Monthly Archives: May 2014

CFF14: LIGATURE MARKS

CFF_Ligature MarksLIGATURE MARKS
Presented as part of the Cincinnati Fringe Festival ’14
Art Academy Commons
Over-the-Rhine 

Reviews: CityBeat |

Jill can’t live without Terry. So it’s up to both of them – and Terry’s favorite online multiplayer game NOIR – to make sure she never has to. This noir comedy from critically-acclaimed, award-winning playwright Mac Rogers charts a twisted romance between two of life’s losers as they take one final shot to be something other than what they are.

  • Wed, May 28 at 7pm
  • Fri, May 30 at 7pm
  • Sat, June 1 at 3pm
  • Tue, June 3 at 7pm

Official page with online ticketing |

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MPI Announces Auditions for TAKING MY TURN

mpi_logoDirector Dennis Murphy will hold auditions for the Mariemont Players production of TAKING MY TURN, the award-winning, critically acclaimed musical about people “in their prime” performed by people “in their prime” at 7:00pm on Monday, June 2nd and Tuesday, June 3rd at the Walton Creek Theater, 4101 Walton Creek Road (just east of Mariemont). TAKING MY TURN has music by Gary Williams, lyrics by Will Holt and book by Robert H. Livingston. This production is being produced by Michael Sauer and NancyAnn Storey, with musical direction by John Nixon.

Those auditioning are asked to bring a resume and photo and to prepare two 16-bar contrasting songs from pre-70s Broadway, Cole Porter, Gershwin or the like. Their will also be readings from the script.

The show calls for 8 performers, 4 male and 4 female, who are 50 years and older. One male and one female are African-American. This is a wonderful opportunity for veteran performers to shine onstage!

The score for TAKING MY TURN includes songs from a variety of inspirations: Broadway, classical, waltzes, ballads, jazz and gospel. The spoken words represent stories, poems, remembrances, reflections and even complaints collected from interviews with everyday senior citizens. The result is fresh, a little feisty, full of poignancy and of humor. TAKING MY TURN was the winner of the 1984 Outer Critic’s Circle Award for Best Lyrics/Music and a nominee for the Drama Desk Award for Best Musical. The original production which starred Cissy Houston, Margaret Whiting, Marni Nixon and others was filmed by PBS and shown on “Great Performances.”

Rehearsals for this production will begin in late July, with performances September 12 through September 28, 2014.

For more information, contact the director at 513-921-2909.

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CFF14: IKELUS

CFF_IkelusIKELUS
Presented as part of the Cincinnati Fringe Festival ’14
The School for Creative and Performing Arts
Over-the-Rhine 

IKELUS is an evocative story of a young man’s journey to find acceptance in a world unlike his dreams. This production captures, through the lens of a teenage boy, the importance of feeling emotion in everyday life. This compelling story follows a besieged Ike along his journey as he struggles with Narcolepsy. As the story evolves, we begin to see how the struggle of one boy represents the common struggle everyone has with expressing themselves.

  • Fri, May 30 at 9:45pm
  • Sat, May 31 at 4:15pm

Official page with online ticketing |

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CSP(OH) Announces Auditions for INHERIT THE WIND

CSPO_logoCenterStage Players will hold auditions for their fall performance of INHERIT THE WIND at their performance venue – The North College Hill City Center (1500 W. Galbraith Road, Cincinnati, OH 45231)

Auditions will take place on Sunday, June 1st, 2-5 PM and Monday, June 2nd, 6:30-9:30 PM
(if necessary, call backs will be Wednesday, June 4th, 6:30-9:30 PM)

  • No appointment necessary. Auditioners will be taken in the approximate order of arrival.
  • Auditions will consist of readings from the script.
  • Rehearsals will begin with a kickoff meeting and party on or around Saturday, July 19th.
  • Show dates are September 26, 27 & 28 and October 2, 3 & 4, 2014.

INHERIT THE WIND
Written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee
Directed by Fred Hunt

INHERIT THE WIND is based on the 1925 Scopes “Monkey” Trial, in which a Tennessee high school science teacher named John T. Scopes (here Betram Cates), was convicted for teaching evolution to his high school students. Some of the characters in the play are fictional and some are based on the real Scopes trial’s participants, including the opposing attorneys Matthew Harrison Brady and Henry Drummond, based on the real Scopes trial’s opposing attorneys William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow.

