Author Archives: robbucher

Rush Tickets Announced for KIMBERLY AKIMBO at Broadway in Cincinnati

RUSH ANNOUNCED: A KIMBERLY AKIMBO rush deal will make your life better!

Anyone is eligible to purchase up to two (2) tickets for all performances of KIMBERLY AKIMBO, running now – March 2 at 50% off current pricing.

Available in-person while supplies last at the Aronoff Ticket Office only, 2 hours prior to the performance.

Production Page |

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Cast Announced for THE FULL MONTY at TheatreLab Dayton

Introducing the cast of THE FULL MONTY

April 18 & 19 at the Dayton Convention Center

Directed by Philip Drennen
Choreography by Abby Kress Monroe
Music Direction by Jeremy King

  • Zach King – Jerry Lukowski
  • Dustin Evans – Dave Bukatinski
  • Aaron Hill – Malcolm MacGregor
  • Joshua Hughes – Ethan Girard
  • Tim Wilson – Noah “Horse” T. Simmons
  • John Woll – Harold Nichols
  • Katie Pees Arber – Vicki Nichols
  • Joshua Stucky – Jeanette Burmeister
  • Robin Shank – Pam Lukowski
  • Jax H, Wren M – Nathan Lukowski
  • Tyler Kirk – Buddy “Keno” Walsh
  • Maggie Komp – Georgie Bukatinski
  • Amy Askins – Susan Hershey
  • Roniece Hutchins – Joanie Lish
  • Naman Clark – Teddy Slaughter, Ensemble
  • David Baker – Minister, Ensemble
  • Ty Smith – Tony Giordano, Ensemble
  • Monica Tenhover – Molly MacGregor, Ensemble

For more information visit www.simpletix.com/e/the-full-monty-tickets-205220

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Auditions Announced for CALENDAR GIRLS at The Drama Workshop

The Drama Workshop and director Micheal Kiser are pleased to announce auditions for CALENDAR GIRLS by Tim Firth.

Audition sessions will be held:

  • Saturday March 8, 2025 3-5pm
  • Monday March 10, 2025 7-9pm

Auditions will be held at The Glenmore Playhouse. 3716 Glenmore Ave. Cheviot OH 45211.

This show will be performed July 25th through Aug 10th, 2025 at The Glenmore Playhouse. The following information explains more about this production, your rehearsal commitments and performance requirements. A detailed rehearsal schedule will be made available when rehearsals commence.

Please sign up for a time slot here: https://www.signupgenius.com/go/70A094FA8A622A6FC1-55153955-auditions

Audition Requirements
After selecting a timeslot, use this link to complete the audition form and upload the information requested. https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScSGNdii4oS3hNnUHBxEwT59muLESsdSIe7ZjnER-GaQDT0yA/viewform?usp=sharing

Additionally, audition sides will be sent to all who sign up.

Nudity
Please be aware that the calendar shoot is the best-known aspect of the Calendar Girls’ story. It is essential that the audience see nothing that we do not wish them to see in this scene. It will be carefully choreographed, all will be wearing appropriate body garments, and will require a great team effort from all those involved to ensure that each person’s modesty is protected by her fellow actors. However, if you are uncomfortable about the “act” of appearing nude, please do not audition for the role of Chris, Annie, Cora, Jessie, Celia or Ruth.

Accents
We will be incorporating the use of various English Accents. While an English accent would be in keeping with the original concept there is no requirement for any specific accent. If you can flatten the “a” so that giraffe no longer rhymes with scarf then that will be more than sufficient; but even that should not be championed over the intrinsic rhythm of the line.

Roles
Please note that the ages listed below serve only as a guide however all adult ages will be considered for all adult roles to achieve the best overall fit for the cast. All roles are available, and casting is open. An indication of the size of each role has been given based on the time on stage.

**CHRIS: 40 – 60. Large Role (On stage 14/14 scenes) You want Chris at your party. She will talk to people she doesn’t know, find things to say to fill silences and generate laughter.

Part of this is because Chris is at home in crowds, holding court, being the center of attention. Without Chris in her life, Annie would be better behaved, her life less fun. The two of them are like naughty schoolgirls. Ideal car – who cares, as long as it’s a cabriolet. Ideal holiday – Algarve.

**ANNIE: 40 – 60. Large Role (On stage 14/14 scenes) Annie will join in mischief but is at the heart more conformist and less confrontational than Chris. After Chris has put a waiter’s back up in the restaurant, Annie will go in and pour calm. The mischievousness Chris elicits saves Annie from being a saint. She has enough edge to be interesting, and enough salt not to be too sweet. Ideal car – who cares, as long as it’s reliable. Ideal holiday – walking in English countryside. Together these two are greater than the sum of their parts. The relationship between these roles is of particular importance.

