Thursday, December 5, 2019

Pioneer Valley Theatre News December 5, 2019

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Pioneer Valley Theatre Newsletter
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December 5 - 25, 2019


Happy December! Hope you all survived our snow storm and are warm and happy! Giving Tuesday was earlier this week - but if you missed it, I guarantee your favorite theatre company is still accepting donations. 

The next issue will include events through January 1. Submit upcoming events via the link below or by emailing me before Tuesday at midnight. Any questions, comments or feedback? Email me at pioneervalleytheatre@gmail.com

Submit Your Theatre Event
YOUR EVENT HERE
$5 per week for your poster and ticket link in top billing!
Email me to reserve your dates.
THIS WEEK IN THEATRE NEWS:
from Howlround

Parents of Color and the Need for Anti-Racist Theatre Practices
by Nicole Brewer

From the article: 

I’m at a theatre conference, and I hear the children before I see them. Bubbly giggles erupt from their bodies as they take flight, running for the pure joy of the experience. For a moment I’m lost in thought as I measure the emotional cost of me being here—which is time away from my own children—and what it would mean for them to accompany me into these highly problematic, racist spaces. Confident I made the right decision to leave them at home, I return to the reality of the conference.

Have you read an interesting article about theatre recently? Send it to me! pioneervalleytheatre@gmail.com
Click to Access: Pioneer Valley Theatre Google Calendar
Click to Access: Pioneer Valley Theatre Personnel Spreadsheet
PERFORMANCES
“FOREVER PLAID” TAKES THE STAGE AT MAJESTIC THEATER DEC 5 - 8 

The Majestic Theater's 23rd Season continues with “Forever Plaid,” a musical that runs October 24 through December 8, according to Producing Director Danny Eaton.

The play, by Stuart Ross, tells the tale of a semi-professional harmony group on their way to their first big gig at the Hilton airport cocktail bar, rehearsing their big finale, when they are slammed broadside by a school bus full of teenage girls on their way to witness the Beatles make their debut on The Ed Sullivan Show. While none of the girls are injured, the four harmony singers are killed instantly, but somehow manage to take the stage for one final gig. “Forever Plaid” is filled with great songs that audience members are sure to know and love, and has been described as “screamingly funny and entirely enchanting.”

The cast includes Tomm Knightlee (Smudge), Bryan Austermann (Jinx), Brian Michael Henry (Sparky), and Chris Coffey (Francis). The play is directed by Ben Ashley, and Mitch Chakour is the music director. Set design is by Greg Trochlil, Dawn McKay is costume designer and the lighting design is by Dan Rist. Doug Wallace is sound engineer, and Stephen Petit is production stage manager. The band includes Chakour, Cliff Schofer and Don Rovero.

Ticket prices range from $27 to $34 and can be purchased by calling the box office at (413) 747-7797 or visiting while the box office is open (Monday – Friday 10am – 5pm, and Saturday 10am – 1pm). Tickets for the other plays in the Majestic's 23rdSeason can also be purchased.
STCC Theater presents Circle Mirror Transformation

12/5/19 at 11:00 AM, 12/06/2019 at 7:00PM and 12/07/2019 at 7:00PM

Scibelli Hall Theater, STCC, One Armory Square, Springfield, MA 01102


The College Theater Workshop at Springfield Technical Community College will bring to the stage “Circle Mirror Transformation,” a play centered around drama classes in a community center located in a fictional town in Vermont. The play traces the lives of a handful of small-town Vermont residents who gather each week for an acting class. After they begin to experiment with harmless games, hearts are quietly torn apart and time wars of epic proportions are waged and won. Tickets, which cost between $5-$8, are available at the door


https://www.stcc.edu/
Smith College Department of Theatre presents Fall Studio Productions
December 6 and 7 at 7:30 PM 
Hallie Flanagan Studio Theatre, Mendenhall, Smith College
Free, Open to all, no reservations

Things We Said Today by Neil LaBute, directed by Icarus Tyree '21

A couple sits down for lunch during a holiday shopping trip. Through conversation, they unwittingly end up face to face with the fractures in their marriage. Can they work through this, or are there some things that you can never - and should never - ignore?

