Friday, September 30, 2011

National Theatre Live Series To Be Shown at the Englert

Iowa City - The Englert Theatre is proud to present high definition re-broadcasts of performances from the National Theatre in London. The Englert will broadcast every performance from the 2011-2012 season, starting with One Man, Two Guvnors on Saturday, October 1 at 7pm.

Nicholas Hytner’s “five star” production of One Man, Two Guvnors is the first play in the third season of National Theatre Live broadcasts. The production was filmed on September 15, and broadcasted to almost 400 cinemas around the world. Based on the Italian classic The Servant of Two Masters by Carlo Goldoni, Richard Bean’s hilarious English version has received wide acclaim from critics and audiences alike. The Guardian described One Man, Two Guvnors as “One of the funniest productions in the National’s history.”

Other upcoming National Theatre Live broadcasts at the Englert include:

The Kitchen - November 19

Collaborators - December 17

Tickets are available at the Englert Box Office. Tickets are $15 for students & seniors, and $18 general admission. For tickets, the public should call the Box Office at (319) 688-2653. Tickets may also be purchased online at englert.org.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Crucible opens Friday

Iowa City — Dreamwell Theatre presents Arthur Miller's The Crucible, which runs September 30 through October 8. This dramatic story of the Salem Witch Trials is one of the classics of modern theatre. While there are many themes at work in this amazing play, Dreamwell chose it because of the character John Proctor and his struggle to remain true to himself–will full acknowledgement of his own weaknesses–no matter what the consequences might be. This show is directed by Scott Strode.


Director Scott Strode says, "Arthur Miller uses the metaphor of the crucible to chilling effect. Certainly it is prevalent in the lives of his characters, but isn't it also an appropriate metaphor for our own lives? John and Elizabeth Proctor, Giles Corey, Abigail Williams, Danforth, and others in the play find themselves in crucibles of their own making. Are those crucibles so far from our own?"

The show runs September 30, October 1, 7, and 8 at 7:30 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Society at 10 S. Gilbert Street in Iowa City. $13 general admission, $10 senior/student. Call 319-541-0140 or go to www.dreamwell.com for reservations.

This is the first show in Dreamwell's first ever fall-summer season, moving away from their previous calendar year season. The theme “Here I Stand” is taken from the Martin Luther quote "Here I stand, I can do no other." Each of the season’s offerings features characters who choose to be who they are, despite the consequences. This season Dreamwell celebrate the strength of character we can all achieve.

Cast:
Betty Parris – Mira Bohannan Kumar
Reverend Parris – Jim Evans
Tituba – June Kungu
Abigail Williams – K. Lindsay Eaves
Susanna Wallcott – Maya Bergman-Corbet
Ann Putnam – Lois Crowley
Thomas Putnam – Paul Freese
Ruth Putnam – Laura Cornell
Mercy Lewis – Emily Coussens
Mary Warren – Kelly Scherrer
John Proctor – Brad Quinn
Rebecca Nurse – Bryson Dean
Giles Corey – Scott Strode
Reverend Hale – Brett Myers
Elizabeth Proctor – Traci Gardner
Francis Nurse – Mark Nidey
Ezekiel Cheever – Jacob Hulme
John Willard – Daniel Eliserio
Judge Hathorne – Ben Singer
Deputy Governor Danforth – Jason Tipsword
Sarah Good – Elisabeth Ross

(Photo by Elisabeth Ross.)

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Pinocchio opens Saturday

Amana - All he wants is to be a real boy, but his lies and his nose keep getting in the way. Join The Old Creamery Theatre for Young Audiences for the retelling of a classic. Pinocchio opens Saturday, October 1 at 1 p.m. on the Main Stage in Amana and runs through Oct. 15.

This beloved Italian story will be brought to life through the classic theatrical tradition of “Commedia dell’Arte.” Using sound effects, masks and lots of humor, the characters in this play will be truly unforgettable.

The cast of Pinocchio consists of John Hill of Rockford, Illinois; Andrew Bosworth of Holly Springs, North Carolina; Laura Ambrose of Minneapolis, Minnesota.; Nicholas Hodge of South Amana; and Kamille Zbanek of Ely. Directed by Sean McCall of Marengo, Pinocchio was adapted from Carlo Collodi ’s classic Italian tale by Johnny Simons.

Tickets for Pinocchio are $8 per person and all seating is reserved. Reservations are highly recommended. Show times are Saturdays at 1 p.m., October 1 and 8 with two shows on Saturday, October 15, at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Auditions for White Christmas this Weekend

Iowa City - The Iowa City Community Theatre is looking for a few good actors/singers/dancers and theatre tech personnel for their holiday production, White Christmas. The show will be directed by Krista Neumann, with musical direction by Ed Kottick and choreography by Jill Beardsley. The show runs December 9th through the 18th. Rehearsals start October 24th.

Audition times:
Friday September 30, 6PM -9PM, at the ICCT Theater on the Fairgrounds
Saturday October 1, 1pm-4pm, at the ICCT Theater on the Fairgrounds
Call backs Sunday, October 2, 1pm-4pm, at the Robert A. Lee Recreation Center

Please prepare a song from the show or a standard from the 40’s or early 50’s. Please be prepared to dance (comfortable clothes and shoes that you can move in).

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS AND REQUIREMENTS
BOB WALLACE – (late 20’s to mid 30’s) A major singing star. A baritone who can move well.
PHIL DAVIS – (late 20’s to mid 30’s) Song and dance partner of the team Wallace and Davis. Bari-tenor, moves well.
BETTY HAYNES – (mid 20’s to mid 30’s) Destined to be a star. Chest mix sound with soprano extension. Moves well.
JUDY HAYNES – (20’s) Other half of the Haynes sisters. Chest mix, strong song and dance performer.
GENERAL HENRY WAVERLY – (late 50’s to mid 60’s) A retired U.S. General. A non- singing role.
MARTHA WATSON – (late 40’s to mid 60’s) Once a Broadway star now the General’s housekeeper at the Inn. Character comedienne with belt voice.
SUSAN WAVERLY – (9 – 12 years old to play 9 years old) The General’s granddaughter. Excellent belt voice and can move well.
RALPH SHELDRAKE – (30’s or 40’s) Army buddy of Bob and Phil’s now a TV mogul. Fast talking NY professional. Baritone.
RITA AND RHODA – (20’s – 30’s) Star chorus girls. Brash, sexy and not too smart.
EZEKIAL FOSTER – (any age) The ultimate taciturn New Englander, must have accent.
MIKE – (20’s to 50’s) Bob and Phil’s stage manager. Over dramatic and hysterical.

