Category Archives: Season Announcements

DTG Announces 2012-2013 Season

THE DAYTON THEATRE GUILD 2012/2013 SEASON:
TILL DEATH DO US PART

Come see our palette of plays that will take you right to the edge, whether in a theater filled with laughter or the lean-forward-in-your-seat intensity of great drama. And some will be a little bit of both. You’ll love the intimate confines of our new Oregon District home which now backs our award-winning casts with the very latest in technology, yet still maintains the Guild tradition of family where no one in our audience is ever a stranger. Come join us.

OPUS
by Michael Hollinger
Showing: August 24-September 9, 2012
A world-class male string quartet struggles with the loss of a member, the recasting of a woman to replace him and the day-to-day tensions of exacting, temperamental artists struggling to make perfect music onstage, as well as to make sense of their lives offstage. This one-of-a-kind contemporary script is filled with quiet drama and surprising humor.

Directed by Greg Smith
Produced by Barb Jorgensen
(auditions dates: July 16 & 17, 2012)

— — — — — — — — — —

AND MISS REARDON DRINKS A LITTLE
by Paul Zindel
Showing: October 5-21, 2012
Three sisters are each misshapen in a different way by a childhood without order or stability. Anna is a science teacher convinced she’s contracted a life-threatening illness; Catherine, who has her own life issues, is the sister who cares for her, and Ceil, also in the business of education, has manipulated life often at the expense of the other two. From this twisted mix playwright Zindel has created an unexpected, delightful comedy.

Directed by Debra Kent
Produced by K.L.Storer
(auditions dates: August 27 & 28, 2012)

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A TUNA CHRISTMAS
by Ed Howard, Joe Sears & Jaston Williams
Showing: November 23-December 9, 2012
It’s Christmas time and local radio personalities Thurston Wheelis and Arles Struvie tell us all about the annual Christmas lawn display contest that Viola Carp keeps winning (14 times), the troubled local production of A Christmas Carol and along the way introduce us to a host of colorful characters, each one funnier than the last, in this little mythical Texas town. Two actors portray more than twenty roles in this hilarious production.

Directed by Kathy Mola
Produced by Deirdre Root
(auditions dates: October 8 & 9, 2012)

— — — — — — — — — —

GHOSTS
by Henrik Ibsen
— translated by Christopher Hampton
Showing: January 11-27, 2013
A brilliant new translation by Christopher Hampton breathes new life into this classic drama. The “ghosts” in this play are taboo topics that cannot be openly discussed. This drama is one of IbsenÕs most powerful works, but also one of his most controversial. Family sins are revisited when a son returns home to dedicate an orphanage in his father’s name and becomes involved in a tryst that ends in the painful knowledge of long suppressed family truths.

Directed by Matthew W. Smith
Produced by Steve Strawser
(auditions dates: November 26 & 27, 2012)

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100 SAINTS YOU SHOULD KNOW
by Kate Fodor
Showing: February 22-March 10, 2013
Father Matthew McNally has served his congregation well but now finds he needs some time to reflect on his own faith and suddenly leaves his parish. Theresa, a cleaning woman at his rectory, searches him out for spiritual advice. She needs help with her sixteen-year-old daughter, Abby. And Garrett, a grocery delivery boy, desperately seeks Father McNally’s guidance in search of his own identity. An unexpected crisis brings these characters into confrontation. Faith is tried and shaken as Father McNally faces his own spiritual demons and his greatest fear — living without a connection to God.

Directed by Ellen Finch
Produced by Debra Kent
(auditions dates: January 14 & 15, 2013)

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LEAVING IOWA
by Tim Clue & Spike Manton
Showing: April 5-21, 2013
The annual family vacations of one family are remembered as the son tries to take his father’s ashes to a former home. His attempts to reach the final resting place are interspersed with memories of family vacations the kids often hated. The actors play themselves as teenagers, as parents and as their older selves, on the road-trip of life. A sentimental play of good humor that is sweet and often contagiously funny.

Directed by Robb Willoughby
Produced by Greg Smith
(auditions dates: February 25 & 26, 2013)

— — — — — — — — — —

PILLOW MAN
by Martin McDonagh
Showing: May 17-June 2, 2012
“With echoes of Stoppard, Kafka, and the Brothers Grimm, The Pillowman centers on a writer in an unnamed totalitarian state who is being interrogated about the gruesome content of his short stories and their similarities to a series of child murders. The result is an urgent work of theatrical bravura and an unflinching examination of the very nature and purpose of art.” — Dramatists Play Service.

