Directed by Paul Weber
Moon Over Buffalo follows the struggling actors, Charlotte and George Hay, as they face a potential Hollywood movie offer and a family crisis. They are performing in repertory, struggling with their marriage and a visit from their daughter’s fiancé, while trying to impress director Frank Capra, who is in town. The play is filled with humor and chaos, with the Hay’s deaf mother-in-law adding to the comedic mix.
Tickets go on sale Monday, February 9 at 11 am
by A.R. Gurney
Directed by Christopher Weimer
A.R. Gurney’s Pulitzer Prize-nominated play, Love Letters, chronicles a fifty-year relationship between two lifelong friends, Andrew Makepeace Ladd III and Melissa Gardner. Told entirely through the exchange of letters, notes, and cards, the story follows them from second grade through adulthood, war, and separate marriages. Andrew follows a path of duty and political success, while Melissa leads a rebellious, artistic life marked by personal struggle. Despite their diverging paths, their lifelong correspondence reveals a complex, enduring bond of missed opportunities and deep affection that transcends distance and time.
This production is triple cast.
Directed by Sydney Wehmeyer
Explosive, passionate, and heartrending, A Streetcar Named Desire is modern American theatre at its best. When fading Southern belle Blanche DuBois arrives on the doorstep of her sister Stella’s apartment building in New Orleans, she is unwittingly entering a lion’s den. Wounded by romantic abuses, loss, and dangerous mistakes, Blanche prefers her world kept in dim, flattering light, fuzzy at the edges. She is shocked by Stella’s simple existence, her new low-class habits, and most of all, her crude, simple husband, Stanley. Stanley is fierce and unpredictable, moving from violence to softness in an instant, and he and Blanche begin a cruel, sadistic dance where the only possible end is pain. With his signature poetic prose, muggy Southern Gothic setting, and psychological insight, Tennessee Williams’ mighty play, and his troubled, eccentric heroine, unravel before our very eyes.
Tickets go on sale Monday, April 13 at 11 am
Book & Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner
Music by Frederick Loewe
Adapted from George Bernard Shaw’s play and Gabriel Pascal’s motion picture “Pygmalion”
Original Production Directed by Moss Hart
Directed by Dana Ayers
Eliza Doolittle is a young flower seller with an unmistakable Cockney accent which keeps her in the lower rungs of Edwardian society. When Professor Henry Higgins tries to teach her how to speak like a proper lady, an unlikely friendship begins to flourish.
Tickets go on sale Monday, June 1 at 11 am
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