Monthly Archives: December 2017

THE PILLOWMAN to Open January 26th

FT_The Pillowman logoThe setting is the aftermath of a series of gruesome child murders that take place in an unnamed totalitarian police state. A writer whose macabre fairy tales bear an eerie resemblance to the recent murders is interrogated by police officers who suspect a connection between the stories and the killings. What follows is a hard-hitting examination of the power, purpose, and nature of art.

Falcon Theatre’s third production of its 2017-18 season is Martin McDonagh’s bone-chilling black comedy The Pillowman, opening January 26. British Theatre Guide says the play has “hidden depths that will leave the amateur psychologists in the audience with much food for thought.” Curtain Up calls it “a riveting and very original theatrical nightmare” and “a thrills-and-chills examination of the storyteller’s art.”

The Pillowman is Falcon’s second production of a McDonagh play in three years. The Beauty Queen of Leenane was staged as part of Falcon’s 2015-16 season. Beauty Queen director Ed Cohen returns to direct Pillowman.

Playwright McDonagh has made a name for himself over the past twenty years as a writer of gripping stories that exhibit a dark humor. McDonagh also was screenwriter and director for the recent film Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.

Director Cohen sees McDonagh’s humor as a device to throw the audience off kilter…and off the scent of the trail. McDonagh often leads his audience down a path that ends up in a place that they don’t suspect. “In this case,” Cohen says, “humor is used to keep the audience guessing. Is this real? Or is it an absurdist piece? Is the humor to relieve tension or to heighten the horror?”

The Falcon production features Rory Sheridan as Katurian, Michael Monks as Michal, Joe Hornbaker as Tupolski, and Nathan Tubbs as Ariel. Performances are at 8 P.M. on January 26, 27 and February 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, and 10. Tickets are $22 for Adults and $15 for students (with valid i.d.). For tickets, go to falcontheater.net or call (513) 479-6783ADVISORY: This play contains graphically violent content.

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STELLA AND LOU Runs Jan. 19-Feb. 4

DTG_Stella and Lou logoSTELLA AND LOU
Dayton Theatre Guild
Jan. 19-Feb. 4
Dayton

Directed by Gary Thompson
Produced by Barbara Jorgensen

Cast: Amy Taint as Stella, Geoff Burkman as Lou & Adam Clevenger as Donnie

Lou’s South Philadelphia bar is the kind of place where the same faces sit on the same barstools seven nights a week, drowning their sorrows into countless mugs of beer. Lou is happy to run the place and enjoy time with Stella when she stops in. But Stella has decided they need to take the next step in their relationship –or she’s moving to Florida. This funny, wise, and tender story is a mid-life portrait of friendship, and maybe more.

  • Fri-Sat, Jan. 19-20 at 8pm
  • Sun, Jan. 21 at 3pm
  • Fri, Jan. 26 at 8pm
  • Sat, Jan. 27 at 5pm
  • Sun, Jan. 28 at 3pm
  • Fri, Feb. 2 at 8pm
  • Sat, Feb. 3 at 5pm
  • Sun, Feb. 4 at 3pm

Official page |

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THE GIVER Runs Jan. 19-Feb. 4

THT_The Giver logoTHE GIVER
Town Hall Theatre
Jan. 19-Feb. 4
Centerville

Official cast list |

Follows the journey of Jonas as he struggles in a community where sameness is valued and there is a land with no color or memory. Jonas has been assigned as a memory keeper for his community. While learning of the past, present, and future, Jonas must decide if sameness is really worth it all. Ages 8 and up.

  • Fri, Jan. 19 at 7pm
  • Sat-Sun, Jan. 20-21 at 3pm
  • Fri, Jan. 26 at 7pm
  • Sat, Jan. 27 at 3pm & 7pm
  • Sun, Jan. 28 at 3pm
  • Fri, Feb. 2 at 7pm
  • Sat-Sun, Feb. 3-4 at 3pm

Official page |

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Auditions Announced for CHAMPAGNE GODS at Clifton Players

CP_logoClifton Players will be holding audition for some of the open roles in their next show
CHAMPAGNE GODS by Emily Dendinger. Seeking non-union actors, positions are paid.

