Monthly Archives: October 2018

2019-2020 Season Announced by Mariemont Players

MPI_logoMariemont Players Inc. excited to announce our 19-20 season!!!

Is He Dead?
Adapted by David Ives
Directed by Michele Mascari
September 13-29, 2019
Comedy

Jean-Francois Millet, a young painter of genius, is in love with Marie Leroux but in debt to a villainous picture-dealer, Bastien Andre. Andre forecloses on Millet, threatening debtor’s prison unless Marie marries him. Millet realizes that the only way he can pay his debts and keep Marie from marrying Andre is to die, as it is only dead painters who achieve fame and fortune. Millet fakes his death and prospers, all while passing himself off as his own sister, the Widow Tillou. Now a rich “widow,” he must find a way to get out of a dress, return to life, and marry Marie.

Broadway Bound
By Neil Simon
November 8-24, 2019
Directed by Jerry Wiesenhahn
Comedy

Part three of Neil Simon’s acclaimed autobiographical trilogy finds Eugene and his older brother Stanley trying to break into the world of show business as professional comedy writers while coping with their parents break-up and eventual divorce. When their material is broadcast on the radio for the first time, the family is upset to hear a thinly-veiled portrait of themselves played for laughs.

Evelyn in Purgatory
By Topher Payne
Directed by Jennifer Keith
January 10-26, 2020
Dark Comedy

When a complaint is filed against one of the 70,000 teachers in New York’s public schools, they’re sent to a Reassignment Center, one of a series of empty offices in the Department of Education Building. There, they sit and wait for their case to be reviewed. Usually for months. Sometimes for over a year. A claim of improper behavior by a failing student lands Evelyn Reid in “the rubber room,” where she encounters a group of teachers, some guilty, some not, who have long since lost any hope of returning to a classroom. Over the course of the school year, these colleagues form an unlikely alliance, reminding each other of forgotten passions, emerging to face life outside in unexpected new directions. They also learn French and workshop a screenplay.

Earth and Sky
By Douglas Post
Directed by Jef Brown
March 13-29, 2020
Thriller

EARTH AND SKY is a poetic thriller about a would-be poet and part-time librarian named Sara McKeon whose lover of ten weeks, David Ames, is found dead one hot August morning in the city of Chicago. It appears that David, owner and manager of an expensive art-deco restaurant, may have been involved in several illicit activities including kidnapping, rape and murder. Unable to believe that the man she gave her heart to was a killer, and outraged that the police seem to have closed the book on the case, Sara begins her own investigation of the crime and is led deeper and deeper through the urban labyrinth into the contemporary underworld. As the detective story moves forward in time, scenes from the love affair take us back to the moment when Sara and David first met. Finally the plots converge, and Sara finds herself face to face with the person who murdered her beloved.

The Art of Dining
By Tina Howe
Directed by Laura Gossett
May 8-24, 2020
Comedy

Cal and Ellen are the owners and sole staff of a small, elegant gourmet restaurant. Cal’s main preoccupation is paying back the $75,000 it cost to start it up, and that means packing in the customers. Chef Ellen is preoccupied with the food’s quality and stopping Cal from sampling the ingredients. The diners act out their own private dramas over dinner and their conversations are exquisite burlesques of contemporary attitudes. There’s a sensual middle aged couple who go into paroxysms of ecstasy just reading the menu and then there’s three crass chic young career women. Finally, there’s Elizabeth, a maladroit, shy and neurotic writer who’s dining with her prospective publisher. Her actions and conversation are unintentionally hilarious and a delicious example of how not to act and what not to talk about while dining.

Somewhere in Between
By Craig Pospisil
Directed by Dan Maloney
July 10-26, 2020
Romantic Comedy

