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KILLJOY, OHIO at 2020 Cincy Fringe

CFF20_Killjoy OH logoA what-dunnit about small towns and bermuda triangles

(CINCINNATI, OHIO) –  KILLJOY, OHIO  at the 2020 Cincinnati Fringe Theatre Festival, May 29-June 13. A stranger new to town and a cat burglar team up in this sleek what-dunnit about small towns, Bermuda triangles and the lengths people will go to recover lost things.

From the creative force behind 2019’s SOLD-OUT show Zoinks! comes a sleek what-dunnit about small towns, Bermuda triangles and the lengths people will go to recover lost things. PICK-OF-THE-FRINGE winners Bridget Leak, Jordan Trovillion and Trey Tatum return with a new story of the bizarre in an entirely new format.

AWARDS AND ACCOLADES FOR QUEEN CITY FLASH

  • 2019 Cincy Fringe Full Frontal Pick – Zoinks!
  • 2018 Cincy Fringe Full Frontal Pick – of Monster Descent
  • 2014 Cincy Fringe Artist Pick – Slut Shaming

INTERNATIONAL PRAISE

  • ★★★★★ STARS – Saskatoon Star Phoenix, of Monster Descent
  • ★★★★ STARS – CBC, of Monster Descent
  • ★★★★ STARS – Winnipeg Free Press, of Monster Descent 

WHO DID WHAT
Written by Trey Tatum
Performed by Jordan Trovillion & Trey Tatum
Directed by Bridget Leak

SEE KILLJOY, OHIO AT THE CINCYFRINGE FESTIVAL, ONLINE!

TICKETS:   $10 General Admission, $15 Love-Your-Artist Ticket
Tickets can be purchased at cincyfringe.com

Previous Queen City Flash productions at Cincy Fringe:

  • 2019 – Zoinks!
  • 2018 – of Monster Descent
  • 2017 – The Disappearance of Nicole of Jacobs
  • 2016 – The Midnight Express
  • 2015 – Shelter (with Pones, INC.)
  • 2014 – Slut Shaming

ABOUT TREY TATUM: Trey Tatum is a playwright / composer from Cincinnati, Ohio. Recent credits include ZOINKS!, a Nancy Drew send-up about the opioid epidemic, Alabama Monster, his solo show about mental illness, family ties and creatures that lie just out of sight, and JALZ, a remake of the blockbuster movie JAWS that examines Alzheimer’s disease, end of life care and family legacy. For the past four seasons, Trey has been composer for Playhouse in the Park’s Off the Hill Education Touring Series. Current Projects include Have Monster, Will Travel, a new audio fiction podcast about road trips, monsters and the meaning of family. Trey makes theatre and mischief with his wife, director Bridget Leak. treytatum.com

ABOUT JORDAN TROVILLION: Jordan Trovillion is an actor based in Covington, Kentucky; the endpoint of her Southerly drift from her home state of Michigan. Recent theatre credits are Puffs (Susie Bones track) and The Absentee (The Operator) at Know Theatre of Cincinnati, Zoinks! (Nolan) at the 2019 Cincinnati Fringe Festival, and JALZ (Dylan), both with Queen City Flash. Other favorite shows include Neverwhere (Hunter) with Know Theatre of Cincinnati, Ken Ham’s Journey to the Center of the Earth (Most Women) with Queen City Flash, and Baskerville (Actress) at Falcon Theater. Jordan is a member of SAG/AFTRA and has performed in various films and television shows, including “The Old Man and the Gun,” “My Days of Mercy,” and Comedy Central’s “Detroiters.” She is also a freelance illustrator, and used to be in a cover band. More info at www.jordantrovillion.net.

ABOUT BRIDGET LEAK: Bridget Leak is a freelance director and co-founder of Queen City Flash. She recently made her LORT debut with Actually at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, where she has previously directed for the Playhouse’s Off-the-Hill Series. Bridget is a 2019 People’s Liberty Grant recipient for her project Desktop Theatre, an arts-initiative that helps teachers integrate the performing arts with larger-than-life plays made small enough to fit on a child’s desk. She previously collaborated with Cradle Cincinnati to develop a healing-through-storytelling pilot program for Mothers in Price Hill and is a former Cincinnati Arts Ambassador Fellow. Bridget has her M.F.A. in Directing from the Actors Studio Drama School at Pace University. She calls East Price Hill home with her husband, playwright-composer Trey Tatum and puppies “Pocket” & “Lint” bridgetleak.com #ADirectorsLife

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Submissions Sought for MONOLOGUES ABOUT RESILIENCE at Equality Productions

EP_logoEquality Productions invites playwrights to submit monologues with the theme of Resilience. Let your voice be heard. Write an engaging story then watch it come to life online. What a great way to have your words be seen by a wide audience.