Auditions will be held Thursday December 28 at 7:00 at The Liberty Exhibition Hall (3938 Spring Grove Ave). Please bring resumes and headshots if available. Auditions will be cold readings from the script. More information on the show is listed below. Please email Mindy Heithaus with any questions at timelessred@gmail.com.

Show dates: April 27-May 12. Shows held on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, with one Monday show May 7

Rehearsals: Week of April 8 thru opening of show

Synopsis: CHAMPAGNE GODSs by Emily Dendinger
Holly has made the greatest archeological discovery of the 21st century—an oracle of the god Apollo that shows you the person you’re meant to spend your life with. However, when Holly decides that there’s more to life than archeology, her colleague Will takes it upon himself to change her mind. Set among the marble halls of the British Museum on the night of a New Years Eve gala, chaos ensues as love turns everything topsy turvy. A throwback to the screwball comedies of the 1940s, CHAMPAGNE GODS is a romantic romp about fate, farce and fidelity.

Character Descriptions

  • Arthur Davinport- British, forties, male
    An archeological financier, in love with his young wife but not quite over the death of his first wife *(precast)
  • Gwendolyn Davinport-American, late twenties, female
    Looks like a trophy wife but actually very sweet and loving
  • Ethan Davinport- British, fifteen, male
    An old soul who likes scheming and Groucho Marx , a bit nerdy but fun
  • Holly Stevens- British, early thirties, female
    Smart like Katharine Hepburn, an archeologist who used to be with Will but is now engaged to someone else *(precast)
  • Will Dewhurst- American, early thirties, male
    Charming and funny, like Cary Grant, in love with Holly, an archeologist
  • Clarissa Halloway- British, late forties, female
    A curator for the British Museum, single and proud *(precast)

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Legends Will Rock Cincinnati Playhouse in MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET

PIP_Million Dollar Quartet logoTony Award-winning Broadway musical revives the music of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins in electrifying production Jan. 20-Feb. 18

CINCINNATI — The Tony Award-winning MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET will take Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park audiences on an exciting step back in time beginning Jan. 20, 2018, where they can relive the impromptu jam sessions of Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Elvis Presley. The electrifying musical will run through Feb. 18 in the Playhouse’s Marx Theatre.

For fans of music, the show brings to life some of the 20th century’s most beloved musicians and includes performances of “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Walk the Line, “Great Balls of Fire” and “Hound Dog.” For newcomers, the powerhouse production will introduce audiences to some of the best music in modern history that likely inspired their favorites as well.

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET not only relives a historical evening of music but also provides a snapshot of the profound moment in time that rock ‘n’ roll became a cultural force to be reckoned with,” explained Blake Robison, artistic director of the Playhouse. “Most of the audience members know what icons these musicians would become, but their characters don’t. It’s fun to imagine them at the beginning of it all and to examine their relationships with each other.

The musical, which Chicago Sun-Times called “a breakneck hour and 45 minutes of rock ‘n’ roll heaven,” earned three Tony Award nominations, including one for best musical, during its Broadway run.  It’s based on the true events that occurred on Dec. 4, 1956, when the artists discovered by Sam Phillips, known as the “grandfather of rock and roll,” spent a serendipitous evening together in the recording studio of Sun Records.

On that fateful night, Carl Perkins was scheduled for a recording session, an attempt to follow up his blockbuster single “Blue Suede Shoes,” which that spring had become Sun Records’ first national hit and certified million-seller. Accompanying Perkins on the piano was a relative unknown named Jerry Lee Lewis, whose own tune “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” would be released just a few weeks later. Johnny Cash was good friends with Carl Perkins, so he stopped by to lend support to the session. Earlier that year, he leapt into the national spotlight with “I Walk the Line,” his first crossover success after country hits such as “Folsom Prison Blues.”