Finding the Sun by Edward Albee, directed by G Goldberg '20

Four duos try to take a relaxing day off at the same beach, but the past, and their complicated intertwining relationships, get in the way. Fergus, a teenage boy, can't seem to keep his nose out of everyone else's business, and slowly unravels the web that binds all of them together, which pulls at the end of their sanity as well. Who's married to whom? Who's sleeping with whom? Who would (or most certainly would not!) sleep with whom?

(CW: violence, self-harm)
Mr. Drag and Karl 
return 
to the Shea Theatre,
71 Avenue A in Turners
for their annual holiday show
on December 6 and 7
at 7:30 both nights. 


Tickets are $20 at eggtooth.org
and free for all children under 12. 

This is a family friendly drag show with a few jokes tucked in for adults, an entertainment filled with song, dance and story enjoyable for both children and adults.

Broadway makeup designer, and Emmy nominee, Joe Dulude had this to say about the show that is based upon the favorite Seussian tale about the Grinch, “We all know the tale of how a Grinch with bad intentions tried to steal Christmas from a town and how the town showed him that the holiday wasn’t about the material things but about spending time with each other.  In our version the Grinch has very good intentions,  however misguided.  He is sad to spend the holidays alone and takes Karl so that he can have someone to spend the holidays with.  He already has a big heart, he just needs to be shown that he is parter of a much larger family.”

As Katherine Adler pointed out, “There’s so much to learn from the traditional holiday format from the 30s and 40s. What we do with Mr. Drag and Karl is to distill the essence of the human spirit from those forms to create a modern interpretation that holds onto that earnestness and celebration of life in all it’s facets, eccentricity, sentimentality and nostalgia. We embrace the tears and the smiles with song, story and dance. The thing about my character, Karl is that he and other characters give voice and visibility to facets of ourselves that are often kept hidden and that we are a bit nervous to share. Karl has a sweet vulnerability and awkwardness that is totally endearing.” 

When asked where the idea to do a drag show came from, Joe replied, “Mr Drag and Karl started as an idea that both Kat and I had when hosting our first Holiday Spectacular.  We wanted to play off of famous entertainment duos like Laurel and Hardy, Penn and Teller, Burns and Allen.  I am also inspired by old vaudeville - that form of entertainment of taking the stage in a town and entertaining the masses.  Taking from Penn and Teller, we decided that Karl would be the quiet one and that Mr Drag would be the showy one.  Over time the characters have grown deeper and we have discovered a whole history to them that we couldn’t have imagined when we first started.  Mr Drag is not just an over the top performer who thinks he is the best in the world.  He has a heart and truly loves Karl and could not live without him - something we explore in Mr Drag and How the Grinch Stole Karl.  And Karl, often soft spoken, has grown to show these amazing beautiful emotional parts of himself.  He expresses himself in dance and through a myriad of facial expressions paying homage to such incredible performers as Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton.  He speaks loudly without speaking at all.

With Mr Drag and Karl, I want to firstly bring a form of positive entertainment.  Movies, shows, music have always been an escape for people.  Seeing and hearing these allows people a chance to enter a fantasy world for a little while, forget about what is happening outside and allow themselves a moment to embrace the joy that life could be.  With all of our shows, we strive to entertain the audience and make them smile.  But we also want to be able to inject a bit of reality into our shows.  Mr Drag’s stories are not just about making jokes and telling ridiculous fables but they also educate about history and present social and political views.  I want people to walk away with a smile on their face but with a question or thought in their mind.”

Featuring many local performers from Eggtooth Unstaged including Lindel Hart from Greenfield, Myka Plunkett from Northampton, Maureen McElligott from Northampton, Linda Tardif from Northampton, Jack Golden from Leyden, Monte, Enzo, and Atticus Belmonte from Turners Falls, Caitlin and Thomas Von Schmitt from Greenfield, Marina Goldman from Montague, Jane Williams from New Salem, Izzy Heltai from Northampton, Chris Rose from Northampton, Thatcher and Rebecca Beauregard, Reynolds Whalen, Tim Fisk, Katherine Adler and Joe Dulude II, all from Greenfield.
Darius Taylor presents Wrong Answer: Examining Stakeholder's Voices in High Stakes Testing

December 6th and 7th, 2019 at 7:00pm

New Africa House Theater, 180 Infirmary Way, UMass Amherst campus


What’s race got to do with high stakes testing?

