Category Archives: Press Releases

Caroline Scott Players Announces WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF Production Dates and Cast

CSP_Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf logo3Caroline Scott Players, the Oxford Community Arts Center based resident semi-professional theatre company, announces the cast of its upcoming production, WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF, directed by Rosalyn Benson. Performance dates are Thursday, April 7 and Saturday, April 9 at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, April 10 at 2 p.m. in the Center’s north parlor

The 1962 Edward Albee play examines the evolution of the marriage of a middle-aged couple, Martha and George. After a university faculty party they invite a younger couple, Nick and Honey, to their home for a nightcap only to draw them into their relationship.

Bekka Eaton is appearing as an Actor’s Equity guest artist playing Martha. Caroline Scott Players Founder and Artistic Director, Bill Brewer, plays George. Caroline Scott Players acting company members Vince Smith and Molly Wanko play Nick and Honey respectively.

The production won both the 1963 Tony Award for Best Play and the 1962-63 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award for Best Play.

Tickets for general admission are available for $15 at www.carolinescottplayers.com, by phone at 513-524-1277 or in person at the Oxford Community Arts Center.

The Oxford Community Arts Center is a not-for-profit organization representing performing and visual community arts groups who wish to rehearse, perform, display and teach their various art and craft forms in a facility that represents a permanent home for the community arts.

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The Human Race Theatre Company Announces Its 2016-2017 Eichelberger Loft Season

Company launches 30th Anniversary Season with updated logo
and mix of new work and well-known revivals

HRTC_30th Anniversay logo(Dayton, OH) — The Human Race Theatre Company is preparing to celebrate its 30th anniversary as Dayton’s premier professional regional theatre company by unveiling an updated company logo and announcing its 2016-2017 season of shows at its home, the Loft Theatre in downtown Dayton. The season, with two musicals and four plays, begins September 8, 2016.

The 2016–2017 Eichelberger Loft season opens with Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler’s Tony Award-winning musical thriller, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (September 8 – October 2, 2016); followed by Tom Dudzick’s comedy of faith, Hail Mary! (November 3 – 20, 2016); a world premiere drama about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, 26 Pebbles (February 2 – 19, 2017), by Eric Ulloa; Ernest Thompson’s warm and welcoming On Golden Pond (April 6 – 23, 2017); and closes with Cincinnati writers Janet Yates Vogt and Mark Friedman’s musical adaptation of Anne of Green Gables, based on the novel by Lucy Maud Montgomery (June 1 – 25, 2017).

“Thirty seasons—it’s hard to believe,” reflects Human Race President and Artistic Director Kevin Moore. “It’s a great milestone and a testament to the support of our audiences—many of whom, like me, have been with The Human Race since our start in 1986.” Moore sees the thirtieth year as an opportunity to honor the company’s past successes while taking a leap into its future, primarily by introducing a updated logo. “We’ve streamlined our logo—updated it for a new generation—while retaining many of its former elements,” says Moore. “We’re still The Human Race Theatre, but as a company, we continue to grow and mature.”

To pay tribute to the theatre’s past during the 2016-2017 season, Moore has chosen to remount three well-received past productions – Sweeney Todd, On Golden Pond and Anne of Green Gables – for their first stagings in the Loft Theatre. “Every one of these shows was a great success when we did them at the Victoria Theatre for the Victoria Theatre Association’s Broadway Series,” says Moore, “and each time, we said to ourselves, ‘This would be great to do in the Loft.’” First produced in 1996, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street starred Resident Artist Scott Stoney in the title role. Now, twenty years later, Stoney takes on the directing duties. The Human Race introduced Norman and Ethel Thayer, and their lakeside house, in On Golden Pond to Dayton theatregoers in 1999. The company’s history with Janet Yates Vogt and Mark Friedman’s adaptation of Anne of Green Gables began during the 2002-2003 season with a reading in its Musical Theatre Workshops program. Known then simply as Green Gables, the musical received a full production on the Victoria Theatre stage in 2005.

November’s production of Hail Mary! marks playwright Tom Dudzick’s third in the Loft. “Our audiences have absolutely loved his other plays,” exclaims Moore. “Over the Tavern in 2008 and Miracle on South Division Street in 2014 had people crying, they were laughing so hard. When I read this script, I knew right away we had to do it.”

