Dates and Order to be Determined
YANKEE TAVERN by Steven Dietz
THE LION IN WINTER by James Goldman
THE EXONERATED by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen
BASKERVILLE: A SHERLOCK HOLMES MYSTERY by Ken Ludwig
BLUES FROM AN ALABAMA SKY by Pearl Cleage
Dates and Order to be Determined
YANKEE TAVERN by Steven Dietz
THE LION IN WINTER by James Goldman
THE EXONERATED by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen
BASKERVILLE: A SHERLOCK HOLMES MYSTERY by Ken Ludwig
BLUES FROM AN ALABAMA SKY by Pearl Cleage
Filed under Season Announcements
HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, KY – Commonwealth Theatre Company at Northern Kentucky University is proud to announce our 2018 Summer Dinner Theatre season. Performances begin in June 2018. Tickets on sale in March 2018.
LIFE COULD BE A DREAM
By Roger Bean
Directed by Dee Anne Bryll
June 8 – 24, 2018 | NKU Stauss Theatre
Take a trip to Springfield and meet Denny and the Dreamers, a fledgling doo-wop singing group preparing to enter the Big Whopper Radio contest to realize their dreams of making it to the big time! Trouble comes in the form of Lois, who arrives to put some polish on the boys. Denny falls in love, Wally falls in line, Eugene falls apart, and along comes handsome heartthrob Skip to send the whole situation spinning. The ‘60s hits say it all: “Fools Fall in Love,” “Tears on My Pillow,” “Runaround Sue,” “Earth Angel,” “Stay,” “Unchained Melody,” “Lonely Teardrops,” and “The Glory of Love.” Winner of the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Best Musical Award, LIFE COULD BE A DREAM will leave you laughing, singing, and cheering.
THE ODD COUPLE
By Neil Simon
Directed by Mike King
July 6 – 22, 2018 | NKU Stauss Theatre
Back by popular demand, THE ODD COUPLE returns to the Summer Dinner Theatre stage! This comedy classic features favorites Ken Jones as Felix Unger and George Alexander as Oscar Madison. When Felix moves in with recently divorced Oscar after his own marriage ends, it quickly becomes apparent that the roommates are complete opposites in their habits and lifestyles. Oscar is a sports writer who enjoys junk food and takes a certain pride in his sloppiness. Felix is a neat-freak photographer who cooks gourmet meals and is obsessed with removing each and every bit of dirt and disorder from Oscar’s apartment. Hilarity ensues as the two drive each other crazy – will their friendship survive in spite of their differences?
For more information call the NKU School of the Arts Box Office at (859) 572-5464 or visit nku.edu/ctc.
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Filed under Press Releases, Season Announcements
Rivertown Players, Inc. 2018-2019 Season Announced!
The Best of RTP: Season Preview
Directed by Shea Haney
April 27, Great Crescent Brewery, 8PM
URINETOWN the Musical
Directed by Carla Zell
July 2018
Hillforest Murder Mystery
Directed by Bev Toon
October 26, 27, 2018 Hillforest, 6:30PM
GODSPELL JR.
Directed by Nicole Folop
November 2018
Disney’s SLEEPING BEAUTY KIDS
Directed by Jamie Haney, Shea Haney, and Bree Nero
Spring 2019
Filed under Season Announcements
2018-2019 Broadway Series
OCTOBER 2-7, 2018
SCHOOL OF ROCK – THE MUSICAL
JANUARY 15-20, 2019
FINDING NEVERLAND
FEBRUARY 12-17, 2019
RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN’S THE KING AND I (FEBRUARY 12-17, 2019)
MARCH 5-10, 2019
ON YOUR FEET!
APRIL 2-7, 2019
LES MISÉRABLES
JUNE 25-30, 2019
WAITRESS
2018-2019 BROADWAY SERIES SEASON TICKETS START AT $245 FOR ALL 6 SHOWS! Subscribe online at Ticket Center Stage, at the Box Office, or by phone at 937-228-3630 or 888-228-3630.
2018-2019 Star Attractions
OCTOBER 23-25, 2018
THE WIZARD OF OZ
NOVEMBER 16 & 17, 2018
RUDOLPH THE RED-NOSED REINDEER: THE MUSICAL
FEBRUARY 1 & 2, 2019
CHICAGO
MAY 21-26
THE BOOK OF MORMON
Filed under Season Announcements
A version of this article was originally published Feb. 21, 2018
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By Rob Bucher
In discussing the success of the first season in their new Over-the-Rhine home, Artistic Director Brian Isaac Phillips speaks with a combination of pride, amazement, and gratitude. “One of the things that’s really important to me, one of the reasons I wanted to work in Cincinnati and stay in Cincinnati, was I didn’t want to go somewhere where everything was already done, and built, and you just become a cog in a machine. I saw the potential for what this company could be and so to see this company grow, and this city grow, and so not to just be a fly over city anymore, but now getting this recognition on a national level…that this is a place to visit for the arts, for food, for everything is really exciting. I think a lot of people in this city have done a lot of hard work to make that happen and it’s nice to be a part of it.”
“Business overall is up 60%. We had a subscription goal and a single ticket goal for every single show. We blew past that subscription goal by so much that it started to eat into available capacity that we could actually sell for single tickets. For us to make our single ticket goals based on how many subscribers we had, we had to operate at 85-95% capacity on every production, which is sort of where we were on Race Street, but now we have all the extra seats. We are hitting those single ticket goals and exceeding them as well, so we are running at a very high capacity.” Phillips is eager to carry that momentum into their 25th season.