What would you change about standardized testing to make it better for all?

Wrong Answer: Examining Stakeholder Voices in High Stakes Testing is a theater-based intervention that highlights the challenges with testing in the black and brown communities who all too often fall victim to detrimental outcomes for being at the lower end of the educational achievement gap.

Come out and join us in a multimodal theater experience and community conversation that reimagines current testing practices and develops action steps to incite equitable change in society.

Tickets.

LAST CHANCES TO SEE 2019 CLIMATE CHANGE THEATRE PROJECT GREENFIELD 

Play reading series wraps up with programs at Dance Spree and Racial Justice Rising 

December 7, 2019 – 10:15 a.m. – Climate Change Theatre Action: Lighting the Way: 10 short plays about climate change plus songs about the earth by Musica Franklin's youth chorus, followed by a talk-back session. First Congregational Church, 43 Silver Street, Greenfield. Childcare available with reservation: Contact email@racialjusticerising.org with number and ages of children. FREE.

The Understudies: An Improvised Musical! 
December 7th at 7:00 PM
Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, MA) 
Be part of the fun as brave improvisers and their trusty musician create an entire musical from scratch. Saturday, December 7th at 7pm at the Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, on rte.9). Tickets: $13 online and at the door.
For more info: www.happiervalley.com.
HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS 2019” AT MAJESTIC THEATER

Special Holiday Variety Show to Run December 11-22

West Springfield’s Majestic Theater will present its annual seasonal variety show, “Home For The Holidays,” December 11-22. 

The family-friendly show, featuring Pioneer Valley-based performers, has become a tradition at the theater for more than 10 years. Similar in style to nostalgic holiday specials of years past headlined by Andy Williams and Perry Como, “Home For The Holidays 2019” will be hosted by singer Ray Guillemette, Jr., who has headlined several previous "Home for the Holidays” shows and countless "A Ray of Elvis" sold-out shows at the Majestic.

Joining Ray onstage will be veteran Majestic performers including Ben Ashley, Myka Plunkett, Tomm Knightlee and Kait Rankins. Guest performers include Steven Sands, Brad Shepard, Kaytlyn Vandeloecht, Lori Efford, Autumn Marchetto and Rob Clark. 

Music Director Mitch Chakour will lead a band that also includes Tim Hosmer, Cliff Schofer and Don Rovero. The show will be directed by Sue Dziura

Tickets are $24 & $26 for adults, and $10 for children 10 and under, and are available by visiting or calling the Majestic Theater Box Office at (413) 747-7797 during its hours of operation (Monday – Friday 10am - 5pm, and Saturday 10am - 1pm).
Smith College Department of Theatre presents 
New Play Reading Series: Mary Ventura and the Ninth Kingdom

by Sylvia Plath
Directed by Hannah J. Simms
December 12 at 7:30 PM
Acting Studio 1, Mendenhall Center for the Performing Arts
Free

The story - recently published for the first time in the Hudson Review and written while Plath was a student at Smith College - focuses on a young woman's mysterious journey by train.

 
Pioneer Valley Ballet presents The Nutcracker
December 13 at 4:00 PM and 7:00 PM
December 14 at 1:00 PM and 4:30 PM
December 15 at 1:00 PM and 4:30 PM
Academy of Music, Northampton

Pioneer Valley Ballet begins its performance season each winter with The Nutcracker, onstage at the historic Academy of Music Theatre. This is our 41st annual production!

Join Clara as she battles the Rat King to save the Nutcracker Prince, and then travel to the enchanted Snow Forest and beautiful Kingdom of Sweets.