**CORA: 30 – 50. Large Role (On stage 14/14 scenes) Cora’s past is the most eclectic, her horizons broadened by having gone to college. This caused a tectonic shift with her more parochial parents. She came back to them pregnant and tail between-legs, but Cora has too much native resilience to be downtrodden. She is the joker in the pack, but never really plays the fool. Her wit is deadpan. It raises laughter in others, but rarely in herself. Her relationship with her daughter is more akin to that between Chris and Annie. Cora doesn’t need to sing like a diva but must be able to sing well enough to start the show with Jerusalem and sing the snatches of other songs required.

**JESSIE: 50 – 70. Large Role (On stage 14/14 scenes) Get on the right side of Jessie as a teacher and she’ll be the teacher you remember for life. Get on the wrong side and you will regret every waking hour. A lover of life, Jessie doesn’t bother with cosmetics – her elixir of life is bravery. Jessie goes on roller coasters. Her husband has been with her a long time and is rarely surprised by her actions. Jessie bothers about grammar and will correct stallholders regarding their abuse of the apostrophe “s”. Ideal car – strange-looking European thing which is no longer manufactured. Ideal holiday – walking in Switzerland or Angkor Wat.

**CELIA: 30 – 60. Large Role (On stage 13/14 scenes) The fact that Celia is in the WI is the greatest justification of its existence. A woman more at home in a department store than a church hall, she may be slightly younger than Chris or the same age, but she always feels like she’s drifted in from another world. Which she has. She is particularly enamored of Jessie, and despite the fact Jessie has very little time for most Celias of this world, there is a rebelliousness in Celia to which Jessie responds. It is what sets Celia apart from the vapid materialism of her peer group and what makes her defect. Ideal car – Porsche, which she has. Ideal holiday – Maldives, where she goes often.

**RUTH: 40 – 60. Large Role (On stage 14/14 scenes) Ruth’s journey is from the false self- confidence of the emotionally abused to the genuine self-confidence of the woman happy in her own skin. Ruth is eager to please but not a rag doll, and despite being Marie’s right- hand woman she is desperate to be the cartilage in the spine of the WI and keep everyone happy. She has a spine herself – if she was too wet, no one would want her around. But they do, and they feel protective of her because they sense there is 3 something better in Ruth than her life is letting out. They are proved right. Ideal car – at the start, whatever Eddie wants; at the end, whatever she wants. Ideal holiday – at the start wherever Eddie is, at the end, wherever he isn’t.

MARIE: 40 – 70. Medium/Large Role (On stage 6/14 scenes) Marie has gradually built the current ‘Marie’ around herself over the years as a defense mechanism. She went to her Oz, Cheshire, and found Oz didn’t want her. She came back scorched. The WI is a trophy to her, which justifies her entire existence. There is a lingering part of Marie that would love to be on that calendar. Ideal car – something German and well-valeted. Ideal holiday – a quasi- academic tour of somewhere in Persia advertised in a Sunday Supplement which she could then interminably bang on about.

LADY CRAVENSHIRE: 50 – 70 but any age suitable. Smaller / cameo role (On stage 2/14 scenes) Lady Cravenshire really doesn’t mean to be so patronizing, but the WI girls seem from another world, the world of her estate workers. Dress: when she makes an entrance, she must make an entrance. She wears largely white or cream to outplay the others, with a bigger hat than Marie.

ELAINE: Any age. Smaller / cameo role (On stage 1/14 scenes) Elaine really doesn’t mean to be so patronizing. But Jessie seems from another world. The world of her Gran.

BRENDA HULSE: 40 – 60. Smaller / cameo role (On stage 1/14 scenes) Brenda is a woman committed to tedious subjects. In the previous year she spoke to the group on “The History of the Tea Towel”. This year it is “The Fascinating World of Broccoli”. She soldiers on seriously while her audience dissolves sniggering. Brenda is a bore.

Male Roles
JOHN: Annie’s husband. 40 – 60. Medium Role (On stage 3/14 scenes) John is a human sunflower. Not a saint. Not a hero. Just the kind of man you’d want in your car when crossing America. When he dies it feels like someone somewhere turned a light off.

ROD: Chris’s husband. 40 – 60. Medium Role (On stage 4/14 scenes) You have to be a certain kind of guy to stick with Chris and Rod loves it. He can give back when he gets, and has a deadpan humor which has always made Chris laugh. He drinks a lot but never so much as to have a problem. He would work every hour to make his shop a success. And John was his mate, even though the relationship was originally channeled through their wives.

