Tag Archives: Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park

2023-2024 Season Announced by Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park

PIP_logoThis spring, we brought our once-in-a-generation project to a close with the opening of the Mainstage Theatre Complex, featuring Moe and Jack’s Place – The Rouse Theatre. Now, we’re looking forward to the first full season in our new home with a lineup of shows that exemplifies the best of American theatre and takes advantage of all the enhanced theatre technology our new, state-of-the art facility provides.

Our 2023-24 season promises to inspire, entertain, celebrate our differences and lift up our shared humanity. It features stories that feel familiar, that stand the test of time, and that are fresh and contemporary.

MOE AND JACK’S PLACE — THE ROUSE THEATRE SEASON
Presented by Schueler Group

RING OF FIRE: THE MUSIC OF JOHNNY CASH
Created by RICHARD MALTBY, JR.
Conceived by WILLIAM MEADE
Directed by MARCIA MILGROM DODGE
Aug. 26 – Oct. 1, 2023

The hit musical returns! Ring of Fire celebrates the iconic Johnny Cash — the Man in Black whose razor-sharp vocals and stripped-down country sound helped shape the American rock ‘n’ roll landscape in the 20th century. The musical follows Cash’s early life in the cotton fields of Arkansas and moves to Memphis as he launches his music career, hits it big and marries the love of his life, June Carter. Five actor-musicians deliver crowd-pleasing renditions of Cash’s musical catalog, including “I Walk the Line,” “Folsom Prison Blues,” “I’ve Been Everywhere” and, of course, “Ring of Fire.” Revisit this toe-tapping, soul-stirring musical biography like never before in The Rouse Theatre!

CLYDE’S
By LYNN NOTTAGE
Directed by TIMOTHY DOUGLAS
Oct. 14 – Nov. 5. 2023

Every sandwich has a story at Clyde’s, a truck-stop operated by a group of people recently released from prison. Under the no-nonsense authority of Clyde — an ex-con herself whose searing remarks can really leave a burn — the small kitchen crew finds redemption and purpose through the art of sandwich-making. These vividly drawn characters share their stories and learn to express themselves creatively as they attempt to reclaim their lives in a world that’s set up for them to fail. Can an artistic twist on a grilled cheese elicit feelings of hope? Can assembling the perfect sandwich awaken a spiritual experience? In this witty and inspiring dramedy from two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage, they absolutely can.

ALL-NEW
A CHRISTMAS CAROL
By CHARLES DICKENS
Adapted and Directed by BLAKE ROBISON
Nov. 24 – Dec. 30, 2023

The holiday story you love unfolds in spectacular fashion with a brand-new production specially designed for Moe and Jack’s Place – The Rouse Theatre! In Charles Dickens’ classic tale, Ebenezer Scrooge is a greedy curmudgeon who finds his heart changing when three spirits and the ghost of a long-lost friend show him the errors of his ways. Across one fateful Christmas Eve night, Scrooge recalls the warmth and generosity of past loved ones, learns the value of kindness through Tiny Tim and the Cratchit family and glimpses a terrifying future should his heart remain the same. Featuring dazzling new set, costume and lighting designs, A Christmas Carol promises a magical holiday experience for your family like never before!

SEASON EXTRA! Subscribers get first access to tickets before the general public!

DRACULA
A WORLD PREMIERE
By VANESSA SEVERO in collaboration with JOANIE SCHULTZ
Directed by JOANIE SCHULTZ and VANESSA SEVERO
Feb. 3 – March 3, 2024

Bram Stoker’s classic vampire tale comes back to life in this evocative world premiere where everyone has a secret…and those secrets are deadly. Lifelong friends Mina and Lucy share intimate details about the men in their lives. Dr Seward works to unlock the mystery of Renfield’s strange affliction with the help of his friend Van Helsing, who carries her own secret. Jonathan Harker returns from Transylvania with a dark disclosure. As tensions rise, temptation lures them into double lives as they unmask one man, Count Dracula. Created by Vanessa Severo (Frida…A Self Portrait) and Playhouse Associate Artistic Director Joanie Schultz, this bold, highly theatrical re-telling breathes new life and new blood into the most famous vampire story of all time and pulses with humor, humanity and blood-curdling thrills.