This treasured community event includes over 250 dancers from towns throughout Western Massachusetts, dancing alongside PVB's pre-professional students and guest artists from the Carolina Ballet and Festival Ballet.

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE:

Friday, December 13th at 4:00pm: Sensory and Family Safe Presentation

Now in its third year, this performance has lighting and sound accommodations for reduced sensory experiences. A narrator will assist the audience at the start of the performance. This show will run approximately 1 hour without an intermission.

Friday, December 13th at 7:00pm: Special Performance with Musical Guests

It's become a new tradition: We turn our Friday night performance into an evening packed with extra entertainment. You get a full Nutcracker performance along with special performances by the UMass Doo Wop Shop, and other fun treats sprinkled throughout. If you're looking for a date night performance, this is the one.

Saturday, December 14th & Sunday, December 15th at 1pm & 4:30pm: Our traditional full-length performances, approximately 2 hours in length with one intermission.

NEW THIS YEAR: STORYTIME WITH CLARA
Sunday, December 15 from 12-12:30pm

Be Clara's special guest! Before she performs in the The Nutcracker, Clara will meet you and your child in the theater lobby and personally escort you up on stage into her living room. Your chid will hear the story of The Nutcracker, have the opportunity for a photo with Clara and even get Clara's autograph!

Add this special experience to your ticket to The Nutcracker — or purchase this as a stand-alone treat — and make the afternoon an extra special holiday experience. Limited to 25 children.

Tickets on sale through the Academy of Music Box Office

Tickets.

FINAL REPRISE PRODUCTION: SILVERTHORNE THEATER PRESENTS 

A CHRISTMAS CAROL: A RADIO PLAY

 For two years, the Holiday Season has seen the re-telling of the Dickens’ classic Christmas story in Silverthorne Theater Company’s 1930s radio adaptation of the familiar tale.  A Christmas Carol: A Radio Play, was a terrific hit in 2016 and 2018, and this year will once again be playing in three different Franklin County locations the weekend of December 13-15.  

Director John Reese and actor Michael Haley have revised the 2018 script that was adapted from a full-length version of the story. This hour-long 2018 version presents the recreation of a 1930s production being broadcast live from the radio studio and is performed without intermission.  It is complete with six actors in period costume, gathered around standing microphones and voicing multiple characters.  Haley anchors the performance as Scrooge, joined by Joan Haley, David Rowland, Kimberly Salditt-Poulin, Ann Steinhauser and John Reese, with Marvin Shedd providing narration. 

Sound effects genius John Iverson recreates the excitement of the early days of live sound production with an assortment of weird-looking and -sounding machines which he wields in full view of the audience during the course of the show. Period commercials spice up the station identification breaks!

As Reese says, “A Christmas Carol is a perfect theater piece for a holiday revival because it not only entertains an audience but it directly addresses the meaning of being human.  It engages and delights the youngest to the oldest member of an audience.”

Specifically designed to be family-friendly, A Christmas Carol: A Radio Play will be performed in three venues:

·      Friday,  December 13 at  7 pm in the Perch at Hawks & Reed Performing Arts Center (289 Main Street, Greenfield) 

·      Saturday, December 14 at 7 pm at Centennial House (94 Main St, Northfield – part of Northfield’s Special Day Celebration)

·      Sunday, December 15 at 4 pm at The Deerfield Inn (81 Old Main Street, Deerfield)

Tickets are $15 general admission; $10 for students/seniors. Tickets may be ordered online at Eventbrite.com or by calling 413-768-7514. Details at www.silverthornetheater.org

Next year, Silverthorne plans to present a fully staged Holiday production in December as part of its regular 2020-2021 Season. Details will be forthcoming in January, 2020.

Four mini-comedies will be read at Arms Library in Shelburne Falls at 6:30 on Friday, Dec. 13.
All are welcome.
"I Can't Hear You When the Water is Running" by Robert Anderson is made up of four one-act comedies, written in 1967
"They are very funny and a welcome hiatus from all that's happening right now.  They have absolutely nothing to do with politics!" said Jackie Walsh, managing director of Footlights at the Falls, which has organized the reading with the Arms Library.