In February, The Human Race will address the all-too-often occurrence of gun violence when it presents the world premiere of Eric Ulloa’s drama, 26 Pebbles. Following the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, Ulloa visited Newtown, Connecticut, and interviewed a number of its townspeople about that tragic day and its aftermath. With their blessing, he collected those interviews and developed them into a six-person play where the actors take on multiple roles. “The hope and determination of the people of Newtown floored me in the weeks I spent up there,” says Ulloa. “I know that their fierce spirit will touch every person that leaves the theatre.” Bringing the play to the Dayton theatre felt like a natural move to the actor/playwright. “When many people think of Ohio, they think of Main Street, USA and all the nostalgic qualities that make it the heart of America,” he explains. “By having 26 Pebbles’ world premiere at The Human Race, my creative home since 2008, we have the unique opportunity of starting dialogue about this American epidemic right here in the heart of our great country.”

The five plays perform in the Loft Theatre, The Human Race’s intimate 212-seat downtown performance space, located in the Metropolitan Arts Center at 126 North Main Street. Throughout the productions’ scheduled three- and four-week runs are a number of associated special events: a Thursday night preview performance, preceded by the “Inside Track” discussion with the director; Friday Opening Night with a free post-show party with the cast at downtown Dayton’s Uno Pizzeria & Grill; Lite Fare at The Loft, a Tuesday night pre-show dining in The Loft Lobby, with food items provided by Citilites Restaurant; a “While We’re on the Subject” talkback following a Sunday matinee; and a Saturday night signed and audio-described performance opportunity.

In addition to the five shows on the theatre’s subscription series, The Human Race presents a holiday add-on production, the return of last year’s sold out comedy, The Santaland Diaries by David Sedaris. Resident Artist Tim Lile once again stars as “Crumpet” for a limited-engagement run in The Loft Theatre (December 8 – 17, 2016).

THE 2016-2017 EICHELBERGER LOFT SEASON LINEUP

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
A Musical Thriller
music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
book by Hugh Wheeler
from an adaptation by Christopher Bond
September 8 – October 2, 2016

Attend the tale of Sweeney Todd, a barber unjustly imprisoned by corrupt Judge Turpin, who returns to 19th century London fifteen years later to take his revenge on the man who took him from his wife and young daughter. Todd’s need for vengeance becomes indiscriminately murderous—and profitable—when he partners with the unscrupulous Mrs. Lovett and opens his new barber practice above her failing meat pie shop. With his busy straight razors and her new secret ingredient, their fame grows until Todd comes face to face with the judge. Can he avenge his family before their dastardly deeds are uncovered?

Hail Mary!
by Tom Dudzick
November 3 – 20, 2016

Plucky novice Mary is causing trouble again, teaching her own unorthodox views on God to the third graders at Saint Aloysius Catholic Elementary School, where she’s hardly a favorite with her conservative Mother Superior. Mary’s aspirations of becoming a nun are in further jeopardy when her childhood sweetheart reappears and declares his love. Will she give up a life of Sisterhood for the man of her dreams? Or will she choose another path and listen to an eccentric priest who proclaims her to be the world’s next savior in this delightful comedy that puts the “fun” in fundamentalism.

A World Premiere
26 Pebbles
by Eric Ulloa
February 2 – 19, 2017

On December 14, 2012, an act of unbelievable madness took the lives of 20 innocent children and 6 adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. These 26 deaths—described by one local resident as “pebbles thrown into a pond”—created ripples that captured the attention of the entire nation. Now, through a series of interviews with the people of this small New England town, the true stories of that tragic day and its aftermath come to light in this powerful drama that asks, “How does a community endure the ultimate test, and what comes after the cameras and noise leave?”

On Golden Pond
by Ernest Thompson
April 6 – 23, 2017

For forty-eight years, Norman Thayer and his energetic wife, Ethel, have been spending the summers at their lakeside home on Golden Pond, fishing and watching for loons. This year, their divorced daughter, Chelsea, her new fiancé and his thirteen year old son make an unexpected visit. When Norman develops an unlikely friendship with the boy, it reinvigorates the grumpy retired professor and highlights the rocky relationship between this father and his now middle-aged daughter. As the summer days grow short, there is still time for their family to heal, and to rediscover the joys in everyday life.