ENSEMBLE ROLES
TESSIE – Bob and Phil’s assistant.
JIMMY – The proprietor of Jimmy’s Back Room nightclub.
CIGARETTE GIRL
SNORING MAN
MRS. SNORING MAN
TRAIN CONDUCTOR
DANCE CAPTAIN
SEAMSTRESS
ASSISTANT SEAMSTRESS
ED SULLIVAN ANNOUNCER
ENSEMBLE: Singers and dancers. This is 1950’s Hollywood movie musical dancing – ballroom, tap and jazz. The ensemble will, over the course of the show, play:

JIMMY’S BACK ROOM CLUBGOERS
TRAIN PASSENGERS / INN GUESTS
CHORUS KIDS
PATRONS OF THE REGENCY ROOM

TECH POSITIONS: If you are interested in stage managing, lighting or set construction please contact Maria at goingtomaria@gmail.com.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Get a Taste of TCR's Superior Doughnuts

by Sarah Jarmon

Cedar Rapids - Having been a part of Theatre Cedar Rapids' Underground Festival last year, I knew that the Grandon Studio, where I had the pleasure of seeing Tracy Letts' Superior Doughnuts Saturday night, was going to be an excellent venue for actors and audience members alike. The energy amidst the nearly full house had me almost as intrigued as the set, a quaint little shop with an old fashioned cash register, gleaming bar stools, and the word "Pussy" angrily etched upon the wall like a scarlet brand.

A little bell on the door of this aged establishment announced entrances and exits with a tinkling kind of punctuation. And throughout the course of the show, the actors painted us a word picture of the old neighborhood where this fading small business stood; the last remaining piece of a man whose dreams had been forgotten or purposely left behind.

Audience members sat on three sides of the stage which created some sight line issues. And though these issues were acknowledged in Leslie Charipar's curtain speech, I did feel like there were a few scenes where altering the blocking could have increased visibility without distracting from the story, which was quite good.

An oldies tune, reminiscent of 50's diners and old sitcoms, welcomes the audience to the first scene. Max, a neighboring business owner, is making a statement to the local cops about finding the doughnut shop with the window smashed in and the derogatory graffiti on the wall. Steve Worthington, as Max, has a thick accent and a larger than life manner about him. He is equal parts lovable goof and ignorant fool. Worthington executes this nebulous territory well, delivering his lines in such a way that instead of a jerk, we are able to see him as a well-meaning, albeit a bit clueless, fellow who is consistently crossing the line and then back-pedaling hard once he realizes he has done so. His loud, physically exuberant demeanor is in stark contrast to Arthur, the owner of Superior Doughnuts and an unapologetic hippie with a long gray pony-tail.

Arthur has, for lack of a better word, issues. He is loath to open up, and terrified of taking risks, which has made him cynical and lonely. So when a starry-eyed, silver-tongued 21-year-old named Franco bounds into his store and convinces Arthur to give him a job, it is only a matter of time before they clash. But amidst their many disagreements an unlikely friendship blossoms.

Arthur, played with charming delicacy by Steve Weiss, seems to be a bit of a lost soul. He shuffles his feet and seems determined not to meet anyone’s eye during scenes. That is not to say that he didn't connect, quite the contrary, but he engages in a sort of fight or flight manner, utilizing either soft tones and casual gestures or yelling gruffly with his whole body. Weiss never let you fall out of the story, even during the monologues between scenes where you learn about his past. He tells his tale with such conviction and simple grace that you could almost be sitting at a table with him, having a beer.

His new employee, Franco, played by Brandon McDaniel, tries again and again to open Arthur’s eyes to new possibilities and endless opportunities. He spouts ideas on everything from revamping the shop to boost the business and updating his style to elicit the affections of the dorky and lovable lady cop, Randy, played by Nicolette Coiner-Winn, who Franco insists is interested in Arthur.

McDaniel sweeps you up in his energy and makes you want to realize his dreams. He charges onto the stage and lights it up, making us smile again and again. He is the kind of character you wish was one of your real-life friends. But that doesn't mean he doesn't have a past, and his penchant for looking at the sky has made him forget to watch where he's walking, and he's stepped into a dangerous mess.

Scott Davidson as Luther, a bookie Franco owes a lot of money, delivers an air of dangerous that appears effortless. Going from a good-natured lament of his kids playing too many video games to screaming a demand for his money in such a believable temper flare that my heart pounded. Luther’s flunkie, Kevin, played by Nathan Bowden, was funny and intimidating, too, stalking across the stage with an angular bravado that put me to mind of cartoon villains and your standard noir film thugs.

This is a play with a lot of angles. It touches on hope, on fear, and the many social aspects of inner city life. But it stays away from preaching and is never heavy handed. The plot does occasionally feel a bit contrived, and the fight scene did not actually make me fear for the actors, but the characters were well-rounded, perfectly flawed people. They were kind of people that you know. That dedication coupled with the intense monologues that threaded through the play between scenes lent just the right degree of stylized unreality that made this a really enjoyable journey.

This is a gritty, odd, and wonderful play to christen the Grandon as TCR’s newest performance space. Being in such close proximity made me shrink away from Arthur’s wrath, lean in to comfort Randy, and allowed me to see the constantly working jaws of BJ Moeller, the down on her luck Lady. I fell in love with the characters, despite their mistakes, and because of their shortcomings. And even as I write this review, I am not sure whether this play was a tragedy or a comedy. Because though it was funny from beginning to end, it was rife with the tragic realism that life is made of. Go see it and maybe you can tell me, and bring a friend, because you’ll want to discuss it afterward.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Auditions for TCR's A Christmas Carol This Weekend

Cedar Rapids - Did you not get cast City Circle's production of A Christmas Carol? No problem - TCR is also producing the show for the Christmas season. TCR will hold one day of youth auditions and two days of adult auditions for A Christmas Carol this weekend. Auditions will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 25 for children, and at 7 p.m. Sunday and Monday, Sept. 25 and 26, for adults. They will take place at TCR's home in the Iowa Theater, 102 Third St. SE. Leslie Charipar is directing.