For mature audiences only
Directed by Natasha Randall
Produced by Ralph Dennler
(auditions dates: April 8 & 9, 2013)

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Season tickets membership is $75
* add the Holiday Show for an additional $10 for a total of $85

Individual ticket prices:

  • Adult: $19
  • Seniors (60+): $17
  • Students: $12

daytontheatreguild.thundertix.com
* all individual tickets are $1 less when paid for in cash on site at the Box Office

Dayton Theatre Guild
430 Wayne Ave
Dayton, OH 45410
937-278-5993

www.daytontheatreguild.org

CHILDREN UNDER SEVEN WILL NOT BE ADMITTED

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MLT Announces 2012-3013 Season

Middletown Lyric Theatre’s 2012-2013 Season
Life, Laughter, Love & Lunacy

September 13, 14, 15, 21 & 22
Closer Than Ever: Musical Revue
By: Maltby & Shire
An intimate, insightful tale about couples and unrequited love, included are several songs that were cut from the acclaimed BABY. Love, security, happiness-and holding onto them in a world that pulls you in a hundred directions at once. Maltby and Shire bring their celebrated craft and contemporary sensibility to songs about aging, mid-life crisis, second marriages, and role reversals.

November 1, 2, 3, 9 & 10
Shirley Valentine: Comedy
By Willy Russell
The heroine in this actor’s tour-de-force is an ordinary middle class English housewife. As she prepares chips and egg for dinner, she ruminates on her life and tells the wall about her husband, her children, her past, and an invitation from a girlfriend to join her on holiday in Greece to search for romance and adventure. Ultimately, Shirley does escape to Greece, has an “adventure” with a local fisherman and decides to stay. This hilariously engaging play was a hit in London and New York.

December 6, 7, 8, 14 & 15
Inspecting Carol: Comedy
By Daniel Sullivan & The Seattle Reparatory Company
A Christmas Carol meets The Government Inspector meets Noises Off in this hilarious hit. A man who asks to audition at a small theatre is mistaken for an informer for the National Endowment for the Arts. Everyone caters to the bewildered wannabe actor and he is given a role in the current production, A Christmas Carol. Everything goes wrong and hilarity is piled upon hilarity. (While A Christmas Carol is the catalyst for this show it is NOT performed in its entirety within the play)

February 7, 8, 9, 15 & 16, 2013
Bright Ideas: Comedy
By Eric Coble
How far would you go for your child? For Genevra and Joshua Bradley, the question is no longer hypothetical. Their three-year-old son, Mac, is next on the waiting list to get into the Bright Ideas Early Childhood Development Academy—and everyone knows once you’re in there, your life will unfold with glorious ease. Josh and Gen have had to scramble all their lives to get this far…and now they are one fatal dinner party away from the ultimate success as parents: The Right Pre-School. You may never look at pre-school—or pesto—the same way again…

March 21, 22, 23, 29 & 30
A-My Name is Alice: Music Revue
Conceived By Joan Micklin Silver & Julianne Boyd
Originally produced by the Women’s Project at the American Place Theatre in New York, Alice enjoyed a long run at the Village Gate Off-Broadway. This slick and lively revue created by a wide variety of comedy writers, lyricists and composers offers a marvelous kaleidoscope of contemporary women. Sophisticated, bawdy, funny and insightful, the twenty numbers portray friends, rivals, sisters and even members of an all-women’s basketball team. Winner of the Outer Critics’ Circle Award, Best Musical

April 25, 26, 27 & May 3 & 4
God of Carnage: Comedy
By Yasmina Reza – Translated by Christopher Hampton
A playground altercation between eleven-year-old boys brings together two sets of Brooklyn parents for a meeting to resolve the matter. At first, diplomatic niceties are observed, but as the meeting progresses, and the rum flows, tensions emerge and the gloves come off, leaving the couples with more than just their liberal principles in tatters.

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MPI Announces 2012-2013 Season

Mariemont Players Inc. proudly announces their 2012-2013 (76th) Season. Since 1936, MPI has been an all volunteer organization commited to producing high quality entertainment at affordable prices and since 1958 have been housed in the Walton Creek Theater, a former four-room schoolhouse. THIS WILL BE AN ALL COMEDY SEASON!

September 7 – September 23, 2012
The Fox on the Fairway, by Ken Ludwig and directed by Ginny Weil
A tribute from Ken Ludwig (Lend Me A Tenor, Moon Over Buffalo) to the great English farces of the 1930s and 1940s, The Fox On the Fairway takes audiences on a hilarious romp which pulls the rug out from underneath the stuffy denizens of a private country club. Filled with mistaken identities, slamming doors, and over-the-top romantic shenanigans, it’s a furiously paced comedy that recalls the Marx Brothers’ classics.