Told in ten scenes, the play begins in the dark, as Jasper confesses his feelings of isolation to the audience. But he becomes unnerved in the dark and calls for lights. In the first scene, Jasper is stuck between floors on an elevator with a claustrophobic man, who goes quickly and hilariously over the edge. At work, a sleazy coworker gives him farcical advice on how to pick up women, and that night Jasper goes to a bookstore and tries to pick up a pretty clerk, Holly. He strikes out badly, but is picked up by another woman, who takes him home…where she lives with her boyfriend. A ride on the subway turns into a comic free-for-all as he and other riders enthusiastically give advice to a lost tourist. Jasper crosses paths with Holly again at a party and gamely starts a conversation, hoping she won’t recognize him, but she does and teases him flirtatiously. On their first date, Jasper and Holly go to a cozy restaurant for quiet conversation, but the couple seated on one side of them erupts in a battle of the sexes, while the couple on the other side engages in passionate verbal foreplay. Later, Jasper walks Holly home and their conversation seems mundane, but their fantasies about each other are anything but. A chance encounter with a homeless man forces Jasper to gain some perspective on his life. Back at work, Jasper snaps when a friend tells him Holly is dating someone else. He loses his cool, kicks a chair, breaks his foot, and gets fired. Feeling suddenly liberated, he hobbles to Holly’s bookstore and asks her if she is seeing someone else. She isn’t. They kiss—and leave immediately for the hospital. In the end, Jasper briefly talks to the audience again, understanding he must accept life’s uncertainties, which aren’t all bad, and make the best of things.

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The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati Enters National Partnership Bringing Theatre to Local Middle Schools

TCTC_Jumpstart promo1

(CINCINNATI, OHIO, October 16, 2018)— The Educational Theatre Foundation (ETF) will partner with The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati (TCT) to entrust the management and administration of the nationally-recognized JumpStart Theatre program to the oldest theater for young audiences in the nation.

The Educational Theatre Association (EdTA), in collaboration with Music Theatre International and iTheatrics, developed and introduced the pilot for JumpStart Theatre in Cincinnati in 2015. In November 2017, STAGES St. Louis and La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego, California, were announced as the first two partner theatres, initiating the national expansion of the JumpStart Theatre program.  They were then joined in June 2018 by Alliance Theatre in Atlanta.

Beginning with the 2019-20 school year, TCT will oversee the day-to-day operations of the initiative that creates sustainable theatre arts programs in Cincinnati-area middle schools where there previously were none.

Participant schools are chosen through a rigorous application process and receive materials, budget, and training support to produce their first full-scale musical production. The support continues for three years until the program becomes self-sustaining.  Non-theatre teachers are equipped with skills and resources to produce their school’s first musical through a proven combination of boot-camp style training and hands-on mentoring.

Kim Kern, Managing Director and CEO of The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati said, “JumpStart Theatre is a natural extension of The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati’s goal to fill the gap left by the reduction of arts education in schools, and to provide equitable access to the arts for all children.  As an established professional theater with a robust education department, TCT is equipped with the resources needed, and is absolutely thrilled to partner with the Educational Theatre Foundation and the Educational Theatre Association to ensure the continued success of this unique program locally.  A program that gives schools the tools they need to build a sustainable musical theatre program, while providing students with exposure to the arts and building life skills such as increased self-esteem and social skills.”

Julie Cohen Theobald, president of the Educational Theatre Foundation said, “When I walked into The Children’s Theatre, I saw on the lobby wall their credo: ‘Awakening a lifelong love of theatre in children and the young at heart.’ This could not be a better description of the mission of Jumpstart Theatre, and we fully entrust TCT to carry it forward, continuing to make theatre education accessible in Cincinnati schools and communities.”

JumpStart Theatre is funded entirely by gifts and grants. The expansion within Cincinnati and TCT is made possible by a generous gift from Robert Greenblatt, chairman of NBC Entertainment, as well as gifts from The Shubert Foundation, and others.

Integral to the program, research being conducted by the Centers for Research on Creativity to measure the impact of the program on student development in nine areas. Preliminary results (Capturing Student and Teacher Creative Growth through the After-School JumpStart Theatre Program, Year Two Report, 2017) indicate students demonstrate improved confidence, creativity, resiliency, responsibility, collaboration, and sense of community. Another finding shows similar benefits for the participating educators as well.