Performing Nov. 25 through Dec. 17, A Christmas Carol is a new stage adaptation of the classic novel by Charles Dhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifickens. For specific information on available roles or general audition requirements, call (319) 366-8591 or visit here.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Superior Donuts opens tomorrow

Cedar Rapids - Theatre Cedar Rapids presents Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Tracy Letts' heart-warming and humorous tale of unlikely friendships in one of Chicago’s most diverse neighborhoods. Arthur Przybyszewski’s Superior Donuts has been a community hub for decades, and both the neglected storefront and its rundown owner are evidence to that. But when Franco, a young fast-talking dreamer, bounds into the shop, the writing is on the wall that things are going to change – maybe even for the better. Superior Donuts features a “superior” ensemble of new and familiar faces to TCR, including Nicolette Coiner-Winn, Steve Worthington, and Steve Weiss!

Monday, September 19, 2011

Boeing Boeing offers colorful, funny evening of theatre

By Joe Jennison

Amana - During the Old Creamery Theatre’s Sunday matinee curtain speech for Boeing Boeing, Producing Director Tom Milligan promised his audience “a good laugh.” As this Theatre Blog’s assigned reviewer for the show, I felt compelled to pen the promise to paper, and then sat in the Old Creamery’s darkened auditorium and waited for the promise to be delivered.

I didn’t have to wait long.

There is a scene early on concerning a bottle of cognac and three characters forced to cover up an outlandish secret. A French housekeeper, an international lady’s man and an American tourist have just realized that two of three fiancés promised to the same man are now staying in two of the four bedrooms in a Paris flat. The housekeeper assigned to manage the house, and keep the two women from running into each other, grabs the cognac to calm her nerves. She pours a glass, it’s taken immediately away by the lady’s man, she pours another glass, and it is taken away by the tourist. And then, with no more glasses within reach, she quickly guzzles directly from the bottle. The actress playing the housekeeper milks this moment for every comic bit available and as I watched this professional comedienne work her theatrical magic, I laughed and laughed and laughed. Very funny.

Promise delivered.

The play, a two-act French farce written by Marc Camoletti and translated by Beverley Cross and Francis Evans, concerns Bernard (John D. Smitherman), an American architect living in Paris who has asked three international flight attendants to marry him. Gloria (Jessica Bradish) is an American flight attendant who works for TWA. Gabriella (Deborah Kennedy) is an Italian flight attendant who works for Alitalia. And Gretchen (Jackie McCall) is a German flight attendant who works for Lufthansa.

Bernard confesses early on that he has no desire to follow through with his commitment to any of them, and works very hard to keep that secret (and the three flight attendants) from coming out and creating trouble at his Paris flat. Helping him in this endeavor are Berthe (Marquetta Senters), the aforementioned French housekeeper, and Robert (Sean McCall), an old friend from Wisconsin who just happens to be in town.

As this is a farce, we all know that all three women will indeed run into each other at the flat, and eventually Bernard’s scheme will be unraveled, but not without first some very funny theatrics as women are whisked off to the country, locked in the bathroom or hidden away in any one of several offstage rooms. Watching these performers whisk and slam and hide throughout the course of two acts is indeed funny, and all of these performers are adept at physical comedy. Director James Fleming is obviously skilled in the art of farce and slapstick, and the play’s many comic bits are mined to perfection by this professional group of performers.

The set, designed by Tom Milligan, is a colorful piece of work: pink doorways, blue walls, orange chairs, red pillows all on top of a lush, flesh-colored carpet. Six doors fit for slamming, and an offstage front door allow for perfect timing as one flight attendant arrives as another is pushed into a bedroom or bathroom or kitchen. Costumes designed by Kamille Zbanek complement Milligan’s set nicely and are tailored perfectly. The flight attendants’ uniforms in particular are well done with the American flight attendant dressed in red, the German dressed in yellow, and the Italian in green. Later, three nightgowns are equally stunning and all three flight attendants are gorgeous to look at in silks, chiffons and one wonderful little black dress, with a red belt and black pumps lined with faux fur. These are wonderful costume details that I loved to watch and discover as each scene went on. Well done.

The six actors offer six distinct characterizations; four offer up accents. Jackie McCall’s Gretchen is a tough, and, at times brutal, German woman who is a take-charge kind of lover. Bradish’s Gloria is a scheming gold-digger from Texas who admits she is ready to commit... that is, until she finds a millionaire. And Kennedy’s Gabriella is a passionate but suspicious Italian who looks gorgeous by the way in the little black dress. Senters’ Berthe is a hard-working, put-upon French housekeeper who manages to keep her employer’s secrets under wraps, for a regularly increasing raise. Sean McCall’s Robert continually nearly gives away his friend’s dirty little secret away as he very funnily juggles globes and suitcases and pratfalls. He quietly watches with envy as his friend’s three fiancés come and go and hide and resurface. And Smitherman’s Bernard is a likeable and charming international playboy.

Farces are by nature predictable, and this one is as well. The early scenes are full of exposition and the set up at times seem to drag a bit. But this farce does pay off with some wonderful laughs, comic bits pulled off by professional actors who know how to keep things funny and moving along. The play offers lots of giggles and quite a few outright belly laughs, and I loved the colorful set and costumes and the funny multicultural characters and accents.

Tom Milligan’s promise was right on target: Boeing Boeing offers a good laugh.

Only Drunks... makes you think, question and reflect

by Andrew Juhl

Anamosa - There’s a reason I haven’t watched Million Dollar Baby yet, despite the fact that I’ve owned the DVD for several years. I know the story will depress me, and I have to be in the mood to see a story that I know will depress me. Sure, it probably has some funny and happy moments—even the saddest of movies usually do—but I’m just not in the mindset where I want to be depressed all that often.

A depressing chapter in Canadian history provides the fodder Canadian playwright Drew Hayden Taylor’s Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth. Generations of aboriginal Canadians were devastated by their government’s attempts to “assimilate” the native children into mainstream Canadian culture, most often by placing them with white families and in residential schools. As a result, languages and cultures have been lost, some never to be recovered, as thousands of children were taken from their families. Taylor, himself part Ojibway (the same culture at the heart of this play, in itself a sequel to Someday), attempts to use a little bit of laughter as medicine to heal some of those emotional wounds. But a little bit of laughter in this production is a little bit too little, I’m afraid.

Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth is chiefly concerned with the story of Janice (Mary Vizecky), who was raised by a white family after being removed from the reservation where she was born. Now a successful lawyer in Toronto, Janice—still called ‘Grace’ by her birth family—is unexpectedly visited by her sister (Carolann Beaulne), her sister's fiancée (Alex Smalley), and a friend (Basilio Light) with news that Janice’s birth mother has died. As the three visitors attempt to persuade Janice to fulfill tradition and to return to their reservation to pay her respects, Janice is forced to reflect on questions about her identity and the nature of family.

Actress Carolann Beualne (Barb, the main character’s sister) shifted repeatedly between maintaining an awkward tension and guilting Janice beyond measure. While she was enjoyable to watch at times, her character wears on the audience well before intermission, due in no small part to her endless capacity to putatively foist guilt on her sister. “Yes. We get it. You think your sister is a bitch for not coming home,” says the audience in a collective sigh after the issue comes up for the umpteenth time in the first act.

Alex Smalley’s portrayal of Rodney, Barb’s fiancée, was enjoyable, thought perhaps played a little too cartoonishly. Rodney has the bulk of the jokes-written-to-be-obvious-jokes in the play, and Smalley could definitely relax a little and let the writing shoulder more of the effort.

Basilio Light (Tonto) plays his yeoman-like character with a natural ease. Far-too-intelligent by half, Tonto is the emotional anchor and continuous voice of reason in the play; and while Light nailed his delivery of several steely (if wizened) platitudes, that same Yoda-esque delivery perfused the vast majority of the rest of his lines, lending a repeated, inorganic quality to what should have been ordinary conversations.

Mary Vizecky turns in a serviceable Janice/Grace, but her performance somewhat suffers from what I like to call “the 75-cent syndrome.” When she’s angry about something, she seems roughly three-quarters as angry as she should be. Three-quarters as surprised, three-quarters as amused, three-quarters as sad, three-quarters as interesting as her character could have been. Even as Vizecky delivers the bulk of the last and perhaps most moving scene of the play, I couldn’t help but think to myself, “Quit it. Quit holding back. Let us have it. Quit worrying about the next line and just let us see the character—not you trying to remember the character.”

Director Rick Sanborn keeps the play to a tight two hours (with intermission) and the spartan stage, props, and costuming are all done well. It’s a powerful play: one that will make you think, one that will make you the question policies and actions of whatever Big Brother, one that will make you reflect on the nature of family, and—yes, occasionally—one that will make you laugh a little. If you’re in the mood for it, Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth is a good evening at a small-town community theatre.

And if you’re not in the mood for it, there are several bars within short walking distance of the marquee.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Little Women Auditions Coming Soon

Anamosa - Auditions for Little Women will be held October 2, 3, 4 of 2011 at 7 pm at the Starlighters Theatre in Anamosa. The director is Jan Cratsenberg (Monticello). For more information, e-mail cratsen@gmail.com.

Based on one of the most popular pieces of literature, Little Women follows the joys and hardships of the four young and inseparable March sisters: outspoken Jo, motherly Meg, quiet Beth, and worldly Amy. While at home with their mother and beloved cook, Hannah, they anxiously await their father's return from the Civil War. The girls wrestle with the problems of poverty and everyday life, but with wisdom from Marmee and the love of family, we watch them mature and grow. Written by Peter Clapham, and based on the novel by Louisa May Alcott, the play faithfully brings the story of this timeless classic to the stage, weaving together the lives of the March sisters and their neighbor, Laurie. Little Women will make you laugh, cry and appreciate what is truly important in life.

Production Dates:
December 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm
Sundays at 2 pm

Characters:
Amy March (ages 11-13)
Beth March (ages 14 -18)
Jo March (ages 17-25)
Meg March (ages 18-25)
Hannah (age 50s)
Mrs. March [Marmee] (late 40s)
Laurie (ages 16-22)
Mr. Lawrence (60s)
Mr. Match (50s)

* Actors do not necessarily need to be in the age ranges given, as long as they could possibly play someone in that age range.

Auditions for Curious Savage Coming Soon

Iowa City - Dreamwell's auditions for John Patrick's The Curious Savage are coming soon. Gerry Roe will direct. Performances will take place November 11-19 in Iowa City.

AUDITION WHEN and WHERE:
Friday, Sept. 23, 6 p.m. Iowa City Public Library, Room B
Saturday, Sept. 24, 1 p.m. Iowa City Public Library, Room C
Sunday, Sept. 25, 1 p.m. Iowa City Public Library, Room D

ABOUT THE SHOW:
The Curious Savage is about a recently widowed woman, Ethel Savage, whose step children don’t want her to use her inheritance for good works, so they commit her to an institution. Ethel becomes close to the unique individuals in the institution, who might just be more sane than her own step children. The Curious Savage is a comedy with a lovely message about the human spirit and choosing one’s identity.

HOW TO PREPARE
Sides will be provided. No preparation necessary. Copies of the play will be on reserve at the Iowa City Public Library.

AVAILABLE ROLES and DESCRIPTIONS:

The Guests of Cloisters:
Florence - polite, somewhat 'proper' patient. She believes her son John Thomas lives with her at The Cloisters.
Hannibal - friendly, but somewhat serious. Over weight. A statistician before becoming a guest at The Cloisters.
Fairy May - young, flighty but intelligent. Needy.
Jeffery - young, handsome but mired in self doubt and recrimination. Crippled by his own fears.
Mrs. Paddy - Older, somewhat brutish. Has chosen not to speak expect for occasional rants against anything and everything.
The Family:
Titus Savage - A US senator of dubious reputation. Serious, overbearing. Not overly intelligent.
Samuel Savage - a District Judge who has the distinction of having more decisions over turned than any other judge. Swallowed up by his brother's shadow.
Lilly Belle Savage - A bitter, humorless, controlling socialite with more husbands than Zsa Zsa Gabor.
Ethel Savage - The stepmother of the three Savage children. Trying to live a meaningful life. She is clever and has a clear vision of what she thinks is important in life. Possess a good sense of humor.

The Staff:
Miss Miss Wilhelmina - Kind, gentle and efficient, Miss Willie is responsible for most of the direct patient care. She is friendly, loving but no push over.
Dr. Emmett - The Doctor in charge of The Cloisters. He is solid, dependable, compassionate and pretty much the only stable person (except for Miss Willie) in the play.

