Yearly Archives: 2013

SISTER ACT Runs April 30-May 12

BIC_Sister ActSISTER ACT
Presented by Broadway in Cincinnati
April 30-May 12
Downtown

Reviews: Enquirer | Talkin’ Broadway | CityBeat |

Local media coverage: Enquirer article |

Sister Act is Broadway’s feel-amazing musical comedy smash! The New York Post calls it “ridiculously fun,” and audiences are jumping to their feet in total agreement! Featuring original music by 8-time Oscar® winner Alan Menken (Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, Little Shop of Horrors), Sister Act tells the story of Deloris Van Cartier, a wannabe diva whose life takes a surprising turn when she witnesses a crime and the cops hide her in the last place anyone would think to look—a convent! Under the suspicious watch of Mother Superior, Deloris helps her fellow sisters find their voices as she unexpectedly rediscovers her own. A sparkling tribute to the universal power of friendship, Sister Act is reason to rejoice!

  • Tue-Fri, April 30-May 3 at 8pm
  • Sat, May 4 at 2pm & 8pm
  • Sun, May 5 at 1pm & 6:30pm
  • Tue-Fri, May 7-10 at 8pm
  • Sat, May 11 at 2pm & 8pm
  • Sun, May 12 at 1pm & 6:30pm

Official page with online ticketing |

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Hal Holbrook in MARK TWAIN TONIGHT! | Fri., May 17 | Aronoff Center

Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain.

Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain.

CINCINNATI, OH –­­ Emmy® and Tony® Award-winner and Oscar®-nominee Hal Holbrook returns to the Aronoff Center on Friday, May 17 at 8:00 PM in Mark Twain Tonight! – his acclaimed award-winning one-man show which celebrates the humor, satirical wit, and timeless observations of Mark Twain. This must-see theatrical event is a presentation of Cincinnati Arts Association’s 2012-13 Season.

Hal Holbrook has never been able to quit Mark Twain and probably never will. He has toured the show in some part of every year since 1954, with over 2,200 performances, making 2013 the 59th consecutive year for this remarkable one-man show. Mark Twain Tonight! has become perhaps the longest-running show in theatre history. Holbrook adds to his Twain material every year, editing and changing it to fit the times, and has mined over sixteen hours of Twain with more coming all the time. He has no set program – he chooses material as he goes along.

Hal Holbrook.

Hal Holbrook

Holbrook’s Mark Twain characterization grew out of an honors project at Denison University, in which he and his first wife Ruby created a two-person show, playing characters from Shakespeare to Twain. Holbrook’s first solo performance as Mark Twain was at the Lock Haven State Teachers College in Pennsylvania in 1954. While hunting for a job in New York, the show was his desperate alternative to selling hats or running elevators to keep his family alive. The following year, Holbrook pursued the Twain character at night in a Greenwich Village night club and was spotted by Ed Sullivan, who gave his Twain national television exposure.

In 1959, after five years of researching Mark Twain and honing his material in front of countless audiences in small towns all over America, he opened at a tiny theatre off-Broadway in New York. He was a stunning overnight success, as stunning to Holbrook as anyone else. “The critics went wild.” (Associated Press). “Mr. Holbrook’s material is uproarious, his ability to hold an audience by acting is brilliant.” (New York Times). “Uncanny. A dazzling display of virtuosity.” (The New Yorker). “One of the treasures of the American Theatre.” (Life Magazine).

After a twenty-two week run in New York, he toured the country again, performed for President Eisenhower, and appeared at the Edinburgh Festival. The State Department sent him on a tour of Europe, during which he became the first American dramatic attraction to go behind the Iron Curtain following World War II. At 36-years-old, he was a star who had never appeared in a Broadway play, a nighttime television show, or a movie.

With his success came roles on Broadway; at the acclaimed Shakespeare Festival Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut; and with the original Lincoln Center Repertory Company in New York, among others. He continued to do Mark Twain every year, and in 1966, on Broadway, his second New York engagement won him a TonyÒ Award and a Drama Critics’ Circle Award. This was followed in 1967 by a ninety-minute CBS television special of Mark Twain Tonight!, which was nominated for an Emmy® Award and seen by an audience of 22 million.

