available in the CCM Garage (located at the base of Corry Boulevard off Jefferson Avenue) and additional garages throughout the UC campus. Please visit uc.edu/parking for more information on parking rates.

For directions to CCM Village, visit ccm.uc.edu/about/directions.

CCM Season Presenting Sponsor: The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation 

Drama Studio Series Sponsor: Neil Artman & Margaret Straub 

Sponsored by the CCM Harmony Fund: Challenging Hate and Prejudice through Performing Arts 

Community Partner: ArtsWave 

The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) is recognized both nationally and internationally as one of the leading conservatories for the performing and electronic media arts, composition, scholarship and pedagogy. 

CCM is the largest single source of performing arts events in Ohio with an annual calendar of nearly 1,000 performances and presentations, ranging from solo recitals to full-scale opera and musical theatre performances. 

All event dates and programs are subject to change. For a complete calendar of events or to view CCM’s 2012-2013 season brochure visit our website at http://ccm.uc.edu

UC’s College-Conservatory of Music – The Sound of Synergy

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CCM Professor of Drama Michael Burnham Retires

Burnham wraps up nearly 30 years of teaching,
directing and mentoring at CCM this spring.

CCM_BurnhamCINCINNATI, OH – The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) Professor Michael Burnham has been a faculty member since 1984 and when asked about his many years of work for CCM, he muses, simply, “I liked all of them.” He will retire this month, following the conclusion of the school year and his work as director for CCM’s upcoming production of Execution of Justice, which runs April 18-20 as part of this year’s Studio Series.

“Professor Michael Burnham has been the artistic thorn in the side of every student who has entered CCM Drama for the past 29 years,” says Richard E. Hess, CCM’s A.B., Dolly, Ralph and Julia Cohen Drama Department Chair. “He digs into the mind of each and every new student, causing disruption, chaos and sometimes a little irritation, all in service of deeper thinking, harder questioning, more creativity and expansion of possibilities. Michael’s wonderful mind has touched the hearts of every student lucky enough to work with him.”

During Burnham’s time at CCM, he has seen the college grow and develop. “It’s become more joyful here,” he says. “We know ourselves better [as a college] now.” He has also managed to impact every department he has touched. He was at CCM when the Drama Department was born, at the table for the purchase of CCM’s first Genie lift and even found himself playing Falstaff in a personalized fat suit for a CCM production of The Merry Wives of Windsor. Burnham considers all of his memories fondly: “I’ve gotten to do anything I wanted and it’s because I work here.”

“The most amazing thing about my job has been learning to be taught by others – especially someone younger than you or less experienced,” Burnham reflected. “The environment is really alive. We all learn from everyone, sometimes by accident.”

Learn more about CCM’s Studio Series production of Execution of Justice here.

About Michael Burnham
In the last year, Michael Burnham has dramaturged the writing and then directed the premiere of CCM alumna Alison Vodnoy Wolf’s stage adaptation of James Joyce’s Ulysses. He also wrote and directed Prokofiev, Shostakovich: Pieces in the Key of Silence for the chamber ensemble concert:nova, helped CCM Drama students create a series of small plays for the Cincinnati Homeless Commission, assisted a group of School for Creative and Performing Arts students in building and presenting an original piece at the city’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. celebration and directed the premiere of John Ray’s The Sweet, Burning Yonder as part of the Cincinnati Fringe Festival.

Burnham also performs as a storyteller throughout the eastern part of the country and has narrated symphony concerts for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Salt Lake Symphony Opera and the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra among others. His adaptation of Stravinsky’s l’Histoire du Soldat (which he directed while playing the Devil) premiered at the Salt Lake Symphony Opera.

For his work as a director, occasional actor and playwright, and for championing the city’s small experimental theatre companies, Burnham received a League of Cincinnati Theatres’ Sustained Achievement Award and has been inducted into the Cincinnati Entertainment Awards Hall of Fame.

Before coming to CCM, Michael was Literary Manager at the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, a theater critic for Cincinnati Magazine and a theater and film critic for WGUC-FM. He was also a Fellow of the National Critics Institute at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre Center.

When given a sabbatical a couple of years ago, he studied theatre with Song of the Goat in Poland and Butoh dancing with Oguri in London and Wales and with Atsushi Takenouchi in France. At CCM, Burnham directs and teaches courses in script analysis, directing, dramaturgy and a class called “The Artist in Society.”