NOTE FROM GERRY:
These character descriptions are accurate, but they are not set in stone. Ethel must be at least 10 years older than her stepchildren, but their ages are indicated only by their occupations. The doctor should be of mature years--he is, after all, entrusted with the care and maintenance of the guests of The Cloisters, some of whom are far less acclimated than the guests we meet. They are in the last stage before release, meaning they have made considerable progress toward a normal life. John Patrick says of them: "it is important...that the gentle inmates of The Cloisters be played with warmth and dignity. Their "Home" is not an "asylum" nor are these good people "lunatics." Any exaggeration of the roles will rob them of harm and humor. The whole point of the play is to contrast them with Mrs. Savage's children and the insane outside world. To depart from this point of view for the sake of easy laughs will rob the play of meaning. And both the performers and the playwright will have failed in their purpose."

Contact Gerry at 351-4952 with questions or to arrange an alternate time.

Rocky Horror Auditions Sept 20 Only

Coralville - City Circle will hold auditions for Richard O'Brien's The Rocky Horror Show on Tuesday, September 20 from 7-10 PM at Community of Christ Church, 2121 South Ridge Drive in Coralville.

They are seeking actors, singers, dancers, rock stars, aliens, etc. for principal roles and singing/dance ensemble. Auditioners are asked to bring a song to sing (sheet music) or sing from the score to the show.

Contact CityCircleRocky@gmail.com to schedule an audition. The show goes up Halloween Weekend, Friday and Saturday, October 28-29, 2011.

Working Group's Season Opens with Was the Word

Iowa City - Working Group Theatre kicks off their 2011-2012 season on Sunday September 18th at 7 pm with Was the Word, the first in a series of storytelling, poetry, and music events at the Englert Theatre. Tickets are 'Pay What You Can' at the door. The hour long show will feature the music of Mutiny in the Parlor and pieces from:

Idris Goodwin: Poet and Playwright. Idris's work has been featured on HBO's Def Poetry Jam, nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and developed by the Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center.

Sean Lewis: Playwright and Essayist, Sean's work has won the Smith Prize for Drama and has been featured on This American Life.

Megan Gogerty: Playwright and Performer. Megan's new one-woman show opens Riverside Theatre's 2011-2012 season.

Kate Krohn: Poet and graduate of the University of Iowa, and one of Working Group's poets-in-residence.

Each Was the Word performance benefits an area non-profit. The non-profit partner for our night is Willowwind School, a portion of proceeds will benefit the school's scholarship fund.

To find out more about the event visit their website or become a fan of Working Group Theatre on Facebook.

Only Drunks... Opens Tonight

Anamosa - The latest Starlighters II Theatre show opens tonight. They are presenting the award-winning drama Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth, written by Drew Hayden Taylor.



There is a blemish on the United States' history and how we as a country treated Native Americans. The same can be said for our neighbors to the North, Canada. During the 1950's and 1960's, Canada attempted to "assimilate" native children into Mainstream culture by taking them from their homes and placing them with white families or in residential schools. The effects were devastating to Canada's original inhabitants. Language and culture were lost for these displaced children for generations.

This sad chapter in Canadian history provides the artistic background for the award-winning Canadian Native American playwright, Drew Hayden Taylor, in his play Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth. Taylor uses poignant but humorous situations and dialogue to make observers laugh, cry and heal the wounds for his characters and the world that is watching.

Directed by Rick Sanborn (Stone City, IA), Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth tells the story of Grace (played by Mary Vizecky, Marion, IA), a Native American woman who has been raised by a white family after being removed from the Indian Reservation where she was born. Now a successful lawyer in Toronto where she lives, Grace is unexpectedly visited by her sister (played by Carole Anne Beaulne, Marion, IA), her sister's fiance (played by Alex Smalley, Cedar Rapids, IA) and a friend (played by Basilio Light, Anamosa, IA) with news that her birth mother has died. As the three visitors attempt to persuade her to fulfill tradition and to return to the reservation for her mother's funeral, Grace is forced to reflect on questions about her identity and the relationship with her birth family.

This critically acclaimed play will prompt audience members to question the real meaning of family and if one can truly escape one's past. The production contains some strong language.

For information on "Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth," and ticket information visit the Starlighters II Theatre website.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Combined Efforts Looking for Spooky Writers

Iowa City - Combined Efforts Theatre is seeking scripts or original music to be performed as a part of an evening of Halloween related theatre. Scripts may be scary or comical. Or both! The event is Things That Go Bump in the Night.

Dare to walk the path of deliciously fearful performances, haunting music and ghostly comic scenes. Experience the winning entries of our writing competition. The different paths will be age appropriate and there will be refreshments and stories around the campfire.

One night only - 7:00 PM, October 29 at 3418 Osage SW, Iowa City. Tickets available at the door and are only $5.

If you would like to submit a piece to this event, get all the details of the contest here.

Boeing Boeing opens today

Amana – Fasten your seat belts because The Old Creamery Theatre is taking off with its fall farce, Boeing Boeing, on the Main Stage beginning today.

It promises to be a bumpy ride as Bernard, a successful architect in Paris, juggles three flight attendant girlfriends. Bernard’s elaborate planning to keep the women apart is no match for the newer, faster Boeing jet that lands all three women in town at the same time. You’ll howl at the elaborate measures Bernard, his housekeeper – a sassy and reluctant accomplice - and his innocent friend Robert take to try and keep Bernard’s three little secrets from bumping into one other.

Written by Marc Camoletti, translated by Beverley Cross and Francis Evans, Boeing Boeing won a 2008 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play. The cast consists of Jessica Bradish of Des Moines, John D. Smitherman of Philadelphia, Marquetta Senters of South Amana, Sean McCall of Marengo, Deborah Kennedy of East Amana and Jackie McCall of Marengo. Directed by James Fleming, Boeing Boeing runs through Oct. 16 and is rated Theatre PG-13.

Tickets are $27 for adults and $17.50 for students. Show times are Wednesdays Thursdays and Sundays at 3 p.m. and Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. Call the box office at 800-35-AMANA or visit the website at www.oldcreamery.com for more information or to purchase tickets. Group and student rates are available.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Auditions for Christmas Carol Coming Soon

Coralville - Director Elizabeth Tracy invites actors to audition for A Christmas Carol Monday, September 19 and Wednesday, September 21 from 6:00 - 8:30 pm at the Coralville Library (Downstairs Conference Rooms). Contact CityCircleChristmasCarol@gmail.com to schedule an audition or to ask questions.