These short comedies are about an older man and woman competing for the title of "Least Demented," a middle-aged couple who can't agree about how much sex education their children need, another couple who can't agree whether it's time to replace their queen-sized bed with twin beds, and a playwright who's adamant that one of his actors should appear onstage naked.

This is the third in a series of plays read at the Arms this year.

Others were "The Ferryman" and "The Foreigner." Last year, the group read "A Christmas Carol."

The event is free.

Refreshments will be served.

All are welcome, regardless of experience.

"We've had an experienced actor drive up from Connecticut to read, people reading who have never, ever performed before, and many in between," said Walsh.  "This play is very funny and we are bound to be laughing a lot."

The Arms Library is at 60 Bridge St. in Shelburne Falls.

For more information, call Walsh at 413-625-9413.

BUY TICKETS

The 35th annual Welcome Yule: A Midwinter Celebration returns to the Shea Theater for three performances December 13 through 15.

General Admission $15/ Seniors and Children $12. Children 4 & under are free. 

Rose Sheehan, Welcome Yule founding director, joins the company after a 20-year hiatus in collaboration with current artistic director Liz Smith and music director Kathryn Aubry-McAvoy to mount this year’s production.

Sheehan first conceived the idea for a mid-winter pageant that emphasized folk music and customs in 1985. For 15 years she served the company as artistic director. Sheehan shepherded its growth from a basement coffee house program to a full theatrical production that enjoyed many years at the Shea Theater. She is thrilled to return to direct the 35th anniversary show.

The program’s storyline centers on the wisdom of trees, the power of animals and the deep magic of music. An original song composed by Colin de la Barre served as the nexus for the story development. Sheehan’s son, de la Barre participated in Welcome Yule during his childhood throughout the 1990’s. In recent years de la Barre has performed as one half of the singing duo Meridian. He joins this year’s cast as a featured singer, debuting his composition.

Over the years Welcome Yule's audiences have been regaled with mirth, song, dance and good cheer. This year’s highlights will include rousing harmonies, lively dances, and the use of giant puppets throughout the show.

The Abbot’s Bromley Horn Dance, a staple of the annual pageant, will be performed by the Juggler Meadow Morris Men of Amherst, Massachusetts. The horns carried by the dancers are in fact a set of caribou antlers. Though the origins of this stately English folk dance are debated, one theory holds that it served as a ritual to ensure a plentiful deer herd in the year to come.

Another regular feature, a mummers’ play will also be included. The action of this comic folk drama centers on the death and subsequent revival of one of its characters. The speeches, delivered in rhyming couplets, are written for laughs and the puns are sure to elicit a groan or two.

Welcome Yule is produced and performed by an all volunteer cast and crew. It is a family friendly program suitable for all ages.

For more information contact info@welcomeyule.org

A SUPER SERIOUS AND NOT AT ALL FUNNY READING OF STORIES I WROTE AFTER BRAIN SURGERY
Written and Performed by Gabe Levey
In Collaboration with Lucy Shelby

Saturday, December 14th at 7pm
$10 in advance / $12 at the door
$8 student tickets
$5 seniors / military
Tickets

Last summer Gabe had brain surgery, which left him with a whopping dose of Speech Aphasia. After that Gabe moved back to Northampton to recover. After that Gabe began writing short stories as part of his speech therapy. And now, after all of that, Gabe is going to read some of them out loud for the first time ever in front of mostly strangers and some friends and family. What could possibly go wrong?

Join us as we travel into the post-operative mind of a comic performer, his journey back to coherent speech and the birth of Completely Ridiculous Productions.

Reception to follow.

ARTIST LED WORKSHOP: Intro to The Fun of Failure!
The following day, Sunday December 15th, Gabe will run a 2 hour workshop focused on Games and the reclamation of each individuals ability to play with ease, wonder and reckless abandon. No experience required.

12-2pm in Eli’s Room at The Northampton Center for The Arts @ 33 Hawley Street.
$20 to be paid upon arrival.
Sign up after the show Saturday night, or on the day of!
And bring your program from Saturday night’s show for a $5 discount!!
COMING TO LIGHT
AN ADVENT PROGRESS

 
A New Comic Drama for the Holidays!
 