The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) is recognized both nationally and internationally as one of the leading conservatories for the performing and electronic media arts, composition, scholarship and pedagogy. 

CCM is the largest single source of performing arts events in Ohio with an annual calendar of nearly 1,000 performances and presentations, ranging from solo recitals to full-scale opera and musical theatre performances.  

All event dates and programs are subject to change. For a complete calendar of events or to view CCM’s 2012-2013 season brochure visit our website at http://ccm.uc.edu

UC’s College-Conservatory of Music – The Sound of Synergy

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Falcon’s AND THEN THERE WERE NONE Earns Two LCT Nominations

FT_And Then There Were None1Panelists for the League of Cincinnati Theatres (LCT) have recognized the Falcon Theatre’s AND THEN THERE WERE NONE with 2 LCT nominations as well as distinguishing it as a recommended production: Ensemble in a Play, and Scenic Design (Jared Doran).

AND THEN THERE WERE NONE remains the best selling mystery story of all time because of its timeless characters and thrilling story line. 10 guests on an isolated island…all invited to a dinner party which soon turns into a mysterious evening filled with murder and suspicion.

Panelists praised the ensemble cast who included “some of our community’s terrific character actors… each of them did an outstanding job to bring this play to the stage.” Of Jared Doran’s set design, one panelist remarked “I have seen a LOT of shows at Falcon’s space on Monmouth Street, but NEVER have I see a set configuration look as stylish and accommodate ten actors as well as that set. It was incredibly well done.” Of the show as a whole, panelists called it a “phenomenal outing…a fun night of theatre.”

AND THEN THERE WERE NONE continues through April 20th. Tickets can be purchased at www.falcontheater.net.

Final LCT awards will be determined at the end of the season and announced at the LCT gala in the spring.

The League of Cincinnati Theatres was founded in 1999 to strengthen, nurture and promote Cincinnati’s theatre community. LCT provides its member companies and individual members with education, resources and services to enhance the quality and exposure of the theatre community in Cincinnati and increase community awareness, attendance and involvement. More information about the League can be found at www.leagueofcincytheatres.com.

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CCM/The Carnegie’s PARADE Earns Four LCT Nominations

TC_ParadePanelists for the League of Cincinnati Theatres (LCT) have recognized The University of Cincinnati’s College Conservatory of Music and The Carnegie Visual and Performing Arts Center’s PARADE with 4 LCT nominations, for Ensemble Acting, Music Direction (Steve Goers), Featured Actor (Noah Ricketts) and Lighting Design (Alan Hanson/Wes Richter), as well as distinguishing it as a recommended production.

In the sweltering intolerance of 1913 Atlanta, northerner and Jewish factory manager Leo Frank is wrongfully accused of murdering of a 13-year-old girl under his employment. As press frenzy and public outrage whip his trial into a referendum, Frank’s only hope lies in a brave crusade by the southern wife he never understood, among a people that never understood him. The 2000 Tony Award winner for “Best Book” and “Best Score”, Parade is a transformational story of a country at odds with its declarations of equality.

Panelists praised the ensemble, who “covered a variety of roles while always maintaining the atmosphere of the performance…their execution and full sound of the music carried the show from beginning to end.” Of Steve Goer’s music direction, the panelists noted, “the highlight of this show is Jason Robert Brown’s layered, beautiful, and complicated music, and Steve Goers did an excellent job of directing the entire cast to execute the challenging score very well…the dense harmonies were blended beautifully.” Featured actor Noah Ricketts, as Jim Conley, was “the whole explosive package…he commanded the stage.” Of Hanson and Richter’s lighting design, the panelists reported, “Both designers created a world that supported the story being told. …good use of color and atmosphere.” The production as a whole was “powerful” and “superb”; “an emotionally engaging, musically complex production that was staged and performed with great heart and talent.”

PARADE continues through April 21st. Tickets can be purchased at www.thecarnegie.com.

Final LCT awards will be determined at the end of the season and announced at the LCT gala in the spring.

The League of Cincinnati Theatres was founded in 1999 to strengthen, nurture and promote Cincinnati’s theatre community. LCT provides its member companies and individual members with education, resources and services to enhance the quality and exposure of the theatre community in Cincinnati and increase community awareness, attendance and involvement. More information about the League can be found at www.leagueofcincytheatres.com.

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