Actors are asked to prepare a short 1-2 minute monologue or read from scripts provided at the audition.

The production will begin rehearsals September 26, 2011. Performances will be at the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts, December 9 -18, 2011. For more information, go here.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Joyful Hairspray is Awesome

by Sharon Falduto

Coralville - Joy.

Joy is the feeling that infuses the cast, and so the audience, of City Circle's Hairspray.

The musical is a riot of color and song; if your toes aren't tapping and you don't leave humming, then your soul must be dead, my friend. It is a joy to watch each actor interpret their role, and furthermore, it's a joy to enjoy a show in the brand new Coralville Center for the Performing Arts. How lucky we are to live in a community that places a priority on artistic endeavors and funded such a wonderful venue, with brilliant acoustics and wonderful sight lines, even for those of us who were seated in the very last row of the balcony.

Hairspray is set in 1962 Baltimore, and deals with a range of issues: racism, sizeism, and the complicated relationships between mothers and daughters. The heart of the musical is its star, Tracy Turnblad, who doesn't let her plus size stop her from dreaming big and landing a spot dancing on the “American Bandstand” style “Corny Collins Show.” Elizabeth Breed perfectly inhabits the character of Tracy; full of life and joy and dreams. Elizabeth's voice soars above the crowd, and her spot on delivery of comic asides was wonderful to hear. Her Tracy carried herself tall and proud, as Tracy should; Tracy forces us to look beyond a person's size, or skin color, to hear the heart behind the facade.

The role of Tracy's mother, Edna, is traditionally played by a man, a habit that began with the original John Waters' movie and its inclusion of Divine in this part. In our show, we get the privilege of watching Chuck Bogh evolve from a sad sack washerwoman whom life has beaten down into a strong and powerful woman who owns the stage. The attraction and chemistry is strong and clear between Edna and her husband, Doug Beardsley as Wilbur, who portrays Tracy's joke-shop owning dad with a spryness of physical movement in the mold of Art Carney. The two of them share a duet in Timeless to Me that is touching, funny, and warm.

The mean girls of the show are Janelle Barrow as Amber Von Tussle and Carrie Houchins-Witt as her mother, Velma. They are delightfully and devilishly cruel, especially as Velma plots her daughter's future at the expense of others' pain in Miss Baltimore Crabs. If I have one complaint about Amber, it is that her dancing may be too good—when Mother rebukes her for her horrible dancing on the Corny Collins show, I thought, “Wait, really? I thought she was good!”

Justin Mangrinch's Corny Collins had a great talk show host delivery and style, flipping his microphone with studied ease as he rolled with the movements of a new direction. Tracy's love interest, Link Larkin, was played by Esack Grueskin with an Elvis-type swagger.

Issues of race come to the fore when Tracy lands in detention and meets Seaweed, who helps her learn new dance moves, and who shares an instant attraction to Tracy's friend Penny. I enjoyed watching Tevin Jones as Seaweed, as he moved and glided across the floor with his killer dance moves. I did occasionally have a hard time understanding some of his lines, though.

Seaweed's mother is Motormouth Maybelle, the DJ who spins platters when it is “Negro Day” on the Corny Collins Show. Deandra Watkins' DJ patter is fun and fresh, and when she sings, the roof lifts off the house. Her bio says this is her first musical, and I certainly hope it isn't her last; it's almost enough to make me want to head to her church to hear her sing again.

Seaweed's sister Li'l Inez, played by Mekela Spence, was cute and fun to watch as the 6th grader danced and sang as well as any adult on the stage.

The only flawed note was Kenneth Van Egdon's choice to play Harriman F. Spritzer, advertising force behind the Corny Collins show, as an over-the-top Richard Nixon impersonation.

My personal favorite characters were the Pingletons, Penny and her mother Prudy. Victoria Vaughn's Penny spends the first act in a state of bewildered innocence, wandering amongst the players in choreographed dances in I Can Hear the Bells and misunderstanding the world around her. When she meets Seaweed, her character arc bends away from scared little girl into woman. Her mother, repressed Prudy, was played with great gusto and just the right amount of comic overacting by Robyn Calhoun.

The original choreography by Nolte Academy of Dance was always spot on; each group dance filled the stage in such a way as to look full but not too crowded, and when we are first introduced to the African American dancers, we can tell right away that their dance style is different, looser, more free, than the Corny Collins regulars who suddenly look stiff and square in comparison.

It is a tribute to Chad Larabee's direction, certainly, that at every moment in every scene, each character knew what he or she was doing. When my eyes wandered from the principles, I could tell that each member of the cast was reacting exactly the way their character should, even if they were not the focus. It was noticeable, however, that the character of Brenda's exit (for nine months, wink wink), which precipitated Tracy's shot on the Corny Collins Show, was not complete—in that Brenda, or at least the actress who played her, kept showing up in other scenes, wearing the same dress, as my 10 year old companions noted. The Dynamites, played by Naomi Spence, Taisha Poole, and Chastity Dillard, were a kind of Supremes-style Greek chorus who added color and soul to many scenes. Each member of the “council” of dancers on the Corny Collins show was fun to watch, as they moved in unison in strong dance numbers.

I Know Where I've Been by Motormouth Maybelle is a strong second act song accompanied by choreography that was more abstract than other dances in the show, representing the struggles of African Americans in the early parts of the civil rights movement. Though I love the song, I have a quibble with this part of the book of the musical—because the person who has the idea for a march on the TV station to demand that “every day be Negro day” was not Motormouth, Seaweek, or even L'il Inez, but Tracy; it is unfortunate that we seem to have a tradition of writing plots in which the white person is the one who rallies the minorities to action in order to help themselves.

I took two 10-year-olds to the show with me. They spent the remainder of the evening alternating between singing the show's fabulous closing number, You Can't Stop the Beat, and the song in which we are first introduced to the mother/daughter dynamic, Mama, I'm a Big Girl Now. All of the songs are hummable, danceable, and joyful.

I'd like to give props to producer Chris Okiishi, who introduced the show, for saying it was the first “ticketed in advance, assigned seat” production, thereby acknowledging that the All in a Day Play Festival did precede it. Chris also announced the backstage tours of the new space are available for purchase.

I will leave you with the words of my companions after the show: “That. Was. Awesome.”

