| Show Times: Evening Performances Fridays and Saturdays curtain is at 8pm Sunday Matinee Performances curtain is at 2pm |
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| Ticket Prices: Performance Prices: Adults $10 Seniors $7.00 |
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| May 2008 - Cinderella | ![]() |
by Michele L. Vacca Directed By Larry Smith Performances: May 16-17 & 23-24 at 8pm Sunday Matinees May 18 and 25 at 2pm Based on the famous French fairy tale tells the classic story of the poor orphaned girl raised by her wicked step-mother along with her two mean step-sisters. When she perchants meets Crown Prince Philip in her garden she falls in love but as a poor person she could never hope to marry the Prince. The tale begins with her Fairy Godmother setting the stage for Cinderella's eventual transformation from peasant to Princess. True to the fairy tale, Cinderella attends the Royal Ball but departs at midnight leaving her slipper behind. The Prince sets out on a search to discover the Princess of his Dreams. Click Here to view the cast. |
| July 2008 - Inherit the Wind | by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Directed By Michael C. Nelson Performances: July 25-26 and Aug 1-2 at 8pm Sunday Matinees July 27 & Aug 3 at 2pm Teacher B.T. Cates is arrested for teaching Darwin's theories. Famous lawyer Henry Drummond defends him; fundamentalist politician Matthew Brady prosecutes. This is a very thinly disguised rendition of the 1925 "Scopes monkey trial" with debates between Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan taken largely from the transcripts. Click Here to view the cast. |
| September 2008 - Cheaper by the Dozen | From the book by Frank Gilbreth and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey. Dramatized by Christopher Sergel. Directed by Jessica and Lois Holmes Performances: September 26-27 And Oct 2-3 at 8pm Sunday Matinees September 28 & Oct 4 Suppose you're an attractive high school girl and you're not only a member of a large and unique family but your father is, in fact, one of the great pioneers of industrial efficiency. Then suppose he decides, for no apparent reason, to apply his unorthodox methods to you and to the rest of your big family. The results are terribly embarrassing, funny and—it must be admitted—extremely effective! To Anne, however, the chief effect seems to be that of making them seem ridiculous to everyone else at school—especially to the boys! Dad pushes ahead with better organization for his large and delightful family. He puts up a chart for the young people to initial after completing each household task, uses a rung as an imaginary bathtub to demonstrate how to take a really efficient bath and appoints a utilities officer to levy fines on wasters of electricity. While the situations are often uproarious, there's a serious reason. Dad has a heart condition which he's keeping secret. The children don't understand them. Anne, the oldest, rebels. Both Dad and she are miserable at the lack of understanding between them. Then in a deft and moving scene, Dad becomes aware of how much Anne has grown up. Click Here to view the cast. |
| Christmas 2008 - FrUiTCaKeS | by Julian Wiles Directed By Tom Janowski and Amanda Hammel Performances: December 5-6 and December 11-12 at 8pm Sunday Matinees December 7 & 13 Mix together a batch of fruitcakes, three dozen Christmas trees, 10,000 outdoor Christmas lights, a chicken pox epidemic, two southern spinsters, an estranged old man, a lost cat named Tutti Frutti and a Christmas hog named Buster and you've got the recipe for a fun filled and touching evening filled with holiday cheer. Into this world comes Jamie, a kid who has run away from home and come as far as his money will take him. At first he thinks this town's inhabitants are "nuttier than fruitcakes," but soon he comes to admire, appreciate and adore this nutty little town. A moving story of alienation, understanding and reconciliation, FrUiTCaKeS provides audiences with a heaping helping of holiday warmth and Christmas cheer. Click Here to view the cast. |