Throughout his long career, Holbrook has continued to perform Mark Twain every year, including his third and fourth New York engagements in 1977 and 2005; and a world tour in 1985, the 150th anniversary of Mark Twain’s birth.

Hal Holbrook
Stage-and-screen legend Hal Holbrook was born in Cleveland in 1925, and enjoyed an illustrious and acclaimed early career in the theater, highlighted by his lauded one-man show Mark Twain Tonight!

In 1970, after a dozen plays in New York, he was brought to Hollywood to star in a controversial television series, The Senator, which won eight Emmy® Awards and was cancelled in one year. In the 39 years since then, Holbrook has done some 50 television movies and mini-series, been nominated for twelve Emmys® and won five for The Senator (1971), Pueblo (1974), Best Actor of the Year (1974), Sandburg’s Lincoln (1976), and as host and narrator of Portrait of America (1989). He has appeared in two sitcoms: Designing Women and Evening Shade, and has made guest appearances on The West Wing, the sitcoms Becker and Hope & Faith, The Sopranos, NCIS, and two episodes of ER in 2008. During the 2010-11 season, Holbrook appeared in Sons of Anarchy and The Event.

Equally at home on the big screen, Holbrook’s movie career began with The Group in 1966 when he was 41-years-old. Since then, moviegoers have seen him in nearly 40 films including Magnum Force, Midway, All The President’s Men, Julia, Capricorn One, The Fog, Star Chamber, Creepshow, Wall Street, The Firm, The Bachelor, Waking The Dead, Men of Honor, The Majestic, Shade, Killshot, Into the Wild (written and directed by Sean Penn, for which he received his first Academy Award nomination), and That Evening Sun (which premiered at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin in March 2009). In 2012, Holbrook was seen in Steven Speilberg’s Academy Award-winning film Lincoln and Gus Van Sant’s Promised Land.

In addition to his work on the screen, Holbrook has constantly returned to the stage: in New York (Buried Inside Extra, 1983; The Country Girl, 1984; King Lear 1990; An American Daughter, 1997); at regional theatres (Our Town, Uncle Vanya, Merchant Of Venice, King Lear, A Life In The Theatre, Be My Baby, and Southern Comforts, the last two with his wife Dixie Carter); and a National Tour of Death of a Salesman.

In September 2011, Harold, the first of two volumes of Holbrook’s memoirs, was published. He continues to work on the second volume, covering the years since Harold ended.

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Cincinnati Arts Association SPONSORS

Season Sponsors: AMERITAS (Founding Season Sponsor), The P&G FUND of The Greater Cincinnati Foundation, LOCAL12 WKRC, FIFTH THIRD BANK (Lifetime Endowment Partner)

“CAA PRESENTS” SPONSORS: Coldwell Banker/West Shell, Heidelberg Distributing, Macy’s, Ultimate Air Shuttle, Wells Fargo Insurance Services USA, Inc.

SEASON PRESENTING SPONSORS: Cincinnati Bell, CityBeat, Cincinnati Herald, Furniture Fair, Millennium Hotel

CALENDAR INFORMATION

  • WHAT: Hal Holbrook in Mark Twain Tonight!
  • WHEN: Friday, May 17, 2013 – 8:00PM
  • WHERE: Aronoff Center for the Arts – Procter & Gamble Hall
  • PRICES: $65 • $50 • $40 • $30
  • INFO: Emmy® and Tony® Award-winner and Oscar®-nominee Hal Holbrook returns in his acclaimed award-winning one-man show which celebrates the humor, satirical wit, and timeless observations of Mark Twain. For more than 50 years, Holbrook has enthralled audiences around the world with Twain’s unique take on politics, culture and the world. Holbrook edits and changes his show to fit the times – he has more than sixteen hours of Twain’s material in his repertoire – and makes each performance a unique and memorable experience. A must-see treasure of the American theatre!