The monologues should be written so they can be performed in two to five minutes. Plays are to be submitted in standard playwright format and saved as a PDF without any identifying information (i.e., anonymously) to richardjoseph@gmail.com by May 20.

There is a limit of two submitted monologues per person. A selection committee will choose the monologues to be performed. Local actors will perform them and they will be posted online.

This event, like Equality Production’s previous events, will be a fundraiser for Greater Cincinnati community theaters.

https://www.facebook.com/Equality-Productions-in-Cincinnati-OH-105457637814367

Thanks in advance for your submissions!

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Director Applications Being Accepted for 2021-2022 Season at Mariemont Players

MPI_logo 2020Director Applications being accepted for Mariemont Players 2021-2022 Season

The Mariemont Players Artistic Committee is beginning work to select directors and plays for our 2021 –  2022 Season.  The season runs from September, 2021 thru July, 2022.

Mareimont Players hope to present theatre that make our audience think and feel about what they see on our stage. We want our patrons to be entertained but just as importantly we want them to feel an emotional connection to the material.

Our season slots are September, November, January, March, May, and July. The committee is looking for comedies that can make an audience laugh, a drama that makes them cry, or best of all a show that can do both. It could be a mystery that keeps them guessing until the end or a musical that has them singing in their seats. It could be a favorite classic with a fresh production or an exciting new show.

In addition, we want to provide opportunities for local actors, designers, and technicians to continue to grow and develop as artists.

Deadline for applications is July 15, 2019.  Please contact Arny Stoller, Chair, Mariemont Players Artistic committee
arny@covap.com

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Free Online trueFAKES on May 7

TRUE_trueFAKES logoTo our True friends,

EVERYBODY will have a chance to watch our next storytelling event, “trueFAKES,” this-coming Thursday (May 7) at 7:30 PM (live online!) for FREE, but only those who register to join the Zoom event will be able to be “in the audience” and answer polls and participate in the Q&A that we are adding at the end of the show (a first for us!).

Below, you will find the registration link, but our Zoom account limits attendance to 100 people, so spots are on a first-come-first-served basis.

If you register and get a message that the event is “at capacity” (or just don’t want to be “in the audience”) there is still a way to enjoy the show, live and for free: at 7:30pm on May 7, go to our Facebook page  (https://www.facebook.com/truetheatre) and look for the live-stream and you’ll see how you can start watching . If you join us that way, consider creating a “watch party” when you do so your friends will know you’re watching and can join you! (And if you haven’t done so already, be sure to “Like” us on Facebook so you get a notification when we go Live!)

Both the Zoom event and Facebook live-feed should begin about 10 minutes prior to the show starting, so join in, sit back, and get ready for Cincinnati storytelling at its finest!

To try to register for the Zoom event and be “in the audience,” follow this link:

https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/2915882689773/WN_tI6mmlk0R4-hbsUIVyZSiw  

However you do it, thanks in advance for joining us this-coming Thursday! We’ve got 5 great tellers lined up for you to share their “fake”-themed story. The stories are true, it’s just the theme that’s “fakes”!

Although a different experience than attending a show in-person, we are grateful for a chance to actually be seen by friends, family, and followers around the world and to help create connections and good will between people, even during this period of self-isolation/stay-at-home orders/quarantines.

Until Thursday, be true!
–Dave & your friends at True Theatre

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Spring Musical is an Impossible Dream Made Possible at Anderson High School

AHS_MOLM_Emma Moulas (sm)

Freshman Emma Moulas is a member of the Ensemble of MAN OF LA MANCHA the AHS Spring Musical that will premiere on YouTube in May.