THE CHOSEN
By AARON POSNER and CHAIM POTOK
Directed by AARON POSNER
April 13 – May 12, 2024

How can two directly opposing ideas exist together? Chaim Potok’s classic novel intimately explores such complex and thought-provoking questions in a moving adaptation for the stage. It’s 1940s Brooklyn where two Jewish boys, Reuven and Danny, live five blocks and a world apart. One of them is Orthodox, the other is Hasidic, and they’re both immersed in the religious instruction of their fathers and the traditions of their communities. But fate plays its hand, in the strangest of ways, and forges a life-changing friendship as they grow into adulthood. This hugely popular adaptation — often selling out theatres across the U.S. — is a heartfelt exploration of Jewish culture and the human ability to reach out across differences.

ROSENTHAL SHELTERHOUSE THEATRE SEASON
Presented by The Vontz Family

SANCTUARY CITY
By MARTYNA MAJOK
Directed by KAREEM FAHMY
Sept. 16 – Oct. 22, 2023

How far would you go to help a friend, and what would you be willing to risk? In this strikingly intimate play, two young people become one another’s sanctuaries as the children of U.S. immigrants in the wake of 9/11. Through years of late-night conversations, they see each other through adolescence and fight to find their place in the world. When G becomes a naturalized citizen, she finds a way to help B stay in the country legally. But what begins as a simple choice becomes far more complicated, and G and B’s relationship teeters on the brink of falling apart. This searing new play from Pulitzer Prize-winner Martyna Majok is an unconventional love story that’s as timely as it is unforgettable.

LATE NIGHT CATECHISM
By VICKI QUADE & MARIPAT DONOVAN
Nov. 3 – Dec. 17, 2023

One of the longest running shows in Chicago and U.S. theatre history, this one-nun comedy is part catechism class, part stand-up routine. A playful and compassionate send-up of Catholic culture, the audience becomes Sister’s class in this uproarious piece of interactive theatre. Sister is filling in for Father Murphy, who doesn’t want to miss his poker night, and she’s going to teach the class the way she wants. She goes on to weave stories into a hilarious tapestry that laughs at the quirks of the church while simultaneously embracing them. The Hollywood Reporter said it’s “a laugh-filled evening for all cultures, classes and religions.”

STEW
By ZORA HOWARD
Directed by STORI AYRES
March 2 – April 7, 2024

Three generations of Black women gather in Mama’s kitchen to cook an important meal — and things are about to boil over. As they take turns preparing a stew, closely held details of their lives rise slowly to the surface. But time is running short to prepare the meal, and the truths they try to keep from one another threaten to reveal themselves. A heady combination of secrets, knowingness and even violence hangs thick in the air before the day reaches an unforgettable climax. A 2021 Pulitzer Prize finalist, Zora Howard’s Stew tells a captivating, funny and intimate story about the relationship between mothers, daughters and the realities that bind them together.

VIETGONE
By QUI NGUYEN
Directed by JOANIE SCHULTZ
April 27 – June 2, 2024

An all-American love story about two very new Americans. It’s 1975. Saigon has fallen. He’s lost his wife, she’s lost her fiancé, and home as they’ve known it will never be the same. But this isn’t a story about war: It’s a story about falling in love. Based on playwright Qui Nguyen’s family, Vietgone tells the partially true and endlessly entertaining tale of how his parents, Quang and Tong, met in a refugee relocation camp in Arkansas during the Vietnam War. They navigate their very new lives as very new Americans amidst family pressure, the challenges of migration and a culture full of motorcycles, cowboys, fast food and dreams. With irreverent humor, hip-hop and heightened theatrical storytelling, this original story reinvents the romantic comedy genre and captures your heart.