About The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati (TCT)
The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati is the oldest children’s theatre in the country and is the only professional theater in the region that devotes its entire MainStage season to children.  The company’s mission is to educate, entertain and engage audiences of all ages through professional theatrical productions and arts education programming.  Today, TCT brings art to life for audiences through three key programs:  TCT MainStage at the Taft Theatre, TCT on Tour (including Workshops) and TCT Academy– bringing almost 103,000 people downtown annually to MainStage performances at the Taft Theatre and reaching more than 83,000 students through TCT On Tour touring productions and workshops. In addition, the organization’s TCT Academy offers year-round arts training to children in a variety of disciplines.  www.thechildrenstheatre.com

About the Educational Theatre Foundation (ETF)
The Educational Theatre Foundation  was launched November, 2017, as the philanthropic arm of the Educational Theatre Association, which is the home of the International Thespian Society. ETF provides essential financial support to enhance excellence in theatre education and to expand access to school theatre programs for every child, putting them on a more positive life path. ETF is focused on three areas: JumpStart Theatre–to create sustainable musical theatre programs where there previously were none; need-based grants to schools–to provide teaching and performance resources and equipment in under-resourced schools; and, merit and need-based grants to individuals—to nurture the next generation of theatre teachers and artists.  In its first year ETF has awarded more than $650,000 in grants, directly impacting high school theatre programs in 50 cities, and enabling the development of musical theatre programs in underserved middle schools in six states.

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SNOOPY the Musical Runs Nov. 15-18

UCT_Snoopy logoSNOOPY the Musical
Union Community Theatre
Nov. 15-18
Ferguson Community Center at the Boone County Historic Courthouse [Boone]

Directed by Micheal Kiser
Music/Vocal Directed by Matthew Nassida
Choreographed by Kate Crotty
Produced by Amanda Emmons Shumate and Karen Franxman

Cast: Trevor LaBree as Snoopy, Sylas Craven as Charlie Brown, Kate Crotty as Lucy, Ally Riegler as Sally, Karl Bolinger as Linus, Jennifer Lynette Johnson as Peppermint Patty & Olivia Marita and Bryn Studer as Woodstock

Tuneful! Charming! Hilarious! Yes, SNOOPY!!! – the musical sequel to YOU’RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN is a show the whole family can enjoy! Based on the beloved Peanuts comic strip by Charles Schulz, the show sparkles with wit and warmth as it depicts life as seen through the eyes of Schulz’s unforgettable characters. Musical numbers include “Just One Person,” “Poor Sweet Baby,” “Don’t Be Anything Less (Than Everything You Can Be),” “Edgar Allen Poe” and “Daisy Hill.” Join us for a fun filled view of the world through the eyes of Snoopy and his friends – Charlie Brown, Lucy, Sally, Linus, Peppermint Patty and Woodstock!

  • Thu-Fri, Nov. 15-16 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, Nov. 17 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, Nov. 18 at 2pm

Official page | Facebook event |

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A LITTLE PIECE OF HEAVEN Runs Nov. 15-18

UCP_loogA LITTLE PIECE OF HEAVEN
Undercroft Players
Nov. 15-18
First Lutheran Church [Dayton]

Cast: Dave Nickel as Henry, Toylyn Blunt as Elizabeth, Erin Ryan as Judith, Craig Smith as Jared Havens, Traci Fischer as Glory Havens, Maximillian Santucci as Michael Cain, Shawn Kaliks as Frank Thomas, Katie Dunlap as Janet Thomas, Julia Dunlap as Girl, Jonathan Kalis as Boy, Kathy  Campbell as Lily Adair, Jan Muszynski as Herb, Joyce Genari as Deb, Malcolm Blunt as Sam, Don Campbell as Man & Sarah Saunders as Lily St. John

Have you ever lost anything that meant a great deal to you?  Something that if you could ever find it again would make a huge difference in your life?  If you have, “A Little Piece of Heaven” is the shop for you.  An unlikely relationship is forged in the quirky tourist shop.  Restless biker Michael, who is given a job in the shop, finds a friend in the sassy elderly Lily, although their relationship certainly  doesn’t start out that way. But there’s something odd about this little shop owned by the equally odd Elizabeth and Henry. Suspicion and disagreement turn to respect and trust in this place where long lost things are finally found.

  • Thu-Sat, Nov. 15-17 at 8pm
  • Sun, Nov. 18 at 3pm

Official page | Facebook event |

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Get Ready for an Audience with the Almighty That Will Have You Holy Rolling in the Aisles in AN ACT OF GOD

HRTC_Act of God promo1

Sara Mackie, Scott Stoney & Joshua Levine. Publicity photo courtesy of Heather N. Powell.

The Human Race continues its 32nd Season with the David Javerbaum’s An Act of God, November 1 – 18, 2018 at the Loft Theatre.

