Monthly Archives: March 2015

2015-2016 Season Announced for Village Players

VP_logoWait Until Dark
by Frederick Knott
September 18 – 26, 2015

My Friend, the Fox
by William Glennon
November 13 – 22, 2015

Dearly Departed
by David Bottrell and Jessie Jones
February 12 – 20, 2016

Girls of the Garden Club
by John Patrick
April 22 – 30, 2016

For more information visit http://www.villageplayers.biz/

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The Folger Shakespeare Library Wants to Hear from YOU

CSC_FolgerWhy does Shakespeare matter?  The Folger wants to hear from YOU!

CSC_logoCincinnati Shakespeare Company is collaborating with the Folger Shakespeare Library to better understand what you need to enjoy and connect with Shakespeare. We are inviting you to weigh in by taking a brief survey that can be found online here.

All survey respondents will be entered into a drawing to win one of ten $100 Visa Gift Cards. Your ideas will help inspire programs and services to enrich Shakespeare experiences across the country. Please take the survey today!
Survey closes on March 25, 2015.

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STEEL MAGNOLIAS Runs April 17-18

RSC_Steel Magnolias logoSTEEL MAGNOLIAS
Presented by RiverStage Community Theatre
April 17-18
New Richmond

Directed by Ivory Mazur

Cast: Judy Littlefield as M’lynn, Pam Schreiner as Shelby, Judy Bowling as Truvy, Alyssa Taylor as Annelle, Susan Gerding as Ouiser & Linda Shuck as Clariee

The action is set in Truvy’s beauty salon in Chinquapin, Louisiana, where all the ladies who are “anybody” come to have their hair done. Helped by her eager new assistant, Annelle (who is not sure whether or not she is still married), the outspoken, wise-cracking Truvy dispenses shampoos and free advice to the town’s rich curmudgeon, Ouiser, (“I’m not crazy, I’ve just been in a bad mood for forty years”); an eccentric millionaire, Miss Clairee, who has a raging sweet tooth; and the local social leader, M’Lynn, whose daughter, Shelby (the prettiest girl in town), is about to marry a “good ole boy.” Filled with hilarious repartee and not a few acerbic but humorously revealing verbal collisions, the play moves toward tragedy when, in the second act, the spunky Shelby (who is a diabetic) risks pregnancy and forfeits her life. The sudden realization of their mortality affects the others, but also draws on the underlying strength—and love—which give the play, and its characters, the special quality to make them truly touching, funny and marvelously amiable company in good times and bad.

  • Fri, April 17 at 7pm
  • Sat, April 18 at 2pm & 7pm

Facebook event |

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LCT Review of TRANSMIGRATION

LCT_VThis review has been reposted courtesy of the League of Cincinnati Theatres. For more LCT reviews click here to visit their reviews page.

If you haven’t seen Transmigration, the CCM student written marathon of short, 30 minute plays, make a plan to go next year! It’s fun, fast, and furious and you get a peak into what’s on students’ minds. Many of the vignettes centered on making some sort of “migration, or journey to find something, leave something, or transform,” sort of like moving from schooling into the professional world and working their way through the intense four year journey through the CCM odyssey.

CCM_Transmigration photoThe students have a scant 2 weeks to write, rehearse, and perform the 30 minute pieces. It shows what these talented students can do with very little of the technical support they enjoy in a full production at CCM. Here’s a taste from each. Sadly, there are no students’ names in the program for individual praise:

Coulter Cliffs is sort of Grand Budapest Hotel meets The Shining. A hotel where once you enter, you can’t leave until a new person arrives to provide a swap. The audience votes on who can leave (or “win”) based on the most compelling story. Sort of like what happens when they graduate. Some have been there for 149 years—they never age of course. Who knows what’s waiting for them in the “real” world. The characters who made bold choices were the most successful in winning their escape. It was enjoyable and fun connecting to the characters.

A Fool’s Paradise was a favorite among the reviewers and is a community theatre in Boca Raton Florida; probably the worst graduation nightmare for these talented students! Hilarious musical compositions by the students and sung with great bravado, most notably by the “Mayor” of Boca, the old curmudgeon who leads this cast. The director-diva,Peaches Montgomery, the scariest fool in the “paradise” for her power and control over her universe, exhorts us to have a “Peachy Day” as she blindly props up her son, the piano player, who played expertly. We meet familiar characters like the perennial leads, so often seen in community theatre. Here they are brother and sister vying for Romeo and Juliet and happily provide the audience an “eeewww” factor in the love scenes. The football hero turned “actor” with Brad Pitt good looks, and the fresh newbie, are all drawn, no doubt, from the students’ own pre-CCM experiences.

Seven Feet Under was different from the other concept pieces and drew on a more dramatic through line that didn’t rely solely on humor. The vain and selfish Snow White sends the seven miners on a mission below to find “the treasure” and must face the monster the get it, another graduation truth. Nice monster puppet was created with cardboard and burlap and even some dry ice for effect.   The “dwarves” were a good ensemble and played on their strengths as actors so that we very quickly identified and cared about their journey and demise.

cult(ured) was akin to drinking the Kool-Aid in this woodland cult of characters led by an iconic mother nature figure trolling for recruits–just like CCM. The characters, like the sanguine loner who promoted cocaine-flavored yogurt, were engaging, and the show had smartly showed transitions and the passage of time.

Neutral and Non Partisan: Very well written and performed! This cautionary tale about the very real possibility of big brother watching random, “average” Americans under the guise of psychological research. This employed great use of multi-media combined with layered performances.

Mandatory Fun:  This was the only piece that was less than enthusiastically received by the panelists. In a robot game show where humans battle each other, the plot seemed too obvious and the characters shallow.

Well, you can’t win them all but even with a clinker or two, this is an exceptional evening celebrating enormous creativity and, as we always know we’re going to get from CCM,talent!

For more information on the production, click here.

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Auditions Announced for SHREK The Musical by Queen City Productions

Queen City Productions will be holding auditions for its first production of the 2015-2016 season; SHREK The Musical. It’s the hilarious, family-friendly film transported to stage with show-stopping numbers and larger than life characters!

Auditions will be held at Thomas More College on:
Thursday, April 16th from 6:00-9:00pm
Saturday, April 18th from 3:00-9:00pm

Invited callbacks will be:
Sunday, April 19th from 6:00-9:00pm

All auditionees should be at least 7 years of age and should prepare a song that best features their vocal ability and their personality. All songs should be from a musical or a Disney movie and can be either acapella, on a cd or on an ipod/tablet. Everyone will also be asked to do a cold read from the script. There will be a tap dance audition for anyone who can tap and for anyone auditioning for Fiona, Teen Fiona or Young Fiona. Please bring tap shoes if you have them.

Auditions will be done in groups starting approximately every 30 minutes. To schedule and audition, please email us at queencityproductions@yahoo.com.

Rehearsals will begin around May 3rd and the show is tentatively scheduled for June 19-28. All rehearsals and performances will be at Thomas More College.

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