Matthew Lewis Johnson as Pseudolus. Photo by Mikki Schaffner Photography.
Cincinnati Shakespeare Company opens their 25th season with their first musical production, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. “I’ve been waiting to do [a musical] for a while, but we could never figure out how to make it work at Race Street. [For the new theater,] there was a whole bunch of work that we did in designing, planning and building, specifically so we could start producing musicals as well,” explains Phillips.
“Forum” is a Tony-award winning farce with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Set in ancient Rome, it follows Pseudolus (Matthew Lewis Johnson), a slave who schemes to win his freedom by helping his young master woo the girl next door. Broadway veteran Patrick Ryan Sullivan makes his Cincy Shakes debut playing Roman army captain Miles Gloriosus. On the production side, director Phillips has CCM’s Vince DeGeorge providing choreography and Cincinnati native, Erin McCamley comes home to music direct.
In another first, CSC is honored to have The Royal Shakespeare Company’s associate artist Christopher Luscombe stage “The Winter’s Tale” in March 2019. Luscombe’s currently running production of Twelfth Night closes Feb. 24 at Stratford-Upon-Avon in London and is being filmed for a world-wide release.
Last presented by CSC twelve years ago, “The Winter’s Tale” is one of The Bard’s most beautiful romances. Leontes (Bruce Cromer) the King of Sicilia becomes convinced, groundlessly, that his heavily pregnant wife Queen Hermione (Kelly Mengelkoch) has been having an affair with his childhood friend Polixenes, the King of Bohemia.
Performances begin in July with the summer extra, “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged).” Three actors perform The Bard’s entire canon in with wild comedic abandon at breakneck speed.

Sara Clark as Julia. Photo by Mikki Schaffner Photography.
Early in 2017, George Orwell’s novel “1984” experienced newfound popularity, even landing for a time on Amazon’s bestseller list. In October, Robert Icke and Duncan Macmillan’s acclaimed play makes its regional debut on the CSC stage. The political thriller follows Winston Smith as he discovers a secret resistance to the authoritarian government known only as Big Brother.

Caitlin McWethy as Viola. Photo by Mikki Schaffner Photography.
Viola (Caitlin McWethy) loves Count Orsino. Count Orsino loves Countess Olivia. Countess Olivia loves Cesario. The problem, Cesario is Viola disguised as a man. Learn how Viola gets into, and out of, this dilemma in Shakespeare’s most lively, lovely and lyrical comedy “Twelfth Night” opening in November.
CSC’s holiday tradition, “Every Christmas Story Ever Told (And Then Some!),” returns in mid-December. This 90-minute comedy extravaganza offers an irreverent look at your favorite holiday stories.
In January, Cincy Shakes is proud to produce their first August Wilson script, “Fences.” Accolades include the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and Tony Awards for Best Play (1987) and Best Revival of a Play (2010). Set in 1950s Pittsburgh, the story focuses on Troy Maxson, a former Negro baseball league player, who at 53 years old, struggles to provide for his family as a garbage man. When his son Cory wants to play ball, will Troy’s bitterness and resentment destroy their relationship?

Kelly Mengelkoch as Lady Macbeth. Pby Mikki Schaffner Photography.
CSC Resident Ensemble Member Miranda McGee makes her directorial debut with William Shakespeare’s “Macbeth.” Audience favorite Giles Davies stars as the Scottish general who, after hearing the prophecy of three witches, murders King Duncan to take the throne. Ambition leads to madness as he and his co-conspirator Lady Macbeth (Kelly Mengelkoch) face the consequences of their treachery. Expecting a high ticket demand, an extra week has been added to the run.

Sara Clark as Lucienne and Kelly Mengelkoch as Raymonde.
The season concludes with a hilarious new translation of the turn-of-the-century farce “A Flea in Her Ear” by David Ives (“All in the Timing”). Raymonde, suspecting her husband of infidelity, hatches a plot with her friend to test her husband’s heart. An invitation to a rendezvous from an anonymous admirer sets off an unexpected chain of events. Confusion reigns as a colorful cast of characters run amok in the notorious Paris hotel, The Frisky Puss.
2018-2019 Cincinnati Shakespeare Company schedule
*Season extras
For more information visit www.cincyshakes.com.
Filed under Season Announcements