November 2 – November 18, 2012
West Moon Street, by Rob Urbinati and directed by jef Brown
Young Lord Arthur is deliriously happy – just down from Oxford and engaged to be married – when a mysterious palm reader predicts that he will commit a murder. A proper English gentleman, Arthur believes it is his Duty to get this killing business over with before he marries. But his education has not provided him with the required skills, and a hilarious series of mishaps ensues as he sets about finding a victim.

January 11 – January 27, 2013
Moonlight and Magnolias, by Ron Hutchinson and directed by Dee Anne Bryll
David O. Selznick, famed Hollywood producer, has a problem. He’s three weeks into shooting his latest historical epic, “Gone with the Wind,” but the script just isn’t working. His solution? Fire the director, pull Victor Fleming off “The Wizard of Oz,” and lock himself, Fleming, and script doctor Ben Hecht in his office for five days until they have a screenplay. With only peanuts and bananas to sustain them, they work through and act out Margaret Mitchell’s bestseller and in the process make movie history.

March 8 – March 24, 2013
Red, White and Tuna, by Jaston Williams, Joe Sears and Ed Howard and directed by Norma Niinemets
The much anticipated third installment in the Tuna trilogy takes the audience through another satirical ride into the hearts and minds of the polyester-clad citizens of Texas’ third smallest town. Along with Tuna’s perennial favorites, some new Tuna denizens burst into the 4th of July Tuna High School Class Reunion. This sets the stage for a show full of fireworks and fun from the land where the Lion’s Club is too liberal and Patsy Cline never dies.

May 10 – May 26, 2013
Chapter Two, by Neil Simon and directed by Charlie Sampson
A murder writer George, is encouraged by his younger brother Leo to start dating again after the death of his first wife. After a series of bad matches, he comes up with Jennie and she’s a keeper. Their bumpy relationship, at times funny, at others poignant, is partly based on Neil Simon’s own experience.

July 12 – July 28, 2013
Blue Moon Dancing, by Ed Graczyk and directed by Ed Cohen
In a small West Texas town the Blue Moon honky-tonk is the place where lonely gals hang out in the daytime, swigging Lone Stars and jabbering at each other about every little ol’ thang, sharing dreams and sad stories. A Cincinnati premiere by Ohioan Ed Graczyk (A Murder of Crows and Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean).

Performances are on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00pm; Sundays at 7:00pm (except for the 3rd Sunday); the 2nd and 3rd Sundays at 2:00pm; and the 3rd Saturday at 4:00pm. There is a preview performance on the Thursday evening before each Friday opening. Full season tickets are $90; Sept. – May five show tickets are $75. Shipping & handling is $3 per order.

Reserved Seat single tickets are $17 each, except for the preview performances, when tickets are $10 each for non-reserved seats.

For more information or to order season or single tickets, call Betsy at the Mariemont Players ticket line, 513.684.1236.

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MPI Announces 2012-2013 Season

Mariemont Players announce the slate of shows for their 2012-2013 season.

  • The Fox on the Fairway by Ken Ludwig, Sep 7-23, 2012
  • West Moon Street by Rob Urbinati, Nov 2-18, 2012
  • Moonlight and Magnolias by Ron Huthinson, Jan 11-27, 2013
  • Red, White and Tuna by Sears and Howard, Mar 8-24, 2013
  • Chapter Two by Neil Simon, May 10-26, 2013
  • Blue Moon Dancing by Ed Graczyk, Jul 12-28, 2013

For more information visit http://www.mariemontplayers.com/.

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Blake Robison Announces His First Season at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park

(CINCINNATI) – Incoming Artistic Director Blake Robison today announced his first season at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, which includes a variety of thrilling dramas, hilarious comedies and a mesmerizing musical to move, inspire, challenge and entertain Cincinnati audiences.

Some of the highlights of the 2012-2013 season include:

  • A swashbuckling adventure and a seafaring expedition — journeys for the entire family in THE THREE MUSEKEETERS and SHIPWRECKED!
  • The world premieres of ABIGAIL/1702 and LEVELING UP by two exciting up-and-coming voices, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Deborah Zoe Laufer.
  • Two classics from American masters Neil Simon and Horton Foote: BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS and THE TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL.
  • The music of legendary country artist Hank Williams in HANK WILLIAMS: LOST HIGHWAY. 
  • Dayton native Daniel Beaty’s THROUGH THE NIGHT receives its regional premiere after a triumphant off-Broadway debut.