Anne of Green Gables
book, music and lyrics by Janet Yates Vogt and Mark Friedman
based on Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery
June 1 – 25, 2017

The timeless tale of Anne Shirley comes to life onstage. When Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert decide to adopt a boy to help run their farm on Prince Edward Island, the orphanage mistakenly sends them a young red-haired girl. Bright, talkative and extremely imaginative, Anne quickly wins them over and life in their close-knit farming village will never be the same. Her adventures are endless as she makes new friends and rivals, tries to dye her hair black and mistakes wine for raspberry cordial. It’s a musical story of family, home and irrepressible spirit fit for the whole family.

ADD-ON PRODUCTION

The Santaland Diaries
by David Sedaris
adapted by Joe Mantello
starring Tim Lile as “Crumpet”
December 8 – 17, 2016

The quintessential elf-gone-bad is back to share a series of less-than-merry misadventures in David Sedaris’ hysterical antidote for holiday havoc. Spend some time with the irreverent Crumpet—one of Santa’s little helpers during the Macy’s Christmas shopping rush—as he handles the hordes of insufferable shoppers and their kiddies with whacked out, wicked wit in the return of 2015’s sold out hit comedy.

2016-2017 Loft Series subscribers can purchase tickets to this additional holiday offering at a discounted price before they go on sale to the general public.

SUBSCRIPTIONS AND TICKETS

Subscriptions are available in 3-, 4- and 5-show packages, as well as in Flex Pass plans. Package prices range from $102 – $190, and discounted subscriptions are available for students. Current 2015-2016 season subscribers can guarantee their seats by renewing before May 1, and reservations for new subscriptions can be made now to be seated starting May 23. Both renewing and new subscribers may place their orders with Ticket Center Stage by calling (937) 228-3630 or by visiting the Schuster Center Box Office. Subscribers can purchase tickets to The Santaland Diaries in advance when renewing or ordering a new subscription. Productions, performance dates and ticket prices are subject to change. Single tickets to Sweeney Todd and Hail Mary! go on sale August 1, with tickets to future productions on sale later in the season.

More ticketing and performance information on The Human Race Theatre Company’s 2016-2017 and 2015-2016 Loft seasons are available online at www.humanracetheatre.org or by calling Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630, and at the Schuster Center box office.

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The Human Race Theatre Company was founded in 1986 and moved into the Metropolitan Arts Center in 1991, taking up residence at the 212-seat Loft Theatre. In addition to the Eichelberger Loft Season, The Human Race produces a summer Festival of New Works and special event programming. Under the direction of President and Artistic Director Kevin Moore, the company also maintains education and outreach programs for children, teens and adults, as well as artist residencies in area schools, the Muse Machine In-School Tour, and a summer youth program. Human Race organizational support is provided by Culture Works, the Montgomery County Arts and Cultural District, 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 2015-2016 Sustainability Sponsors are the ELM Foundation, Anne F. Johnson and Steve and Lou Mason. The 2015-2016 Loft season sponsor is the Jack W. and Sally D. Eichelberger Foundation of the Dayton Foundation, with additional support from Premier Health and Morris Home Furnishings.

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SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING Brings Baseball and Jazz to Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park April 23-May 21, 2016

PIP_Satchel Paige logo(CINCINNATI) – SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING, an exciting and inspirational new drama by playwrights Trey Ellis and Ricardo Khan, heads to the mound to close the Playhouse’s 2015-16 Marx Theatre lineup April 23 through May 21 … just in time for baseball season in Cincinnati. Their collaboration about the Tuskegee Airmen, Fly, was a smash Playhouse hit in 2013.

SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING finds the pitcher at the crossroads of his already legendary career. It’s the fall of 1947, and Paige’s fame is being eclipsed by Jackie Robinson’s historic inaugural season. Robinson was the first African-American player in the modern era to break Major League Baseball’s color line. Paige’s team is in the midst of the unofficial end-of-season barnstorming circuit, in which all-star black and white teams could play against each other. Bob Feller is the white pitcher he’s set to face on a rainy night in Kansas City.

Thanks to the subsequent rainout, much of the action takes place off the field in Mrs. Hopkins’ elegant African-American boarding house, where the players congregate to wait for the mud-washed roads to become passable. Mrs. Hopkins represents Kansas City’s cultured, successful if separate black middle class, while her teenaged daughter Moira strains against the segregated status quo.

“The year 1947 is important because the doors were beginning to open in many ways,” says playwright Ricardo Khan, who is also directing the Playhouse production of SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING. “The play is generational; the older generation is looking back and is worried about how the world is going to change, while the young people are really excited and can’t wait. Black and white, they’re all right at the threshold of that change.