TICKET INFORMATION – on sale now

  • www.CincinnatiArts.org
  • (513) 621-ARTS [2787]
  • Aronoff Center Ticket Office
  • Group sales (10 or more): (513) 977-4157

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BAREFOOT IN THE PARK Runs April 26-May 12

TDW_Barefoot in the ParkBAREFOOT IN THE PARK
Presented by The Drama Workshop
April 26-May 12
Cheviot

Directed by Laura Boggs
Produced by Mary Stone with Leslie Roden

Cast: David Trump as Paul, Jennifer Rhodenhiser as Corie, – Bob Brunner as Victor Velasco, Bett Kooris as Mother, Ray Lebowski as Telephone Repair Man & Doug Tumeo as Delivery Man

A conservative young lawyer and his irrepressible bride struggle with marital discord after the ecstasy of the honeymoon gives way to the reality of setting up housekeeping in a five-flight walk-up. Throw in an emotionally repressed mother-in-law, a bohemian upstairs neighbor, and a bottle of Ouzo, and you end up with a laugh-a-minute comedy that will keep you in stitches! Suitable for ages 14 and up.

  • Fri-Sat, April 26-27 at 8pm
  • Sun, April 28 at 2pm
  • Fri-Sat, May 3-4 at 8pm
  • Sun, May 5 at 2pm
  • Fri-Sat, May 10-11 at 8pm
  • Sun, May 12 at 2pm

Official page with online ticketing |

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THE BOOK OF MORMON Auditions April 14-15

BIC_Book of MormonTHE BOOK OF MORMON will be coming to Cincinnati to hold auditions April 14th and 15th by appointment only. We are looking to build our files for future replacements for all three companies (Broadway, 1st National Tour, Jumamosi Tour) for the roles of ARNOLD CUNNINGHAM, KEVIN PRICE, NABALUGI and ELDER MCKINLEY etc. (See role descriptions below.)

Anyone interested in auditioning for any or all of these companies should submit a picture and resume and any additional materials to jrichcasting@gmail.com by 5PM Saturday, April 13th 2013. Please make sure you put the City Name of the audition in the subject line. Due to the amount of emails we receive, we may not be able to respond to every submission. Please note that submitting does not guarantee an appointment. Both Union and Non-Union should submit.

SHOW INFO:

  • Producer: Anne Garefino & Scott Rudin
  • Director: Trey Parker & Casey Nicholaw
  • Book, Music & Lyrics: Robert Lopez, Matt Stone & Trey Parker
  • Music Supervisor: Stephen Oremus
  • Choreographer: Casey Nicholaw
  • Cincinnati Casting Director: Jeremy Rich
  • Casting Director: Carrie Gardner

ARNOLD CUNNINGHAM (Early 20’s-Late 20’s to play 18): Caucasian. Seeking a true character actor. Must be a physical contrast to the other good looking, All-American Mormons. Dweeby, dorky, nerdy, overweight, or all four combined. Arnold is a pathological liar but his heart is in the right place. He is a total screw-up but not for lack of trying, he always wants to do the right thing. Must be fantastic comedic actor who sings well. Tenor. We are also particularly interested in comics who sing.

KEVIN PRICE (Early 20’s-Late 20’s to play 18): Caucasian. All-American. Very handsome. Head of the class, always optimistic. Heroic Mormon. Must be a great comedic actor and a fantastic pop-rock high tenor to a B. Should be at least 5’10 or taller.

NABALUNGI (18- Late 20’s to play 20): Black African. Pretty. Takes the hardships of her village very seriously and wants to help her people find a better life. Must have great comic timing. Strong Alto. Belt to an E.

ELDER MCKINLEY (early 20’s to late 20’s to play 18): Caucasian. District leader of the Mormon missionaries in Uganda. All- American, wide-eyed and hopeful. Often struggles to cover his flamboyant tendencies and adhere to his Mormon morals. Must be a fantastic comedic actor and great singer. High Baritone who can pop out high Bb’s for comedic effect.

