Tag Archives: The Carnegie’s Creative Disruption Committee

The Carnegie Hosts Halloween Themed Production, SILENT SCREAM

TC_Silent Scream logoTickets on Sale Now for Socially Distant Walking Mystery Tour

COVINGTON, KY – Are you dying for something to do this Halloween? Then join The Carnegie Creative Disruption Committee (The Carnegie CDC) for SILENT SCREAM, a small group and socially distant, 60-minute walking tour mystery, running October 29- November 1 at The Carnegie.

Written and directed by Sean P. Mette, SILENT SCREAM is a narrative mystery told one character at a time. Small groups of patrons will tour through a series of rooms and locations in The Carnegie to hear stories from different ghosts and receive new pieces of information to the overarching mystery along the way. 

SILENT SCREAM tells the ghostly tale of Billy Bailey, a promising young actor of the silent screen era. When his fiancé was mysteriously found dead, he became the prime suspect. Before the truth could be revealed, a fire destroyed the theatre and all the evidence within it. Now ghosts roam the theatre where the murder took place, forever searching for the truth. Guests are invited to solve the mystery or maybe, become part of it.

Safety for the audience and actors has been built into the production design of the show. Precautions include physically distant staging, required mask wearing, private party audience tours, and staggered ticketing to keep crowd numbers low. Periodic cleaning throughout the show will also be in place for handrails and other high-touch surfaces. Each tour will have a guide to navigate The Carnegie’s historic campus, and patrons will only be grouped with members of their own party for tours. Please note this tour includes stairs and continuous walking/standing for a period of 60 minutes. Limited mobility accommodations are available, learn more by calling The Carnegie Box Office.

The Carnegie CDC acts as a creative engine and rapid response team to the current struggles of the arts and entertainment industry. It also provides a new community-based structure for performing arts programming, such as safe, socially distant live experiences, like SILENT SCREAM, that follow public health recommendations to keep cast, crew and arts patrons safe.

SILENT SCREAM tours will run 6:50-9:50pm kicking off in 10-minute increments. Tours are $60 per group, up to six people per group allowed. To purchase SILENT SCREAM tour tickets, call The Carnegie Box Office (open Tuesday-Friday noon to 5 p.m.) at (859) 957-1940 or visit thecarnegie.com.

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The SILENT SCREAM cast and production team:

CAST LIST

  • Billy Bailey – Trevor Browning
  • Helen “Nellie” Rose Ward – Zoe Rose Davidson
  • Edith Louise Dinkley – Hannah Gregory
  • William Kennedy – Kyle Taylor
  • Rachel Lockwood – Rachel Barkalow
  • Virginia Grace O’Connor – Makenzie Ruff
  • Georgia Marsh – Liz Carman
  • The Phantasm – Aiden Sims

PRODUCTION TEAM LIST

  • Written and Directed by Sean P. Mette
  • Producer – Maggie Perrino
  • Production Manager – Ria Villaver Collins
  • Lighting Design – Chanelle Dau Pino

ABOUT THE CARNEGIE
The Carnegie is Northern Kentucky’s largest multidisciplinary arts venue providing theatre events, educational programs and art exhibitions to the Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati community. The Carnegie facility is home to The Carnegie Galleries, the Otto M. Budig Theatre, and the Eva G. Farris Education Center. More information about The Carnegie is available at thecarnegie.com or by calling (859) 491-2030. 

The Carnegie receives ongoing operating support from Cincinnati International Wine Festival, The Greater Cincinnati Foundation, Kenton County Fiscal Courts, the Kentucky Arts Council and the City of Covington. The Carnegie is also supported by the generosity of more than 40,000 contributors to the ArtsWave Community Campaign.

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YPCC Kicks-Off Ninth Season with Performance Event on the Purple People Bridge

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The Young Professionals Choral Collective (YPCC) will kick off its 9th season with an unconventional, in-person performance on the Purple People Bridge next Friday, October 16 at 6 p.m. The free event, entitled Building Bridges – Keep the Arts Alive, is produced in partnership with The Carnegie’s newly launched Creative Disruption Committee (Carnegie CDC) and demonstrates the importance of continuing to support the arts throughout the pandemic. This will be one of the first in-person, public choral performances in Cincinnati since March. Performers will be fully masked and socially distanced for the duration of the event, lasting approximately 30 minutes.

YPCC will perform repertoire that features two original works, commissioned by YPCC through the Young Professional Composers Project. The performance also features an arrangement of Simon and Garfunkel’s Bridge Over Troubled Water, signifying what the arts mean to so many people during COVID-19 times.