(Photos by ICPixx.)
(Additional reporting by Rachel Falduto and Mary Vander Weg)

Zahren and Schiano Shine in Give My Regards

by Meghan D'Souza

Amana - The Iowa Theatre Artists Company brought a rare treat by inviting Way Off Broadway from Fairfield, Iowa's only professional musical theatre, to deliver Give My Regards!, a collaboration of favorite Broadway songs, an idea conceived by WOB director Randy West.

Because this was less of a musical, per se, and more of a concert showcasing various songs and famous Broadway songwriters, the set was simple. There was a wide platform to help give the set dimension and wood columns plastered with posters from the shows in the performance gave the illusion of walls. A clever addition to the set was a large screen that showcased images from the various shows featured in this performance.

The lighting was generally fine, with the whole stage lit up or a spotlight to change the atmosphere. It was particularly impressive during a Sweeney Todd number when a blinking red spotlight gave the necessary eerie ambiance. However, a few numbers used distracting purple floodlights along with the regular lighting, making the actors look washed out in situations that did not call for this look.

While the ensemble consisted of four performers, it was Ian Zahren who took the music and turned it into a fabulous performance. The show is not about watching a choir sing, but about talented actors performing Broadway hits. He added the passion and personality necessary to make this show worthwhile. Especially noteworthy was his solo performance as Judas from Jesus Christ Superstar. It was a difficult song to sing, but he managed it, exuding an intense struggle in emotion, pulling goosebumps up from my arms.

Cassandra Schiano also gave a particularly moving performance during a song from The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. For the song I Love You, she portrayed a child longing for her parents' support. She even cried while singing, drawing the hearts of the audience towards her.

Some improvements could be made now that opening night is over. The dancing was not fluid when the ensemble performed together. Opening night blunders were handled awkwardly by some members of the crew, taking the audience away from the spirit of the show and giving it more of a dress rehearsal feel at times.

At the end of the night, the talent of Zahren and Schiano won the audience's hearts, literally making them laugh, cry and leaving satisfied with their night at the theatre.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Feet First in the Water Makes a Splash

By James E. Trainor III

Iowa City - Feet First in the Water With a Baby in My Teeth, Megan Gogerty's new one-woman show, starts off with an anecdote that typically divides the child-bearers from the childless: the dreaded baby on the plane.

If you don't have kids, you've probably had this experience: you're sitting on the plane and some thoughtless lady next to you has a screaming baby. You think: what's wrong with her? Why is this baby on the plane? Why can't she keep it quiet?

Of course, if you do have kids, you've probably been in that woman's shoes, and you know full well that once that metal box is in the air, there is really nothing you can do. You're trapped. It's the kind of thing that you just have to experience on your own, sort of a rite of passage for new moms who have the audacity to go out in public, get on planes, and generally carry on with their lives.

It's with this scenario, performed with a great deal of frenetic comic energy on Scott Olinger's simple and versatile set, that Gogerty starts her hysterical journey down the turbulent river of motherhood. "A baby is born in a few tough hours," Gogerty tells us, "but a mother's birth takes years."

Feet First in the Water With a Baby in My Teeth is an insightful, daring and outrageously comic examination of what it takes to simultaneously be a wife, mother, and working artist in 21st-Century America. Building on a tradition of strong women fighting against all odds, it asks in a very frank and funny manner the question: how can a strong modern woman carry on with her career while her life is being subsumed by the needs of another?

Echoing through the ages, tough mothers from the past have an answer: "ya figure it out." The strong woman of American history gets personal: Gogerty explains her mother's clever and gruesome method of killing chickens on a farm at nine years old and her subsequent determination to get an education. She then dips deeper into family history, relating her great-grandmother's heroic journey across the Mississippi, swimming away from a burning steamboat, infant clutched in her teeth. Compared to that, a modern middle-class woman's social anxiety and career worries seem a bit like first-world problems.

We see, in a series of wonderfully silly "scenes" (the action is performed by Gogerty alone, sometimes with a stepstool standing in for baby or husband, sometimes playing other characters herself), the emotional journey of the young mother.

We see the youthful optimism and determination before the baby comes: "Where a lot of parents go wrong is, they're not organized," Gogerty informs us, with an eager, clueless grin. "I made a flowchart." She proudly shows off her organizational tools, then parades over to the bookshelf: "this book lays out a typical baby's day." She is pleased enough with herself to dance around the stage in glee, until suddenly a year flashes by and she snaps into a grim, exhausted woman.

We see the famous "terrible twos," where a grizzled, overworked Gogerty chases an imaginary boy around the stage, trying desperately to save her laptop - and five minutes of free time - from the needs, desires and whims of a potty-training tyrant.

We see her grasping for a little bit of space, some "me" time, a hobby, working through the problem while sarcastically going through the motions of a "step aerobics" class.

We see her argue with herself in the pivotal moment, daring to ask the ultimate, cold, hard question: "do you regret it?"

The answer, of course, is "no." There's enormous value in raising children despite the numerous stresses and frustrations, and Gogerty is quick to point out that nothing worthwhile has ever been easy.

All of this is performed with tireless, full-bodied commitment. Gogerty's acting style is unabashed, heightened and resourceful, and at the same time heart-breakingly vulnerable. She throws herself completely into a bit, commanding the full stage with ease and energy, guiding us from anecdote to philosophical aside to hot-blooded rant with ingratiating charm and expert comic timing.

Alexis Chamow's direction shows in the easy flow of this piece; the storytelling is excellent and every moment has clearly been explored and polished quite well. Chamow is Gogerty's eyes on the ground, allowing her to fly into fancy, which gives the raw emotion and irreverent humor of this piece a crisp, clean structure.

The lighting design by Drew Bielinski is a great aid to the storytelling. We go all over the place in this play, and whether the excursion is to the local library or Carhenge, the no-frills setup has a color and angle that sets the tone perfectly.

The sound design, also by Gogerty, does a great job of completing the environment. It's employed particularly well when the young college couple discovers Dolly Parton, first ironically and then sincerely, and again when a low creeping noise signals a toddler's tantrum swimming in like Jaws.

If you're a new parent, you absolutely have to see this show. It's required reading, if only so you can't say, with Gogerty, "nobody told me about [insert humiliating and exasperating story]." If your kids are older, you'll laugh right along as she airs the frustrations and challenges of the first few hectic years of parenthood. If you don't have kids, come see it anyway. You won't regret it. Gogerty is the kind of solo performer you just have to see to believe.