“I hope we not only come out of this knowing a little more about the history, but also with knowledge and a sense of pride, along with an appreciation that segregation does not exist like that anymore,” Khan adds. “If we got through all that, I believe that the forces that try to tear us apart today are things we can also handle.”

SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING is infused with music, embodied in the character of Jazzman, an “ageless teller of stories” who helps to set the mood and provides commentary while performing the distinctively Kansas City-style of jazz.

“Ultimately,” adds Khan, “SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING is a play about baseball, about jazz and about people, caught in a snapshot of a fascinating moment of change in America.”

The cast of SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING includes Tsilala Brock (Moira Hopkins), Michael Chenevert (Buck O’Neil), Vanessa A. Jones (Mrs. Hopkins), Kohler McKenzie (Bob Feller), Eric Person (Jazzman), Robert Karma Robinson (Satchel Paige), Peterson Townsend (Art Young) and Sam Wolf (Franky Palmieri).

In addition to Khan, the creative team features Bobby Watson (original music), John Ezell (set designer), Lauren T. Roark (costume designer), Victor En Yu Tan (lighting designer), Tom Mardikes (sound designer), Rocco DiSanti (projection designer) and Rick Sordelet and Christian Kelly-Sordelet (fight directors/action movement coordinators). Jenifer Morrow is the production stage manager, and Brooke Redler and Andrea L. Shell are the second stage managers. SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING is sponsored by Ohio National Financial Services and Fifth Third Bank. TriVersity Construction is the design sponsor; Jack and Rosemarie Brown are the artist sponsors/Satchel Paige and Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. is the artist sponsor/director Ricardo Khan.

Tickets for SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING start at $35. Prices are subject to change, and patrons are encouraged to buy early for the best seats at the best prices. The show is appropriate for adult and older teenage audiences.

Continuing this season is the popular Sunday College Night, with tickets to all 7 p.m. Sunday performances priced at just $10 with a valid student ID. Student tickets are just $15 on the day of the show for all other performances. Discounted ticket prices for teens and students are available in advance for all performances for $30.

Previews for SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING are at 8 p.m. Saturday, April 23; 2 p.m. Sunday, April 24; 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 26; and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 27. The official opening night is Thursday, April 28, at 7:30 p.m. Performances take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays.

Free Meet the Artists programs that allow audiences to interact with the cast and others associated with SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING will be held after the following performances: 2 p.m. Sunday, May 1; 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 4; 2 p.m. Sunday, May 15; and 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 19.

SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING will be audio described for those with visual impairments at 4 p.m. Saturday, May 14, and signed for persons with hearing impairments at 2 p.m. Sunday, May 15. The Playhouse is fully accessible. Audio enhancement receivers, large print programs and complete wheelchair access are available.

Tickets to SATCHEL PAIGE AND THE KANSAS CITY SWING are on sale now. For more information, call the Playhouse Box Office at 513-421-3888 (toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana at 800-582-3208) or visit www.cincyplay.com. Call 513-345-2248 for Telecommunications Device for the Deaf accessibility.

The 2015-16 Robert S. Marx Theatre season is presented by The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation, and Macy’s is the Robert S. Marx Theatre season design sponsor. The season sponsor of new work is The Lois and Richard Rosenthal Foundation.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of the community contributors to the ArtsWave 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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THE BOOK OF MORMON Announces Lottery Ticket Policy

Performances begin March 29, 2016 at the Aronoff Center

BIC_Book of MormonCINCINNATI – THE BOOK OF MORMON, winner of nine Tony Awards including Best Musical, is pleased to announce a lottery ticket policy for the National Tour, which begins March 29 at the Aronoff Center and plays a limited one week engagement through April 3, 2016. In Cincinnati, the production will conduct a pre-show lottery at the box office, making a limited number of tickets available at $25 apiece.

The wildly popular lottery for the Broadway production has attracted as many as 800 entries at some performances.  The producers of THE BOOK OF MORMON are pleased to offer low-priced lottery seats for every city on the National Tour.

Entries will be accepted at the box office beginning two and a half hours prior to each performance; each person will print their name and the number of tickets (1 or 2) they wish to purchase on a card that is provided. Two hours before curtain, names will be drawn at random for a limited number of tickets priced at $25 each. Only one entry is allowed per person. Cards are checked for duplication prior to drawing. Winners must be present at the time of the drawing and show valid ID to purchase tickets. Limit one entry per person and two tickets per winner. Tickets are subject to availability.