AHS Spring Musical is an Impossible Dream Made Possible

The students of Anderson Theatre began rehearsals in February for this year’s 57th Spring Musical, “Man of La Mancha.” The most famous song from this musical is “The Impossible Dream,” and that is what the show seemed to become when schools were shut down in mid March in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Theatre Teacher and Director Chad Weddle was in his Studio Theatre class when the announcement was made to the school. At first, like the students around him, he panicked. “Then I sat down, took a breath, looked around the room, and thought, “we can still do this. I don’t know how yet, but with these kids, I know we will find a way.’”

As the school closure extended into May, and then to the end of the school year, High Schools and Theatre companies throughout the Cincinnati area began cancelling their productions. Anderson High School, however, had a resource most other organizations did not: a strong Film Department.

“The Anderson High School Spring Musical has been a cornerstone of our community for decades,” says Mr. Weddle. “I felt a responsibility to the thousands of past FHSD students who had carried on the tradition, as well as to my current students—over 120 of them in cast and crew.

“While so many school events, competitions, the prom, concerts, were being cancelled—we knew that if we could do this safely, then we needed to do it, for the emotional health of the students,” Mr. Weddle explained.

Mr. Weddle’s plan to leverage the skills his students had gained in Film classes evolved over the weeks, adapting to new restrictions and guidelines, always with the safety of the students a high priority. It is now complete, and the 57th Spring Musical will be presented as a YouTube Film Premiere event, likely in the final weeks of May.

Paige Resor, a Senior who was cast as Aldonza, says she is very grateful to Mr. Weddle and all the participating students. “Being a senior is so very hard. And I think it’s really great that we found a way to do this, and that everyone is so supportive. I’ve never been a part of a cast who worked so hard for each other.”

Each actor had to create a mini film studio in their home, using only equipment and materials they already had available. Student crew members gave feedback and advice, helping their friends find and solve problems, but the burden was on the actors to get things right. While not every student involved in the original production felt they could continue, over 100 are still contributing to the performance in some fashion.

“I’m not a technician,” admitted Nick Gundrum, a Sophomore who plays one of the Muleteers. “But it started to be fun, something to do. I made my own tripod, and it was fun. It’s gonna be awesome to have that final product we can all look back on. We’ll be able to watch it in the future with everyone and feel like we were a part of something.”

Caitlin Walsh is a Senior and a Student Director for the show. She is pleased with the hard work done by all the students. “It’s not necessarily the easiest thing we have done; it’s a lot to ask of everyone. But we all need that bit of creative spontaneity…that excitement we get from being in Theatre.”

“I am very excited to do this,” says Tommy Sanders, a Junior playing Dr. Carrasco. “With so many other uncertainties and cancellations, it means a lot. While I may not know about this problem or that problem, and I don’t even know when I’ll get out of my house, I do know I have this. I have this opportunity right here.”

AHS_MOLM_Braden Perry (sm)

Braden Perry is a Junior at AHS and plays Anselmo, a Muleteer, in Anderson Theatre’s production of MAN OF LA MANCHA.

Braden Perry, a Junior playing another Muleteer, knows this will have a positive effect on the community, as well. “We’re talking about a tradition where the entire southwest part of Ohio has is interested in what we are putting on,” he says. “If we can impact one person, I think this whole process is worth it.”

“I appreciate everything Mr. Weddle is doing for us, how he’s sticking with the show,” says Stella Scheidler, who plays the Barber. “Theatre is what’s getting us through this.”

“I believe in these students, every one of them.” says Mr. Weddle. “Theatre is partly about the process. Keeping the show alive is our way to continue to spend time together and support one another.”

Mr. Weddle adds, “It’ll be something the students can talk about in years to come, when someone asks them what they did during the quarantine, what happened. When we look down the road we’ll be able to tell them the story of how we were able to come together and create something remarkable. This is what we do. We create together. That’s what we do.”

“Man of La Mancha” will be presented to the public online, free of charge, some time in late May as a YouTube Premiere. For more information, including ways you can donate to the Anderson Theatre department to offset their costs and support future productions, visit www.AndersonTheatre.com. The confirmed date of the Premiere will be posted there and on the Anderson Theatre Facebook page. To view more AHS student film work, including the three short films of their 2020 Film Festival, visit the Anderson Film YouTube Channel.

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