Subscribe to guarantee your seats and to get first access to our all-new A CHRISTMAS CAROL (not included in any subscription package). You’ll also enjoy exclusive benefits like the best prices, easy ticket exchanges, payment installments, discounted parking and more. Four-show packages start at $126.

Click here to learn more.

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Cincinnati Playhouse Presents August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS Beginning April 23

PIP_Seven Guitars

Photo by Tony Arrasmith/Arrasmith & Associates.

Blues-infused play part of Wilson’s groundbreaking American Century Cycle

CINCINNATI (April 11, 2023) – The groundbreaking work of playwright August Wilson returns to the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park April 23 with SEVEN GUITARS, presented by the Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile, Jr. Foundation. Featuring live blues and lyrical dialogue, the play is part of Wilson’s award-winning American Century Cycle. (Previews take place April 23, 25 and 26; opening night is April 27.) The show runs through May 14 in the new Moe and Jack’s Place — The Rouse Theatre.

Like recent productions of Wilson’s American Century Cycle plays Jitney and Two Trains Running, SEVEN GUITARS presents an unrivaled exploration of the Black American experience in the 20th century.

Set in the summer of 1948 in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, blues music echoes through every building and creates a poignant rhythm to everyday life. A tight-knit group of friends gather together to reminisce and explore the ties that bind after the untimely death of their friend Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton – a gifted guitarist whose star was on the rise. As they do, a mystery unfolds that touches each of their lives.

“With SEVEN GUITARS, August deviates somewhat from his usual format and gives us a little twist on structure by using a flashback to help us follow the seven characters (seven guitars, so to speak)…Like always, August’s characters are rich and complicated,” explains Director Ron OJ Parson, who has directed more than 30 August Wilson plays and is one of the foremost experts of his work.

The play is among only a few by Wilson to feature live music. Characters bring blues to life, creating a soulful and emotional cadence to a story that’s already lyrical in its writing.

“SEVEN GUITARS, like Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,is about a musician,” says Parson. “I like to take that aspect to another level in the way I direct them. Being into blues and jazz myself, I use that to the fullest extent. Music is so important in the culture and world of the play.”
Considered one of the greatest American playwrights, Wilson and his Tony Award- and Pulitzer Prize-winning body of work have opened doors to innumerable revelations and conversations about the Black experience in the U.S. His chronicling and contributions to Black culture have reached across generations, races and national boundaries, inviting readers and audiences across the globe to examine at ground level the despair generated by poverty and racism, while simultaneously celebrating Black America.

CAST

Saran Bakari (Ruby); Bryant Bentley (Red Carter); Kevin Brown (Hedley); Kierra Bunch (Vera Dotsun); Marsha Estell (Louise); Dimonte Henning (Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton); Vincent Jordan (Canewell)

PRODUCTION
Ron OJ Parson (Director); Shaun L. Motley (Set Designer); Yvonne L. Miranda (Costume Designer); Jason Fassl (Lighting Designer); Andre J. Pluess (Sound Designer); Joe Foust (Fight Director); Cristin Carole (Movement/Intimacy Consultant); Jonathan Hetler (Casting Director); Brooke Redler (Stage Manager); Andrea L. Shell (Second Stage Manager); Co-production with Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

TICKETS

Tickets begin at $35. Preview performances take place April 23 at 2 p.m. and. April 25- 26 at 7:30 p.m.  Opening night is April 27 at 7:30 p.m. Performances will take place on Tuesday-Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 2 and 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. A weekday matinee will be offered on May 10 at 1 p.m.   To purchase tickets or 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. Patrons who are deaf, hard-of-hearing, deaf-blind or speech disabled: dial 711 to connect to the Box Office via Ohio Relay Services.

EVENT: ART TALKS (FORMERLY MEET THE ARTISTS)

Stay after select performances for a behind-the-scenes discussion with members of the artistic team.