According to Playhouse incoming Artistic Director Blake Robison, “It is an honor and a privilege to take the reins as the Playhouse’s new artistic director. To me, there is so much to celebrate here at the Playhouse — from the tremendous legacy of Ed Stern to the unlimited possibilities before us. What excites me most about joining the Playhouse family is the vibrant role that this theatre plays within the region. The doors to the Playhouse are wide open, and we aim to invite as many people as possible inside.

The Robert S. Marx Theatre Season
(sponsored by The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation)

The Marx Theatre season opens with an action-packed update of one of the greatest adventure stories of all time, THE THREE MUSKETEERS, by Ken Ludwig and adapted from the novel by Alexandre Dumas (September 1 – September 29, 2012; opening night: September 6). It’s all for one and one for all in this rousing story of heroism, treachery and honor. Young Frenchman D’Artagnan and his plucky sister Sabine aspire to join the famed Musketeers. But they get more than they bargained for when they stumble into the center of a bitter rivalry between King Louis and the evil Cardinal Richelieu. Incoming Artistic Director Blake Robison will helm the production. Playwright Ken Ludwig said, “I simply couldn’t be happier that Blake has chosen my play to open his tenure at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. I know from first-hand experience that he is one of the genuinely great theatre artists in America, and I’m honored that he’ll be directing THE THREE MUSKETEERS. I’ve admired the Playhouse for years and years, and with Blake at the helm of this remarkable theatre, I know that I’m in the best of hands.”

The season continues with BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS (October 13 – November 10, 2012, opening night: October 18) by Neil Simon, one of comedy’s all-time masters. It’s 1937, and 15-year-old Eugene Morris Jerome lives in close quarters with his extended family in this delightful coming-of-age story. While the daily dramas of his parents, brother, cousins and aunt swirl around him, Eugene spends his days dreaming of playing for his beloved Yankees … when he’s not thinking about girls or setting the table for dinner. Neil Simon’s semi-autobiographical play is a heartfelt love letter to his own Jewish childhood and proof that family harmonies and disharmonies transcend time and place. Time called BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS “Humorous and poignant … something to celebrate.” Artistic Director Steven Woolf from The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis will direct.

For the holidays, the Playhouse will celebrate the 22nd anniversary of its favorite seasonal tradition with Charles Dickens’ A CHRISTMAS CAROL, presented by U.S. Bank (November 29 – December 30, 2012; opening night: November 30). The Playhouse’s production, starring Cincinnati favorite Bruce Cromer as Ebenezer Scrooge, features a lovingly faithful adaptation by Howard Dallin, complete with a cast of nearly 30 actors and elaborate costumes and special effects.

A CHRISTMAS CAROL is not part of any subscription package, although subscribers do receive discounts and early buying opportunities. Associate Artistic Director Michael Evan Haney directs for his 20th year.

Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, one of the hottest up-and-coming playwrights in the United States, has written ABIGAIL/1702 (January 19 – February 17, 2013; opening night: January 24), a thrilling and imaginative world premiere for Cincinnati audiences. What really happened to The Crucible’s Abigail Williams after she stole through Salem’s forest one dark night in search of a new life and new beginning? Ten years have passed since the infamous witch trials, but Abigail still struggles to atone for her sins, the ones history remembers — and darker ones that live in her heart. As she cares for a young sailor on the brink of death, a mysterious stranger from Abigail’s past catches up with her, sending her on one final, suspense-filled quest for redemption. Blake Robison directs.

Horton Foote’s gentle Southern humor in THE TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL (March 9 – April 7, 2013; opening night: March 14) shines anew as an African-American cast offers a subtle new perspective on the universal themes of this life-affirming play. Trapped in a cramped Houston apartment with her son and his self-indulgent wife, Carrie Watts fantasizes about realizing her greatest ambition: returning to the Gulf Coast town of Bountiful and seeing her beloved childhood home one last time. Armed with her latest pension check, a wily stubbornness and limitless determination, Carrie embarks on the inspirational journey of a lifetime. The Plain Dealer calls THE TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL “American theater at its most engaging.” Timothy Douglas will direct.

Finally, the Marx Season concludes with a sultry, sexy and spellbinding noir thriller of love and murder. DOUBLE INDEMNITY (April 20 – May 18, 2013; opening night: April 25) by James M. Cain and adapted for the stage by David Pichette and R. Hamilton Wright, tells the story of a beguiling seductress and morally bankrupt insurance agent who plot to kill the unsuspecting husband who stands in the way of their budding romance. But will they get away with their perfect crime? DOUBLE INDEMNITY is a scintillating new stage version of the novel that inspired one of the most popular noir films of all time. Michael Evan Haney will direct.

The Thompson Shelterhouse Season
(sponsored by Heidelberg Distributing Co.)