This event highlights how music-making and the arts can be used to build bridges between communities, even amid a pandemic. Audience members can expect to be reminded of how important the arts are to the fabric of society, especially throughout Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky. The Carnegie CDC specializes in producing safe, socially distant live performances for the public to continue to enjoy. Select members of the Cincinnati Boychoir, as well as theatre industry professionals through the League of Cincinnati Theatres, will be joining for portions of the performance.

AUDIENCE PROTOCOL: This event is free and open to the public. Social distancing and mask-wearing will be required for all by-standers and audience members on the bridge. Music will be amplified through PA speakers over a stretch of the bridge to allow all audience members to hear while still appropriately distanced. The performance will also be broadcasted on a short-range FM radio frequency, transmitted in real-time to allow audience members the ability to “tune-in” via their own handheld FM radio or car radio on the outskirts of the bridge, closer to the banks. QR codes will be posted along the bridge with links to programming information, including radio frequency tuning directions. 

In case of rain, this event will be rescheduled for Saturday, October 17 at 2 p.m. For more information, please visit www.ypccsing.org/bridgesing. For more information about the Carnegie CDC, go to www.thecarnegiecdc.com

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About YPCC: YPCC is an innovative choral ensemble that combines Cincinnati’s love of singing, socializing and culture for young professionals ages 21-45. YPCC is comprised of more than 1,200 singers who create and share high-quality music in an accessible, fun, and social way.

About The Carnegie CDC: The Carnegie’s Creative Disruption Committee (The Carnegie CDC) is a volunteer consortium launched in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Carnegie CDC acts as a creative engine and rapid response team to the current struggles of the entertainment industry and strives to create safe, socially distant live performances for the public while raising funds for theatre industry professionals.

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Casting Call for SILENT SCREAM from The Carnegie Creative Disruption Committee

TC_Creative Disruption Committee logoCASTING CALL FOR SILENT SCREAM
A walking tour mystery written and directed by Sean Mette

Performances: October 29, 30, 31, Nov 16-10pm

Rehearsals: October 9, 19, 21, 23 on zoom. October 24, 25, 26, 28 onsite at The Carnegie. Rehearsals will mostly take place in the evenings, roughly 7-9pm. Saturday, October 24th will be a longer day, noon-9pm with breaks throughout, including dinner break.

About SILENT SCREAM:
Billy Bailey was one of the most promising actors of the silent screen. When Billy’s fiancé was mysteriously found dead, Billy became the prime suspect. However, before the truth could be revealed a fire destroyed the theatre and all the evidence within it. Now ghosts roam the theatre where the murder took place, forever searching for the truth. Will you solve the mystery or become part of it? 

Description of the Show:
Silent Scream is a narrative mystery that is told one character at a time. Small groups of patrons are led through a series of rooms and locations throughout the Carnegie building hearing stories from the different ghosts and receiving new pieces of information to the overarching story/mystery along the way.

Safety for the audience and actors have been built into the production design of the show. Some precautions include physically distant staging, required mask wearing and small group audience tours through the production.

 Auditions by Email Submission Only. What to send:

  • Headshot and resume for consideration. Actors will be selected from submitted resumes to film a short side for the casting panel. Please include information on which characters you wish to be considered for from the list at the bottom of this notice.

Please send email with resume and headshot attached to Maggie Perrino, mperrino@thecarnegie.com by 5pm on October 1 to be considered for the show. To volunteer for this project, email riavillaver@gmail.com.

CASTING POLICY: SILENT SCREAM encourages a diversity of race, gender identity, age, and body type in its casting. Actors from all backgrounds and life experiences are encouraged to audition. Actors must be able to play the characters as listed but needn’t match the role specifically in age or gender identity.

 COMPENSATION INFORMATION: 

  • The Carnegie CDC defines paid roles in each of its projects that charge admission.

  • SILENT SCREAM will offer 8 paid performance roles.

  • The 8 performance roles will be paid as part of a profit-sharing program at the end of the show. The amount paid out will directly depend on how many tickets are sold.

  • The Carnegie CDC takes 25% of profits for ongoing work, while 75% of profits will be equally split among the defined paid roles (8 actors and 2 production roles.)

 All cast members must feel comfortable rehearsing on zoom, working independently, climbing stairs/walking substantial distances, complying with temperature and symptom checks as well as wearing masks as part of rehearsal and performance protocols. 