  • Sun, April 30 at 2 p.m.
  • Thu, May 4, at 7:30 p.m.
  • Wed, May 10 at 7:30 p.m.

ADVISORY

August Wilson’s Seven Guitars is suitable for adult and older teenage audiences. This landmark script contains adult language (including the n-word) as it explores the tunes of life for the story’s characters. Through poetic dialogue and blues melodies, they speak frankly and deeply about hardship, violence, death and racism. The show runs approximately 3 hours and 15 minutes, with one intermission.

SPONSORS
Production Sponsor is the Carol Anne and Ralph V. Haile, Jr. Foundation.  Artist Sponsors are Geiler, BHDP, 19/19 Investment Counsel, AAA/Provident Travel and Diane and Carl Iseman. Season Sponsors is Schueler Group. The Rosenthal Family Foundation is the season sponsor of new work.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of almost 40,000 contributors to the ArtsWave Community 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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Playhouse’s Free NATE THE GREAT the Musical on April 8 at Kennedy Heights Arts Center

PIP_Nate the GreatNate the Great is on the case! When Annie tells Nate that her new painting has gone missing, the world’s greatest boy detective sets out to solve the mystery. He tracks down clues and puts suspects to the test — and then, another mystery unfolds. Nate finds himself facing the biggest challenge of his career. And worse yet, Mom is all out of pancakes!

This fun-filled musical reminds us of the importance of friendship and opening our minds to new possibilities. Recommended for kindergarten and up.

Saturday, April 8, 2023, 2:15 p.m.
Kennedy Heights Arts Center – 6546 Montgomery Rd, Cincinnati, Oh, OH 45213

For more information visit www.cincyplay.com/productions/nate-the-great-the-musical.

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Playhouse’s Free NATE THE GREAT the Musical on April 7 at Arts Center at Dunham

PIP_Nate the GreatNate the Great is on the case! When Annie tells Nate that her new painting has gone missing, the world’s greatest boy detective sets out to solve the mystery. He tracks down clues and puts suspects to the test — and then, another mystery unfolds. Nate finds himself facing the biggest challenge of his career. And worse yet, Mom is all out of pancakes!

This fun-filled musical reminds us of the importance of friendship and opening our minds to new possibilities. Recommended for kindergarten and up.

Friday, April 7, 2023, 7:30 p.m.
Sunset Players – 1945 Dunham Way, Cincinnati, OH 45238

For more information visit www.cincyplay.com/productions/nate-the-great-the-musical.

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August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS Runs April 23-May 14

PIP_Seven Guitars

Photo by Tony Arrasmith/Arrasmith & Associates.

August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
April 23-May 14
The Rouse Theatre [Eden Park]

It’s 1948 in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, and blues music echoes throughout the neighborhood. A group of old friends gathers to mourn and reminisce about Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton — a gifted guitarist whose star was on the rise and whose untimely death has irrevocably changed each of them. With live blues and lyrical dialogue, August Wilson weaves a poetic and poignant composition about the Black American experience. This landmark, Tony Award-winning play — a part of Wilson’s American Century Cycle — promises a soulful exploration of the ties that bind and the chords that hold us together. August Wilson’s Seven Guitars is suitable for adult and older teenage audiences. This landmark script contains adult language (including the n-word) as it explores the tunes of life for the story’s characters. Through poetic dialogue and blues melodies, they speak frankly and deeply about hardship, violence, death and racism. 

  • In preview Sun, April 23 at 2pm
  • In preview Tue-Wed, April 25-26 at 7:30pm
  • Thu-Fri, April 27-28 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, April 29 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, April 30 at 2pm
  • Tue-Fri, May 2-5 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, May 6 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, May 7 at 2pm
  • Tue, May 9 at 7:30pm
  • Wed, May 10 at 1pm & 7:30pm
  • Thu-Fri, May 11-12 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, May 13 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, May 14 at 2pm

Official page |

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