The Thompson Shelterhouse season begins with a tour-de-force performance by Dayton, Ohio, native Daniel Beaty in THROUGH THE NIGHT (September 22 – October 21, 2012; opening night: September 27). This hard-hitting and inspirational story embodies the stories of six African-American men, ranging in age from 10 to 60, whose lives are intertwined in beautiful and unexpected ways during one life-changing evening. Daniel Beaty’s signature style displays a dazzling blend of humor, poetry, music and drama that earned him Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle award nominations. The New York Times called THROUGH THE NIGHT “A thing of beauty … with lines that cut deep and evoke tears of unexpected hope.” THROUGH THE NIGHT is presented by special arrangement with Daryl Roth.

Rolling Stone describes HANK WILLIAMS: LOST HIGHWAY (November 3, 2012 – December 30, 2012; opening night: November 8) as “Exhilarating! Serves up classic country with the edges raw and the energy hot.” Written by Randal Myler and Mark Harelik, LOST HIGHWAY goes beyond the legend to the roots of Hank Williams’ music. The journey starts in the backwoods of Alabama and winds up at center stage of the Grand Ole Opry. Featuring more than 20 of the singer’s most popular songs, including “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” “Hey, Good Lookin’” and “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” LOST HIGHWAY is an honest and mesmerizing portrait of the drifting cowboy who became one of the most influential country artists of all time. Hank Williams recorded some of his greatest hits right here in Cincinnati. Co-creator Randal Myler will direct.

The fuzzy line between reality and virtual reality is explored in the exciting world premiere of LEVELING UP (February 9 – March 10, 2013; opening night: February 14) by Deborah Zoe Laufer. Four 20-somethings struggle to transition from college to a “real” life that is rarely spent outside the glare of the video game monitors in their Las Vegas basement. What they find is a world of grown-up relationships that require levels of intimacy far beyond the social shield of technology. When one member of the circle is recruited by the NSA to pilot remote missiles, he’s ill equipped to handle the moral ambiguities raised in this thought-provoking and often humorous play.

The development of LEVELING UP was supported by the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center during a residency at the National Playwrights Conference of 2011. Wendy C. Goldberg will direct.

THE BOOK CLUB PLAY (March 23 – April 28, 2013; opening night: March 28) by Karen Zacarías is a comedy about books and the people who love them. When the members of a devoted book club become the subjects of a documentary filmmaker, their intimate discussions of life and literature take on new meaning with the camera rolling. Add in the unexpected arrival of a provocative new member and the sudden inclusion of some questionable titles, and long-standing group dynamics take a hilarious turn. Blake Robison will direct this engaging play that is sprinkled with wit, joy and novels galore.

The Shelterhouse season closes with a charming, family-friendly frolic in SHIPWRECKED! AN ENTERAINMENT – THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF LOUIS DE ROUGEMONT (AS TOLD BY HIMSELF) (May 11 – June 16, 2013; opening night: May 16) by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Donald Margulies. Celebrate the magic of theatre and imagination by hearing the amazing story of Louis de Rougemont, a would-be explorer who embarks from Victorian England on a daring expedition only to find himself marooned on a remote desert island. That’s when the real adventure begins for Louis and his faithful dog Bruno: Typhoon! Killer octopus! Flying wombats! Cannibals! As Louis’ breathless tale grows larger and larger, the boundary between truth and fiction blurs.

Subscriptions to the 2012-13 Playhouse season are available now in a variety of packages. Subscribe by April 30 for the lowest prices of the season. Prices range from $135 for the popular preview performances to $345 for the five-show Robert S. Marx Season, $135 to $353 for the five Thompson Shelterhouse shows and $270 to $628 for the full 10-show combination series package. The popular Build Your Own subscription package allows patrons to create their own season of four to nine shows in either theatre, with prices ranging from $118 to $576 depending on the performance and number of shows selected. Subscription prices increase May 1.

The Playhouse is continuing to offer three-, six- and nine-month payment options for subscribers. Some restrictions apply.

A student Build Your Own package allows full-time students to pick as few as four shows and as many as 10 from either theatre for as little as $22 per show. The Baby Sitter Rebate Series allows a couple purchasing two full subscriptions in the Marx Theatre to attend any performance and receive $100 at the end of the season to help cover the cost of baby sitters.

A Christmas Carol is on sale now to 2012-13 subscribers only. Subscribers save $5 on the very best seats to any performance of the Playhouse’s popular holiday production. Subscribers may also purchase tickets for children and teens to The Three Musketeers and Shipwrecked! at a special discounted rate.

The Playhouse is supported, in part, by the generosity of the tens of thousands of individuals and businesses that give to ArtsWave.

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 and the National Endowment for the Arts.

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