 Available Roles

  • Billy Bailey: The rising star of the silent screen. Billy Bailey is charismatic and charming. A mirrored image of the qualities that you wish that you saw in yourself and others. His on-screen persona is the type of character that despite any logical reason to, you can’t help but root for. However, after the murder of his fiancé all of this is put into doubt of who the real Billy is
  •  Helen “Nellie” Rose Ward: The murdered fiancé of Billy Bailey. Prior to her murder, she was also a rising star of the silent screen, being seen most often alongside Billy in pictures. She is sweet, wholesome and extremely grateful for everything that has been awarded to her in life. Considers herself very lucky. As she came from a poor, rural town she always found ways to help those less fortunate than herself.
  • Rachel Lockwood: The daughter of Henry Lockwood and manages Lockwood Studios, where Billy Bailey’s films are produced. Lockwood comes from wealth and believes that she is entitled to the finest things in life due to her birth. The knowledge that she processes power over the lives of many, including Billy Bailey, gives her joy. Thanks to her wealth and upbringing, she has been awarded the opportunity to study a variety of non-traditional subjects, typically ones that (in one way or another) provide her with a way to accumulate more power.
  • William/Wilhelmina Kennedy: The projectionist and archivist of the Blue Orchid Theater. A Well-educated and openly intellectual person. It makes you wonder why Kennedy chose to work in a theater instead of other scholarly pursuits. Publicly hates having to explain things to people, but secretly enjoys it.
  • Edith Louise Dinkley: Billy Bailey’s most enthusiastic fan, Edith comes to the theater almost every night to see Billy on the screen. Believes that she is Billy Bailey’s greatest love, “he just doesn’t know it yet.” Knows everything about Billy Bailey and is not afraid to speak at length about the subject, despite the lack of evidence of some of her claims. Would do anything for Billy and believes that death will bring her even closer to her “one true love.”
  • Virginia Grace O’Connor:  An aspiring soloist, Virginia is tired of being in the chorus line and wants to be the lead. Her classical training gives her the underlying motivation to be better, no matter the cost. Nicknamed the “Backstage Banshee”, Virginia’s wails can easily be heard as she is “warming up.” Singing ability not required, but preferred.
  • George/Georgia Marsh: The technician and overall “fix it” man for Lockwood Studios and the Blue Orchid Theater. With an office under the stage of the Blue Orchid, Marsh has heard all plenty of conversations that people intended to be private. What does Marsh do with that information? That is for George/Georgia to decide? Marsh enjoys death more than being alive. “I don’t have to work and can spend all my time listening to my “skylark.”” George/Georgia is in love with Virginia Grace O’Connor.
  •  The Phantasm (Rachel Lockwood in disguise): Holds some power over the ghosts of the Blue Orchid Theater. Eerie, manipulative and generally puts people at unease.

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GODSPELL Runs Sept. 12-13

TC_Godspell logo bannerGODSPELL
Presented by Carnegie Creative Disruption Committee
Sept. 12-13
Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park [Hamilton]

Cast: Joshua Carandang as Jesus, Kyle Taylor as Judas/John the Baptist, Kaylee Michael as Socrates/Day by Day Soloist, Maddie Vaughn as DaVinci/Turn Back O Man Soloist, Kara Hancock as Thomas Aquinas/Lessons Well Soloist, Ashley O. Morton as Gibbon/By My Side Soloist, Je’Shaun Jackson as Martin Luther/All Good Gifts & Mackenzie Ruff as Sartre/Bless the Lord Soloist
Ensemble: Royce Louden, Eric Klear, Elizabeth Taylor, Sam Johnson, Andi Angel, Maria Zierolf, Ethan Brooks Baker, Jordan Darnell, Logan Weinfurtner, Liam Sweeney, Savannah Boyd, Julia Olinger, Ezra Crist, Lyndsey Adams

The uplifting musical’s physically distant staging across Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park’s beautiful campus guarantees this will be like no production of GODSPELL you’ve experienced before! Each performance, featuring songs from Stephen Schwartz (PIPPIN, WICKED), has two start times to allow for social distancing within walking audience groups. This format does require sustained walking and standing throughout the show. For those who need a more accessible way to view the show, please call The Carnegie box office to reserve an art cart ticket, which includes access to one of Pyramid Hill’s custom golf carts.

  • Sat-Sun, Sept. 12-13 at 4:30pm & 6:30pm

Official page | Press release |

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The Carnegie, Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park Partnership Bridges The Arts & Public Health Recommendations

TC_Godspell logo bannerTickets on Sale Now for Socially Distant Performance of GODSPELL

COVINGTON, KY – Are you ready to sing about love? The Carnegie’s Creative Disruption Committee (The Carnegie CDC) and Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park have partnered to present GODSPELL in an innovative walking tour format where audiences can experience the musical at a safe, social distance on September 12 and 13. A limited number of tickets are on sale now for the production’s start times of 4:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $35 for adults ($32 for Carnegie and Pyramid Hill members), $25 for students and $15 for children age 10 and under.