THE BOOK OF MORMON features book, music and lyrics by Trey Parker, Robert Lopez and Matt Stone. Parker and Stone are the four-time Emmy Award-winning creators of the landmark animated series, “South Park.” Tony Award-winner Lopez is co-creator of the long-running hit musical comedy, Avenue Q.  The musical is choreographed by Tony Award-winner Casey Nicholaw (Monty Python’s Spamalot, The Drowsy Chaperone) and is directed by Nicholaw and Parker.

THE BOOK OF MORMON is the winner of nine Tony Awards, including Best Musical, Best Score (Trey Parker, Robert Lopez, Matt Stone), Best Book (Trey Parker, Robert Lopez, Matt Stone), Best Direction (Casey Nicholaw, Trey Parker), Best Featured Actress (Nikki M. James), Best Scenic Design (Scott Pask), Best Lighting Design (Brian MacDevitt), Best Sound Design (Brian Ronan) and Best Orchestrations (Larry Hochman, Stephen Oremus); the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Musical; five Drama Desk Awards including Best Musical, the 2011 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album; four Outer Critics Circle Awards, including Best Musical, and the Drama League Award for Best Musical.

THE BOOK OF MORMON features set design by Scott Pask, costume design by Ann Roth, lighting design by Brian MacDevitt and sound design by Brian Ronan.  Orchestrations are by Larry Hochman and Stephen Oremus.  Music direction and vocal arrangements are by Stephen Oremus.

The Original Broadway Cast Recording for THE BOOK OF MORMON, winner of the 2011 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album, is available on Ghostlight Records.

THE BOOK OF MORMON will play the Aronoff Center, March 29 – April 3, 2016 with performances at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, Friday at 8:00pm, Saturday at 2:00pm and 8:00pm and on Sunday at 1:00pm and 6:30pm. For more information, please visit BroadwayinCincinnati.com.

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For more information, visit www.BookofMormonTheMusical.com

Follow THE BOOK OF MORMON on Twitter and on Facebook.

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Sinclair Theatre Presents ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST

SCCT_One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest promoSinclair Theatre will present ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, by Dale Wasserman, based on the novel by Ken Kesey, from April 8-16th, in Blair Hall in building 2 on the downtown Dayton campus.

Directed by Nelson Sheeley, the story focuses on a charming rogue, Randle P. McMurphy, who chooses to serve a short sentence in a mental institution rather than one in a prison. Quickly, he takes over the ward and accomplishes what the medical profession has been unable to do; helping fellow patients improve their condition through unorthodox antics. He clashes with the head nurse Ratched, who resents his successes and retaliates by abusing her authority. The 1975 Academy Award winning film, starring Jack Nicholson, was based on the novel so offers vastly different dialogue than the stage play. It is also more of an ensemble piece, rather than a star vehicle for Nicholson.

Reserved seating is available at $18 for adults/$15 for students and seniors with exception of Throwback Thursdays when ALL seats cost $10. Tickets may be purchased online anytime at www.sinclair.edu/tickets or at the box office, one hour prior to performances (if tickets are still available). Performance times are at 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 10th and at 7 p.m. on Thurs., Apr. 14th. Thursday and Sunday performances are American Sign Language interpreted by Frank Gayhart, Andrew Burris and Jordan Israel-Kendrick.

There will also be a midweek morning matinee at 10 a.m. on Wed., April 13th for high school and home school groups at a reduced rate. For group information contact: patti.celek@sinclair.edu

Cast includes:

  • Randle P. McMurphy: David Brandt
  • Nurse Ratched: Bryana Bentley
  • Chief Bromden: Antonio Davis
  • Billy Bibbit: David Thomas
  • Cheswick: Thomas Puckett
  • Martini: Jonathan Kelly
  • Frank Scanlon: Spencer Boden
  • Dr. Spivey: Maximillian Santucci
  • Aide Warren: Tristan Rivera
  • Dale Harding: Greyson Calvert
  • Nurse Flinn: Rebecca Henry
  • Ruckly: Leonardo Santucci
  • Aide Turkle: Naman Clark
  • Aide Williams: Shaun Diggs
  • Sandra: Elisa Fuentes
  • Candy Starr: Sha-lemar Davis

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