“My early religious education at St. Mary’s Elementary School,” stated Director Kevin Moore with a grin, “did not come close to preparing me to direct AN ACT OF GOD. The nuns rarely even mentioned the Old Testament, beyond Adam and Eve.  I think they would be stunned by the stories that our ‘God’ shares in our production.”

(Dayton, OH) —God is here–in human form–and She wants to set the record straight with a new set of Commandments. Joined by Her faithful angels, Michael and Gabriel, She’s ready to clear up a few misconceptions, share a few secrets and answer the big questions that have baffled mankind since Creation itself. The comedy’s divine in the hottest show since the burning bush.

Don’t miss the show The New York Times calls “A gut-busting-riff on the never-ending folly of mankind’s attempts to fathom God’s wishes…”

An Act of God will be Kevin Moore’s (Director) 31st show he has directed at HRTC. Moore’s last show at the Loft was the comedic hit based on the 80’s sitcom, Family Ties.

CAST AND DESIGN TEAM

The cast of three is made up of Human Race veterans.

Sara Mackie, who last appeared on the Loft stage in Family Ties, will be playing God Herself. Joshua Levine, last seen on the Loft stage in Hail Mary! plays Archangel Michael. Scott Stoney, no stranger to the Loft stage (HRTC’sThe House, Other Desert Cities, Angels in America, and many more), will play Archangel Gabriel.

David Javerbaum (Playwright) is an American comedy writer and currently an Executive Producer for Fusion Network to oversee development of a news satire block of programming. As the former Executive Producer of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” his work for that program, including four years as Head Writer, has earned him 11 Emmys, two additional Emmy nominations, two Peabody Awards, and Television Critics Awards for both Best Comedy and Best News Show.

Eric Moore (scenic designer) designs his 5th production at The Human Race Theatre. Ayn Kaethchen (costume designer), Resident Artists John Rensel (lighting designer) and Jay Brunner (sound designer) round out the design team. Jacquelyn Duncan is the production stage manager.

Biographies on the cast and creative team can be found on The Human Race Theatre Company’s website under An Act of God.

The preview performance of An Act of God is Thursday, November 1. Opening night is Friday, November 2.

The Human Race Theatre Company’s production of An Act of God is sponsored by Dr. Robert L. Brandt, Jr.

PERFORMANCE AND SPECIAL EVENT INFORMATION
Tickets for An Act of God start at $14. Prices vary depending on the day of the week and seating location. Group discounts are available for parties of 10 or more. The Sunday, November 4 7:00 p.m. performance is “Sawbuck Sunday,” when any available seat can be purchased in person for just $10 at the Loft Theatre box office two hours prior to the show. Prior to the Tuesday, November 13 7:00 p.m. performance is “Holy Bubbles!”, which will begin at 5:30 p.m. Additional information and details for “Holy Bubbles!” can be found on our website and Facebook Events page. Discounts are subject to availability and some restrictions apply.

All performances are at the Metropolitan Art Center’s Loft Theatre, located at 126 North Main Street in downtown Dayton, Ohio. Show times for An Act of God are 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings. Performances on Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings begin at 7:00 p.m., and at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday matinees.

Tickets and performance information for An Act of God are available at http://www.humanracetheatre.org or by calling Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630, and at the Schuster Center box office. 

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2018-2019 marks the 32nd season for The Human Race Theatre Company, “Dayton’s Official Professional Theatre Company.” Founded in 1986, The Human Race moved into the Metropolitan Arts Center in 1991, taking up residence in its current home, the 212-seat Loft Theatre. In addition to the Eichelberger Loft Season, The Human Race produces new works development and special event programming. Under the direction of Executive Director Kappy Kilburn and Kevin Moore, Artistic Director, the company also maintains outreach programs, as well as artist residencies in area schools and a summer youth program. Human Race organizational support is provided by the Montgomery County Arts and Cultural District, Culture Works, the Shubert Foundation, the Erma R. Catterton Trust Fund, the Jesse & Caryl Philips Foundation, the Virginia W. Kettering Foundation and the Ohio Arts Council, which helped fund this organization with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans. The 2018-2019 Sustainability Sponsors are the ELM Foundation, Anne F. Johnson, Steve and Lou Mason, and Morris Home. The 2018-2019 Loft season sponsor is the Jack W. and Sally D. Eichelberger Foundation of the Dayton Foundation.

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