The last to arrive that day was the biggest star in the group, Elvis Presley, back in Memphis after a brief stint in Vegas. For Presley, 1956 was the year he, too, became a household name, thanks to three number one songs, no less than 11 national television appearances and the release of his debut feature film, Love Me Tender.

“When Sam Phillips discovered these artists and then when he was doing all these recordings, it’s sort of like the beginning of rock ‘n’ roll,” said Hunter Foster, the show’s director, in an interview with Hollywood Soapbox. “Carl Perkins influenced the Beatles, and Jerry Lee Lewis influenced Elton John. And Elvis obviously influenced a host of artists all the way to Michael Jackson. … You really see the origin, almost like ground zero, of the music that we know today. There really wasn’t that much of that kind of stuff before it, and Sam really created something. They call him the father of rock ‘n’ roll, and it’s really true.”

Hunter Foster, who created the role of music producer and Sun Records owner Sam Phillips in the original Broadway run, will direct the Playhouse’s production.  Foster launched to theatre stardom as an actor in Urinetown The Musical. He also has appeared on Broadway in The Bridges of Madison County, Hands on a Hardbody, The Producers, Footloose and Little Shop of Horrors,for which he earned a Tony Award nomination. As a writer, he penned a stage adaptation of the movie Clue, as well as the books for two off-Broadway musicals: Jasper in Deadland and Summer of ’42.

Beyond the music, MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET examines the relationships between the performers and the players behind the scenes. Industry politics prompt everyone to evaluate their friendships, loyalty and ambition.

SPECIAL EVENTS

Tasting Series: Three-Course Bourbon Experience
Part of our on-going tasting series, a three-course bourbon tasting will be offered before each Friday evening performance of MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET and is priced at $35 per person, and does not include a ticket to the show.

Playhouse Perspectives: Hunter Foster
Saturday, Jan. 21, 6 p.m. – 7 p.m., at the Playhouse
A conversation with the director of MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, Tony Award-nominated Broadway star Hunter Foster. With years of experience with MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET on his resume, Foster will provide an in-depth perspective of the production. Learn how he keeps the show fresh, why he continues to return to this musical and more about his seasoned career in theatre. All Playhouse Perspective Events are free and open to the public, but registration is required. Please call the Box Office at 513-421-3888 to reserve your spot.

Lyric Writing Workshop
Saturday, Jan. 27, 10 a.m. – noon, at the Playhouse
Channel your inner Carl Perkins, the first poet of rock ‘n’ roll. Discover how to tell your story through song by focusing on the words themselves. Registration is $50, and can be completed at cincyplay.com/learn or by calling the Box Office at 513-421-3888.

TICKETS
Prices for MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET start at $35 depending on seat selection and performance day. Tickets for children and teens are $30 or $45 based on seating location. Prices subject to change. Student tickets are just $15 on the day of the show. Plus, Sunday is College Night, with tickets to all 7 p.m. performances just $10. In addition to calling the Box Office at 513-421-3888, tickets can also be purchased by visiting the Playhouse website at www.cincyplay.com.

ACCESS
The Playhouse is fully accessible. Large print programs and hearing enhancement receivers are available upon request.

BOX OFFICE
Call 513-421-3888 or 800-582-3208 toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana; or 513-345-2248 – TDD access (Telecommunications Device for the Deaf).

SPONSORS
The Robert S. Marx Theatre Season is presented by Schueler Group. Season Design Sponsor is Macy’s. Honorary Co-Producer is Linda and Gary Greenberg. Design Sponsor is John and Jennifer Stein. Artist Sponsor is Janney Montgomery Scott.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of more than 40,000 contributors to the ArtsWave Community Campaign.

The Ohio Arts Council helps fund the Playhouse with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.

The Playhouse also receives funding from the Shubert Foundation.

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