Character Synopses (some parts might be doubled):

  • Matthew Harrison Brady – The prosecuting attorney. He is a talented orator and an experienced politician. He is a defender of fundamentalism and a self-proclaimed expert on the Bible. He is pompous and self-righteous.
  • Henry Drummond – The defense attorney engaged by the Baltimore Herald for Cates. Drummond is sophisticated, charming, and idealistic. When he defends Cates, he is defending the freedom of thought and “the right to be wrong.”
  • E.K. Hornbeck – A newspaper columnist for the Baltimore Herald who is sent to Hillsboro to cover Cates’ trial. Throughout the trial, he mocks Brady and his fundamentalist beliefs and the people of Hillsboro for their ignorant views about evolution.
  • Bertram Cates – The defendant in the trial, a quiet, modest 24-year-old science teacher who has been arrested for teaching evolution to his sophomore science class.
  • Reverend Jeremiah Brown – A fundamentalist preacher. As the spiritual leader of Hillsboro, he zealously believes in the literal interpretation of the Bible and is cruel and controlling.
  • Rachel Brown – A 22-year-old second-grade schoolteacher who is the daughter of Reverend Jeremiah Brown and a close friend of Cates.
  • Judge -The judge in Cates’ trial. He tries to remain impartial in spite of his religious beliefs.
  • Mrs. Brady – Brady’s wife. She mothers her husband, watching over his health and diet.
  • Meeker – The bailiff at the Hillsboro courthouse for many years. He is nonjudgmental and kind to Cates.
  • Melinda Loomis – A 12-year -old girl. Upon seeing Drummond, she screams that he’s the devil.
  • Howard Blair – A student in Cates’ science class. He testifies against Cates.
  • Mr. Goodfellow – The owner of a general store near the courthouse. He is more interested in running his business than in the arrival of Brady or the upcoming trial.
  • Mrs. Krebs – A member of the Hillsboro community. She plans a community picnic for the celebration of Brady’s arrival and voices her opinions in the courtroom during the trial.
  • Corkin – A local man who helps put up the banner that says, “Read Your Bible.”
  • Bollinger and Platt – Local men who await Brady’s train.
  • Mr. Bannister – A local man who is selected to be a member of the jury.
  • Mrs. McLain – A local woman who sells frond fans to people in the crowd awaiting the arrival of Brady’s train.
  • Mrs. Loomis – Melinda’s mother.
  • Hot Dog Seller – A local man who sells hot dogs to the crowd awaiting Brady’s arrival.
  • Mrs. Blair – Howard’s mother. She is a member of the Bible League and marches in the parade when Brady arrives.
  • Elijah – A hermit. He sells Bibles and voices his religious beliefs to the crowd of people awaiting Brady’s train. He tries to sell a Bible to Hornbeck.
  • Hurdy Gurdy Man – An organ grinder, accompanied by his monkey, who waits with the crowd of people for Brady’s arrival.
  • Timmy – A young boy who excitedly announces to the crowd of people that Brady’s train is coming.
  • Mayor – The mayor of Hillsboro. He gives a speech welcoming Brady and bestows upon him the title of Honorary Colonel in the State Militia.
  • Tom Davenport – District Attorney who assists Brady during the trial.
  • Jesse H. Dunlap – A farmer and cabinetmaker who is interviewed but rejected for jury duty.
  • George Sillers – A man on the jury.
  • Reuter’s Man – A reporter from Reuters News Agency.
  • Harry Y. Esterbrook – A radioman from WGN a radio station in Chicago.
  • Photographer, Scientists, Townspeople, Hawkers, Reporters, Jurors, Spectators – Ensemble roles with little or no lines.

If you have questions about the production, please feel free to contact the director, Fred Hunt (nwlsdhunt@fuse.net or 513.266.6755).

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CFF14: I HATE MY JOB AND OTHER TALES OF SQUANDERED POTENTIAL

CFF_I Hate My JobI HATE MY JOB AND OTHER TALES OF SQUANDERED POTENTIAL
Presented as part of the Cincinnati Fringe Festival ’14
Know Theatre
Over-the-Rhine 

Our jobs are rough. We are under-paid and under-appreciated, but we’re too young to be entitled to complain about that. So we made a dance about it. I HATE MY JOB AND OTHER TALES OF SQUANDERED POTENTIAL deals with our struggles to fit into a world that we are supposedly very lucky to be a part of, and the ways we wrestle with our constant awareness of this fact.

  • Fri, May 30 at 9:15pm
  • Sun, June 1 at 6pm

Official page with online ticketing |

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