GODSPELL
A Musical Based Upon The Gospel According to St. Matthew
Music and Additional Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz
Conceived by John-Michael Tebelak

The uplifting musical’s physically distant staging across Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park’s beautiful campus guarantees this will be like no production of GODSPELL you’ve experienced before! Each performance, featuring songs from Stephen Schwartz (PIPPIN, WICKED), has two start times to allow for social distancing within walking audience groups. This format does require sustained walking and standing throughout the show. For those who need a more accessible way to view the show, please call The Carnegie box office to reserve an art cart ticket, which includes access to one of Pyramid Hill’s custom golf carts.

“In the arts, we’re natural innovators – especially in response to unanticipated challenges,” said Kim Best, Executive Director of The Carnegie. “COVID-19 represents a sea change for the industry, one in which partnerships are reinvigorated. Together, The Carnegie and Pyramid Hill are safely sharing the joy of the arts with the Greater Cincinnati region in a way we never would have imagined if not for these circumstances.”

“Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park is excited for this collaboration and the opportunity to bring live theatre to our outdoor venue,” says Sean FitzGibbons, Executive Director of Pyramid Hill.  “This will allow our patrons, new and returning, to experience the park in a new way.”

The socially distant production of GODSPELL presented by The Carnegie CDC, the volunteer consortium launched in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park represents the first performance partnership between the two arts organizations.

The Carnegie CDC acts as a creative engine and rapid response team to the current struggles of the arts and entertainment industry. It also provides a new community-based structure for performing arts programming, such as safe, socially distance live experiences, like GODSPELL, that follow public health recommendations to keep cast, crew and arts patrons safe.

The GODSPELL cast and production team is listed below.

CAST LIST

  • Jesus – Joshua Carandang
  • Judas/John the Baptist – Kyle Taylor
  • Socrates/Day by Day Soloist – Kaylee Michael
  • DaVinci/Turn Back O Man Soloist – Maddie Vaughn
  • Thomas Aquinas/Lessons Well Soloist – Kara Hancock
  • Gibbon/By My Side Soloist – Ashley O. Morton
  • Martin Luther/All Good Gifts – Je’Shaun Jackson
  • Sartre/Bless the Lord Soloist – Mackenzie Ruff
  • Ensemble – Royce Louden, Eric Klear, Elizabeth Taylor, Sam Johnson, Andi Angel, Maria Zierolf, Ethan Brooks Baker, Jordan Darnell, Logan Weinfurtner, Liam Sweeney, Savannah Boyd, Julia Olinger, Ezra Crist, Lyndsey Adams

PRODUCTION TEAM

  • Maggie Perrino
  • Greg Dastillung
  • Farley Norman
  • Caleb Redslob
  • Maddie Sensenstein
  • Genevieve Perrino
  • Christine Orr
  • Ria Villaver Collins

To purchase GODSPELL tickets, visit The Carnegie Box Office (open Tuesday-Friday noon to 5 p.m.) in person, call (859) 957-1940 or visit thecarnegie.com.

GODSPELL presented through special arrangement with Theatre Maximus, 1650 BROADWAY, SUITE 606, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019.

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ABOUT THE CARNEGIE
The Carnegie is Northern Kentucky’s largest multidisciplinary arts venue providing theatre events, educational programs and art exhibitions to the Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati community. The Carnegie facility is home to The Carnegie Galleries, the Otto M. Budig Theatre, and the Eva G. Farris Education Center. More information about The Carnegie is available at thecarnegie.com or by calling (859) 491-2030. 

The Carnegie receives ongoing operating support from Cincinnati International Wine Festival, The Greater Cincinnati Foundation, Kenton County Fiscal Courts, the Kentucky Arts Council and the City of Covington. The Carnegie is also supported by the generosity of more than 40,000 contributors to the ArtsWave Community Campaign. 

ABOUT PYRAMID HILL SCULPTURE PARK & MUSEUM
Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park & Museum brings people to art in nature. The park features over 60 pieces of monumental outdoor sculpture in a natural setting of hills, meadows and forests. 

The Ancient Sculpture Museum features Greek, Roman, Etruscan, Syrian, and Egyptian sculpture dating to 1550 B.C. 

General Admission for the park is $8 for adults $3 for children. www.pyramidhill.org.  Thank you to our sponsors: ArtsWave and The Hamilton Community Foundation.

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