Several “Voices” share their thoughts and feelings in twenty-eight spoken-word songs as they look to make their way through early winter and the holiday season—that is, as they try to make more sense of their lives and the life around them.  They seek a true coming to light.
 
Influenced by Luigi Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author, Edgar Lee Masters’ Spoon River Anthology, poetry slams, and traditional Advent, Coming to Light (it follows) is innovative.  It’s designed to be not only interactive, with audience on three sides and no fourth wall, but also immersive.  Members of the audience who are interested in taking part will be invited at different points to step on stage, take the place of one of the Voices, and read a song for that Voice, reflecting the poetry slam quality of the play.
 
Christmas will naturally be addressed in several songs, but the essence of the play is nonsectarian.  Non-Christian elements are incorporated, including the playing of klezmer music by Jim Armenti of the band Klezamir.  Some of Jim’s own ballads are featured as well.
 
Please join us in our progress through the holiday season!
 
ONE SHOW ONLY – Saturday, December 14, 7:30 pm in The Northampton Center for the Arts
 
$10 GENERAL
 
$5 SENIORS/STUDENTS (age 13+ recommended)
 
Cash/Check at the Door
 
Online tickets
The Ha-Ha's & Friends! 
December 14th at 7:00 PM
Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, MA) 
Local favorites since 2003, The Ha-Ha's perform in their monthly show for the LAST TIME! Saturday, December 14th at 7pm at the Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, on rte.9). Tickets: $13 online and at the door.
For more info: www.happiervalley.com.
Phantom Sheep Productions presents LaughCrafters Holiday Show

December 16 at 6:30 PM
Agawam Public Library

Celebrate the season with us and laugh off that holiday stress! In their annual tradition,local comedy troupe Phantom Sheep is performing a FREE show for all of you with lots of live improv and including a few new pre-recorded sketches.

Show begins at 6:30PM
Tell your friends! We'd love to see you there!

Facebook event.

Phantom Sheep also offers adult improv classes through Unity House Players in Springfield, MA. Next session starting early 2020. improv@phantomsheep.com for more info and to register.
WHAT: RLT presents a sharing of in-process work from their new original piece When the Mind's Free

WHO: Real Live Theatre artists Toby Vera Bercovici (Director), Ezekiel Baskin (Stage Manager), Linda Tardif (Cordelia), and Myka Plunkett (Goneril), are joined by frequent RLT guest artist Annelise Nielsen (Regan/Choreographer), as well as by Liz Stanton (AEA, Lear), Carolyn Goelzer (AEA, Fool), and Abbie Killeen (AEA, Kent).

WHERE: The green room at the Shea Theater in Turners Falls

WHEN: Monday, December 16, 7pm



HOW MUCH: Suggested donation, sliding scale, $10-$25 

BUY TICKETS

CONTACT: Toby or Ellen or Ezekiel at reallivetheatre@gmail.com
SHORT EVENT DESCRIPTION: An intimate sharing of the work-in-progress and developmental process of When the Mind's Free, a collaboratively created contemporary adaptation of King Lear. Seating is extremely limited.

FULL PROJECT DESCRIPTION: RLT’s Toby Vera Bercovici launches a new work, devised in collaboration with a team of RLT members and guest artists. The working title of the piece is When the Mind’s Free. It lifts language, ideas, and story from Shakespeare’s King Lear and places them in a contemporary context, a day in the life of a family dealing with early-onset Alzheimer’s. 


When the Mind's Free explores the relationship of Sound to Time and Mortality: the big, free sounds we make when we are born and as we die, and the moments sound is stifled in between; sound as a radical, feminist act; sound as a means by which we leave our mark upon the world. The language in the piece will be contemporary and is emerging out of situation-based improvisations. The piece is process-driven as much as it is product-oriented, and is grounded in female collaboration. 