Feet First in the Water With a Baby in My Teeth runs September 9 – October 2 at Riverside Theatre. Showtimes are Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Rolling World Premiere of Feet First in the Water


Iowa City - This Friday (September 9th), Megan Gogerty will premiere her new solo performance, Feet First in the Water With a Baby in My Teeth, at Riverside Theatre on Gilbert Street.

The show is written and performed by Megan Gogerty with direction by Alexis Chamow and scenic design by Scott Olinger.

Feet First in the Water With a Baby in my teeth is described as "a mostly-true story about a woman who gives birth and then a few years later becomes a mother." It explores topics of parenthood, politics and pop-culture in the comic style Gogerty became known for with Hilary Clinton Got Me Pregnant and other works.

Feet First in the Water is a "rolling world premiere," which means that after it debuts in Iowa City, it will move to Atlanta for a December premiere at Synchronicity Theatre.

"Rolling world premiere is an initiative of the National New Play Network - of which Riverside Theatre is a proud new member," says Riverside Theatre Artistic Director Jody Hovland. "A playwright develops a new work with different creative teams, for different communities of patrons - and hopefully attains the polish and momentum needed to attract the attention of other producers.”

Riverside's production of Feet First in the Water With a Baby in My Teeth opens September 9th and runs until October 2nd, at 213 N Gilbert. Showtimes are 7:30pm (2pm on Sundays). Tickets are $28 for adults, $25 for over 60/under 30, and $15 for youth (18 and under). $15 college student rush tickets are available 20 minutes prior to the show with valid ID. For more information, visit Riverside's online box office or call 319.338.7672

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Hairspray opens Friday

Coralville - This weekend marks an event that has been over a decade in the making. Back in the summer of 1997, a group of community theatre artists came together to form City Circle Acting Company of Coralville. They produced their first show, Nunsense, at the Oakdale campus. Even then they were dreaming of a permanent home. Through the years, they have performed at many different locations from a junior high school auditorium to a warehouse to a swimming pool. This weekend, they will present Hairspray, their first musical in their new home, the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts. It's an amazing space with a beautiful proscenium and stadium seating guaranteeing a good seat no matter where you are.

Tickets can be purchased at the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts Box Office at 1301 12th Street in Coralville, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 11:00 am – 1:00 pm and 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm and Saturdays from noon to 4:00 pm and by calling 248-9370. Or, choose your seats online at http://www.CoralvilleArts.com .

Based on the 1988 John Waters movie of the same name, Hairspray tells the story of Tracy Turnblad and her desire to dance on the local television dance sensation, The Corny Collins Show. On the way, she becomes a champion of self-acceptance, racial integration and plus-size fashion!

Set in 1960s Baltimore, the original score by Tony Winners Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman will thrill the Center audience with rocking upbeat numbers and soulful ballads alike.

Director Chad Larabee, who cut his directing teeth in the corridor in the late 1990s before moving on to regional, New York and London productions, promises a top-notch production showing off the capabilities of the new center. With brand new original choreography by local Nolte Academy of Dance owner Leslie Nolte, this is a showstopper to be sure.

Featuring music direction by Kent Keating (City High School in Iowa City, Jefferson High School in Cedar Rapids), the cast and orchestra of some of the most talented performers in the area intend to blow the newly shingled roof off! “We were overwhelmed by the talent that came out to audition,” says Director Larabee.

The show runs September 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18. Word on the street is that tickets are selling fast. As they say in the show, “You Can’t Stop the Beat!”

Way Off Broadway comes to ITAC

Amana - Way Off Broadway (WOB) is creating and staging an original musical production called Give My Regards! A Celebration of Broadway’s Best, which will debut on the Iowa Theatre Artists Company’s stage in Amana from September 9-18. WOB is Iowa’s only professional musical theatre company and the residential company at the Stephen Sondheim Center for the Performing Arts in Fairfield, Iowa. Randal K. West, WOB’s Artistic Director, is building Give My Regards! which will feature some of the best-known Broadway composers, as well as some of the new writers of Musical Theatre. The production will feature songs by Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim and some surprises. West will be bringing some of Way Off Broadway’s residential company featuring Margaret Clair, Jeff Carty, Cassandra Schiano and Ian Zahren.

Margaret Clair (Fairfield) is a founding member of WOB and most recently performed the roles of Morgana in A Time Out of Rhyme, Amber in Hairspray and Annas in Jesus Christ Superstar just this past summer. Jeff Carty (Fairfield) is also a founding member who played in WOB’s first production of Musical of Musicals, (the Musical!). Jeff was also in Celebrate Sondheim and most recently was Caiaphas in Jesus Christ Superstar. Cassi Schiano (Iowa City) was in the production that opened the Sondheim Center in 2008 when she performed in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and just recently created the role of Princess Lady Lee in A Time Out of Rhyme. Playing opposite Cassi in A Time Out of Rhyme in the role of Prince Chris, was Ian Zahren (South Amana).

Ian Zahren is a well-known performer on the ITAC stage having performed in productions in Amana the past three years, and most recently was the Musical Director and accompanist for ITAC’s spring production of Sister Robert Anne’s Cabaret Class.

Gage Mikels, (Bloomfield) a long time favorite of WOB's, will play the piano and Randy West (Fairfield) will be in the wings playing drums.

The Iowa Theatre Artists Company is proud to host Way Off Broadway in their Amana premiere and introduce this professional theatre to audience members who have not been able to travel to Fairfield to enjoy their work. “It’s a special opportunity to see these WOB performers in the very intimate setting of ITAC over two weekends in September, and we hope that area theatre-goers will take advantage of the chance to see this company perform closer to home,” states ITAC’s Artistic Director, Meg Merckens. West adds, “WOB is delighted to be collaborating with ITAC and hopes this will lead to a regular connection from the Sondheim Center to this delightful theatre in the Amana Colonies in the future.”

The show runs Friday, September 9 through Sunday, September 18. Performance times are Fridays at 7:30 pm, Saturdays at 1:30 pm and 7:30 pm and Sundays at 1:30 pm. The September 9, Friday Evening performance is Opening Night and offers a special price of $18. Regular Ticket prices are: $20 Adult and $10 Student. Reservations are strongly recommended, and can be made through the ITAC box office by calling: 319-622-3222, or emailing: itac@southslope.net.