[MAFALA HATIMBI] (40’s): Black African. Father of Nabalungi. Has come to accept the hardships in the village where they live but is a discerning community leader and tries to bring joy to their lives. Must be a great comedic actor and singer. Also interested in actors who sing.

PRICE’S DAD/MISSION PRESIDENT/VARIOUS ROLES) (40’s): Caucasian. All- American good looks and physique. Plays several parts from the perfect picture of a head of a Mormon household, to the stern missionary president, to Joseph Smith, so must have the ability to be transformative. Must be a great comedic actor and good singer. High Baritone to an Ab.

[GENERAL] (Late 20’s to Late 30’s): Black African. The general is a warlord in Uganda who is terrorizing the local villagers. A physically threatening and intimidating figure who is a great comedic actor and singer. Baritone to an F.

[FEMALE AFRICAN VILLAGERS] Late 20’s to late 30’s. Black African. Seeking great comedic actresses with excellent singing voices. Seeking Altos, Gospel Sopranos and Gospel Belters of all physical types.

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PIP’s GO, DOG. GO! Runs April 5-May 19

PIP_Go Dog Go1GO, DOG. GO!
Presented by Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s Off the Hill Series
April 5-May 19
Various

P.D. Eastman’s beloved children’s book comes to life on stage! Big dogs and little dogs, black dogs and white dogs and all dogs in between delve into life with gusto, creating a visual spectacle of movement and color for audience members of all ages. The dogs swim and play. They howl at the moon. They ride a Ferris wheel. They sing, dance and climb trees. It all culminates in the greatest Dog Party of them all in this rollicking, musical free-for-all. For ages 5 and up.

  • Friday, April 5, 7:30 p.m., Dramakinetics at Presbyterian North (Northside)
  • Saturday, April 6, 10:30 a.m., Woman’s Art Club (Mariemont)
  • Saturday, April 6, 3:00 p.m., Sharonville Fine Arts Center
  • Sunday, April 7, 3:00 p.m., Evendale Cultural Arts Center
  • Friday, April 12, 7:00 p.m., The Drama Workshop at the Glenmore Playhouse (Cheviot)
  • Saturday, April 13, 3:00 p.m., Madeira Elementary School
  • Saturday, April 13, 7:00 p.m., District A at Pleasant Ridge Presbyterian
  • Sunday April 14, 3:00 p.m., The Lebanon Theatre Company, Inc.
  • Friday, April 19, 7:00 p.m., Grove Banquet Hall at Springfield Township
  • Saturday April 20, 1:00 p.m., Sunset Players at Dunham Recreation Center (West Price Hill)
  • Saturday, April 20, 7:00 p.m., Blue Ash Recreation Center
  • Sunday, April 21, 1:30 p.m., Campbell County Library (Ft. Thomas/Carrico)
  • Friday, April 26, 7:00 p.m., Oxford Community Arts Center
  • Saturday, April 27, 1:00 p.m., Tall Institute (Norwood/Oakley)
  • Saturday, April 27, 7:00 p.m., Circus Mojo (Ludlow, KY)
  • Sunday, April 28, 1:00 p.m., Mayerson JCC (Amberley)
  • Friday, May 3, 7:00 p.m., Boone County Library (Burlington)
  • Thursday, May 9, 6:30 p.m., Kilgour Elementary School (Hyde Park)
  • Saturday, May 11, 3:00 p.m., Miami University-VOA Learning Center (West Chester)
  • Saturday, May 11, 7:00 p.m., Baker Hunt Art and Culture Center (Covington)
  • Sunday, May 12, 2:00 p.m., Clifton Cultural Arts Center
  • Tuesday, May 14, 6:30 p.m., Silverton Paideia Academy
  • Saturday, May 18, 11:30 a.m., Anderson Center
  • Sunday, May 18, 5:30 p.m., The Carnegie Center of Columbia Tusculum
  • Sunday, May 19, 3:00 p.m., Mason-Deerfield Arts Alliance at Kings High School Auditorium

Official page |

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