The sharing at the Shea on Dec. 16th is the first public sharing of this ongoing work since the initial developmental residency at the Dragon's Egg Studio in CT in June 2019, continued in a residency this December in Sunderland. The project will continue to develop in 2020.
Storytelling Standup Showcase
December 20th at 7:00 PM
Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, MA)
Catch local talent trying out their new material hosted by the amazing Kelsey Flynn. Friday, December 20th at 7pm at the Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, on rte.9). Tickets: $5 at the door.
For more info: https://www.happiervalley.com/standup-showcase.html
The Happier FAMILY Comedy Show
December 21st at 3:00 PM
Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, 125 W Bay Rd, Amherst, MA

Monthly family-friendly improv comedy show, great for 5-13 year olds and their adults. It's funny for the whole family! Saturday, December 21st at 3pm at The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art (125 W Bay Rd., Amherst). Tickets at the door: $10/Adults, $5/Kids, Free/4 yrs and under (Reduced admission for museum members).
For more info: www.happiervalley.com.
HVC Presents: Not In Charge! 
December 21st at 7:00 PM
Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, MA) 
Join the talented group Not In Charge for a polished, fast-paced improv show inspired by true stories from the cast and audience! Saturday, December 21st at 7pm at the Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, on rte.9). Tickets: $13 online and at the door.
For more info: www.happiervalley.com.
The Happier Valley Championship! 
December 28th at 7:00 PM
Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, MA) 
In this competitive comedy show, two teams of improvisers face off through scenes and games to see who can win the ultimate prize: an old trophy we found in someone's attic. Saturday, December 28th at 7pm at the Happier Valley Comedy Theater (1 Mill Valley Rd, Hadley, on rte.9). Tickets: $13 online and at the door.
For more info: www.happiervalley.com.
AUDITIONS & OPPORTUNITIES
DO YOU WANT TO BUILD A SNOWMAN??
 
Black Cat Theater, Inc. is seeking actors/actresses for the spring production of Disney’s Frozen Jr. directed by Dawn Larder with Greg Williams as Music Director. Auditions are open to all genders ages 10 to 18. They will be held on Thursday, December 5 at 6 pm in Kidder Hall, All Saints Church, 7 Woodbridge Street, South Hadley.
 
Each named role will have a specific song they will be asked to sing from the show and there will also be short readings from the script. Those auditioning for the Ensemble will also be asked to sing the beginning of For the First Time in Forever. All those auditioning will sing to recorded music accompaniment. For character list, sheet music, and audition backing music tracks see www.blackcattheater.pbworks.com, or email blackcattheater@gmail.com.
 
All candidates must be accompanied by a parent/guardian. All applicants should bring a short write-up of previous theater experience with them.
 
Disney’s Frozen Jr. is expected to be produced at South Hadley High School on April 2–5, 2020. Rehearsals are on Monday and Thursday evenings at 6pm starting January 6th.
 
If unavailable to be seen in person, please call 413-563-6023 or email blackcattheater@gmail.com
 
As a community theater, Black Cat Theater, Inc. is always looking for people who would enjoy working “behind the scenes,” assisting with costumes, props, set construction and painting, and other tasks associated with producing a show. If interested, please call 413-563-6023 or emailblackcattheater@gmail.com.
 
SONGS FOR AUDITIONS
(See www.blackcattheater.pbworks.com for sheet music and audition backing music track.)
Anna -- Do You Want to Build a Snowman (sing measures 4-22)
Elsa-- Let It Go (sing measures 25-50)
Olaf -- In Summer (sing measures 6-23)
Hans -- Love is an Open Door (sing Hans' part measures 5-23)
Ensemble --  (Including the Housekeeper, Butler, Handmaiden, Cook, King Agnaar, 
Queen Iduna, Pabbie, Bulda, Kristoff, Sven and Oaken)
For the First Time in Forever (sing all parts measures 4-23)

Auditions: Performers, be part of UMass New Play Lab!

 
Performers — are you excited about helping to shape new work? 
The UMass Department of Theater is looking for actors for this year’s Play Lab. Play Lab is a venue for playwrights to experiment, for directors and dramaturgs to collaborate on shaping new work, for actors to bring intriguing characters to life, and for audiences to help shape the work through their reactions. This year, we are bringing two professional playwrights to UMass to collaborate on new plays. 