LAWRENCE: 20 – 30 but any age suitable. Medium Role (On stage 2/14 scenes) Hesitant without being nerdy, Lawrence is a shy man with enough wit to make a joke and enough spirit to turn up at the WI hall in the first place. When he arranges the shots he is close to female nudity but sees only the photo.

LIAM: Any age. Smaller / cameo role (On stage 1/14 scenes) Liam would like to be directing other things than photo shoots for washing powders. He’s not so unprofessional as to let it show, but we can sense a slight weariness at having to deal with these women. There’s a resigned patience to his actions and each smile he makes we feel is professional. For Liam, this photoshoot is a job, and not the job he wanted.

Please email the director at mrkiser79@gmail.com if you have further questions.

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2025 Season Announced by Commonwealth Artists Student Theatre

CAST_logoONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST
June 27-July 6
Stained Glass Theatre [Newport]

ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST follows the rebellious Randle P. McMurphy as he challenges the tyrannical Nurse Ratched in a mental institution. Immortalized by the iconic film starring Jack Nicholson, the story explores power, freedom, and resistance.

URINETOWN the Musical
July 13-20
NKU Patricia Corbett Theatre [Highland Heights]

URINTOWN is a satirical musical where a severe water shortage forces citizens to pay to use public toilets. When a rebellious hero challenges the corrupt system, chaos ensues. With sharp humor and self-aware storytelling, the show parodies capitalism, politics, and musical theatre itself.

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I NEED THAT Review

By Katrina “Kat” Reynolds

I NEED THAT presented by Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati through March 2nd. I attended the Opening Night performance. 

Kenneth Early as Foster, David Wohl as Sam & Maggie Lou Rader as Amelia. Photo by Ryan Kurtz.

This February, Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati brings us I Need That, a play by Cincinnati native (and award-winning playwright) Teresa Rebeck. Summarized as being a “play about a curmudgeonly father, his exasperated daughter, his patient best friend, and life’s messes”, I Need That is a humorous and heartfelt slice of life.

Ms. Rebeck, who also serves as the play’s director, does a wonderful job keeping the movement fresh and active which can be a tall order for a show that centers almost entirely around one room of a very cluttered home. The pacing of the show is steady, a must when one forgoes an intermission. But once you see the playing space, it will come as no surprise that the true stars of this production are Scenic & Lighting Designer Brian c. Mehring and Properties Curator/Design Assistant Shannon Rae Lutz (pronounced “loots” like “boots”). Sam, our lovable lead character, is facing the dilemma of code violations for his home, both inside and outside. The set has an ideal mix of being easily workable for the actors, but being properly stacked with so many things that it might raise your blood pressure. Mr. Mehring and Ms. Lutz excel in every aspect of the design and to quote my date for the evening, “I wonder if the prop room is empty.”

As most of you may be able to tell from my reviews, I am a sucker for a good ensemble of performing artists – and this show delivers. The trio of performing artists telling us this story have a palpable chemistry which serves the text well. David Wohl, no doubt a “that guy” of the acting world, plays Sam with an expertise few could match. A veteran of both stage and screen, Mr. Wohl is effortless in his quick wit, his frank way of speaking, and his gruff but apparent love for both his daughter and best friend. Without a doubt, he is an absolute treasure in this story of other’s people’s trash. (Reviewer’s note: I was fortunate enough to meet Mr. Wohl and chat with him at a staged reading of a Maggie Lou original script some weeks ago and I can tell you he is a delight. Fortunately, I did not tell him how cool it was that he’s in one of my guilty pleasure films, Troop Beverly Hills – but it is pretty awesome.)

Kenneth Early, an actor known his powerful presence on stage and off, portrays the role of Foster, Sam’s best buddy. Foster ends up being an even more complicated character than you originally think (no spoilers here, but I did have a panic as things began to come out); fortunately, Mr. Early handles all of the character’s facets with grace and sensitivity. We should be so lucky to have a “Foster” in our lives.

Last but certainly not least is Sam’s daughter Amelia played by Maggie Lou Rader. The character of Amelia has a tough road: she tries to be an attentive daughter to her widowed father while still trying to pursue a satisfying adult life of her own. Ms. Rader shows us some beautiful layers in Amelia’s frustration and “tough love” coupled with a sweet vulnerability when she’s exhausted her emotional wall.

Coming in at around an hour and 40 mins with no intermission, I Need That is an enjoyable journey. There are so many relatable topics and not to mention qualities of the people into whose lives we are invited: love, loss, humour, friendship, loyalty. I highly recommend making the trip to OTR to see this master class of acting with the added bonus of playing your own game of “I Spy” with the set.

Click here for more information about the production.

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