Auditions will take place on December 4 and 5 in Room 204 of the Fine Arts Center. 

Please prepare a side in advance of your audition. You can sign up for a slot and access sides on our Sign Up Genius.


About the plays:
THE INTERROBANGERS by M Sloth Levine
Four groovy teens and a dog search the woods in their van to solve a mystery while exploring drugs, queerness, and the fear that men in rubber masks are scarier than monsters. The four question the world they know, looking into the parts of their history they would rather avoid.

We are looking to cast:
  • Zodiac DuMaurier, late teens, he/him/his. Cis-ish. He has white parents but he’s not necessarily white
  • Hank Mason, late teens, he/him/his, cis and white
  • Luna Jaffe, late teens, Asian, they/them/theirs. This role is for an actor who was assigned female at birth but identifies as non-binary.
  • Dani MacHaydn, late teens, she/her/hers, cis and black
  • Bettie Roswell, 60’s, she/her/hers, cis and black. She also plays Tess Mason, late 40’s, she/her/hers. She is Hank’s mom.
  • Officer Craig/Guy at The Jackalope. Cis man of color
  • Mr. Dahl/Nathan Hobart. Any race. Maybe human. Maybe something else.  
Actors cast in The Interrobangers will need to be available on the evening of January 24 and from January 27, 2020 - February 8, 2020

WALDEN by Amy Berryman 
In the not-so-distant future, climate change has intensified and scientists are recommending that we colonize elsewhere. Cassie, a NASA botanist, returns from her year-long deployment in space and is shocked to find her sister, Stella, a former NASA architect, engaged to an Earth Advocate. As the twins grapple with questions of rivalry and love, humanity hangs in the balance.

We are looking to cast:
  • STELLA – early thirties, Cassie’s twin sister – former NASA colony architect, her mouth moves quickly to catch up with her even faster brain, still deeply heartbroken she will never go to space, is harboring secrets and resentment as she struggles to welcome her sister into her new life. She/her/hers
  • CASSIE – early thirties, Stella’s twin sister – NASA botanist, physically strong, seems put together in the midst of all her success, but inside is doubtful and falling apart. Looking for a way to blow up her life, as well as looking for a way to get closer to her sister. She/her/hers
  • BRYAN – mid thirties, Stella’s fiancée – a member of the populist political movement Earth Advocates, laid back, kind, emotionally open, strong, still grieving the loss of his brother, struggling with the wall Stella has built around herself. He/him/his 
Actors cast in Walden will need to be available on the evening of January 24 and from February 10-22, 2020


More about the Department of Theater: umass.edu/theater
K AND E THEATER GROUP AND THE ALTAR BOYZ  NEED YOU!!!

We are looking for IMMEDIATE video submissions for the role of "MARK" the sensitive high pop tenor of the Altar Boyz.

Show dates are April 16-19, 2020 at Northampton Center for the Arts!

If interested PLEASE send a video submission to auditions.ketg@gmail.com singing a song best showing off your high range in both chest voice and pop falsetto.  (If singing from the show, please look at the song "Epiphany")

Rehearsals will begin February 3, 2020. Deadline for submissions is December 21, 2020!

DO YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO JOIN THE ALTAR BOYZ? SUBMIT A VIDEO TO K AND E THEATER GROUP TODAY!!
The Play Reading Co-op is currently seeking submissions of full length plays from New England writers for a monthly, ongoing reading series. The mission of the co-op is simply for local theater makers to have a chance to get in a room together to work on high quality material for our own learning, enjoyment, and camaraderie. It's also a great way to learn about new works and writers. The reading is intended to be informal and without an audience other than other co-op “members” and potentially a friend or colleague(s) of the writer. If the writer is looking for a discussion or feedback afterward, we are happy to make space for that as well. We are ideally looking for plays with at least 2 female identifying roles. 

http://www.rachelfhirsch.com/play-reading-co-op
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