Thursday, March 12, 2020

Pioneer Valley Theatre News March 12, 2020

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Pioneer Valley Theatre Newsletter
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March 12 - April 1, 2020


In light of the constantly changing coronavirus information - I highly recommend you reach out to each individual theatre to make sure the announced performances, workshops, auditions, etc. listed here are still scheduled. If you are feeling sick, please don't attend any events. If you aren't feeling sick, remember that ticket income is a big part of how theatres survive - maybe be a little extra generous if you can. And either way, wash your hands! 

The next issue will include events through April 8. 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

How Theatre Organizations Can Best Serve Youth Artists
by Tiffany Vega-Gibson

From the article: 

Everyone who works in the performing arts knows that youth benefit greatly from being involved in the field. It builds their self-esteem, enables them to think quickly on their feet (ten second costume changes, anyone?), and helps them develop long-lasting friendships and memories. For young artists, the theatre is often a safe space and provides a positive alternative to the troubles some of them experience at home or in school.

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
The Drama Studio presents
Still Life with Iris
Thursday, March 12th at 6:30pm Friday & Saturday, March 13th, & 14th at 7:30pm Sunday, March 15th at 3:00pm
The Drama Studio, 41 Oakland st.
The cast of Still Life with Iris includes actors ages nine to adult and tells the story of Iris, a young girl from the magical land of Nocturno where everyone holds their pasts in their coats. When the rulers of the land, The Great Goods, decide they want a daughter, they take Iris’s coat, erasing her memory and keeping her for themselves. Iris escapes and finds new friends to help her search for home, like Annabel Lee: a young lady of the sea, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: a boy who plays the piano and prefers to be called Motes. The three friends must join together to escape Great Island through the Tunnel of the Unwanted on their fantastic quest for freedom and for a place to belong.

The cast includes Reagan Phillips, Teagan Allen, Rory Brennan-Staub, Sonja Funk, Luke Guy, Rosalyn Hudson, Regan Kleiner, Isaac MacArthur, and Glenn Yarnell of Springfield, Madeline Choiniere Barr, Sean Fazio, and Nadia Hayles of Longmeadow, Teagan Corthell and Jacob Fisher of Wilbraham, Caroline Matheson of South Hadley, Marcos Nieves of Chicopee, Aidan O’Brien of Belchertown, Ben Richards of Hampden, Miles Santanello of East Longmeadow, and Charlotte Watts of Windsor, CT.

Directed by Dan Morbyrne.
Set and Light design by Craig Milne.
Light design by Craig Milne and Austin Yelinek.
Prop Design by Austin Yelinek.
Costume design by Julia Vincenza Whalen.
Stage Management by Bridget Bushey.  
Written by Steven Dietz.

Tickets will go on sale on February 20th ($20 for adults and $10 for students) and may be purchased online through the Drama Studio website (dramastudio.org) or directly from lifewithiris.brownpapertickets.com. To buy tickets by phone call the Drama Studio Box Office 413-739-1983 during the following hours: M-F 4:30PM-7PM and Sat 10AM to 4:30PM. The Drama Studio is located next to the Forest Park Library on 41 Oakland Street in Springfield.
ARHS presents Spring Awakening
March 12, 13, 14
All evening shows start at 7:30; 3/14 matinee starts at 2:00
Amherst Regional High School

ARHS Theater tackles this electric Best Broadway Musical of 2007 in a rare high school production.  Come support this exciting show while supporting the meaningful work theater can do to promote meaningful social dialogue.   It's going to be thrilling and poignant weekend - join us!

CONTENT ADVISORY: This show is not recommended for those under 14 years of age, and contains potentially-triggering content for some audience members.  Details available at bit.ly/arhsspringawakening
 

MAJESTIC THEATER SERVES UP THE PITCH 
MARCH 12 – APRIL 5


West Springfield Production to Serve as World Premiere Run of Drama by Pioneer Valley Writer

The Pitch, a contemporary drama by Pioneer Valley-based writer Stan Freeman, will debut at West Springfield's Majestic Theater February 27 for a six-week run concluding April 5, according to the Majestic's Producing Director Danny Eaton.

The play tells the story of retired sportswriter Roger Pennell who reluctantly agrees to collaborate with a young reporter, Mike Resnick, on the biography of a boyhood friend of Roger's. That friend, Vernon Peters, was a pitcher who had been languishing on a farm team for the Yankees, but finally got the call that brought him to the mound at Yankee Stadium. Peters threw only one pitch that day, and his career in the Major Leagues abruptly ended. In digging into the story, the young writer discovers a secret at the heart of it all, a secret the older writer fiercely intends to protect.

The cast includes John Haag (Roger), Julian Findlay (Mike), R. Steve Pierce (Vernon) and Katie Sloan (Pauline). Eaton is directing the play, set design is by Greg Trochlil, Dawn McKay is costume designer and the lighting design is by Dan Rist. Emily Paegle Bloch is stage manager and Stephen Petit is production stage manager.

This is a brand new play, and it certainly falls within our mission of supporting local artists,” said Eaton. “It's a fascinating, although fictional, baseball story that offers the themes of friendship, loyalty and betrayal set against the backdrop of the rivalry between the Red Sox and the Yankees.”

States Freeman, “You don't need to have a love of, or even much knowledge of, baseball to be interested in this play. You didn't need to have an interest in sales and marketing to find meaning in Death of a Salesman, either. The true focus of The Pitch is generational differences, ethics, as well as life decisions and their consequences, which are all universals.”

Ticket prices range from $24 to $31 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, Saturday 10am – 1pm). 

Mr. Drag and Karl return

to 10 Forward! 

10 Fiske Ave, Greenfield, MA 01301
Friday, March 13, 2020 at 8:00 pm

They're BACK! Don't miss the delight of an old timey variety show filled with song, story, and dance through the blurry lens of Joe Dulude II and Katherine Adler's sparkly vision. Where else on earth can you see performances of a Lizzo song and a Cole Porter song on the same stage? Think of it as Buster Keaton meets Ru Paul with nice refreshing adult beverages in hand. So much fun to be had in a great venue! Tickets are $15 with very limited seating so come a little early for best seats. We can't wait to see you. Also, MERCH will be available including the cutest mugs and tees you ever saw!

Broadway makeup designer, and Emmy nominee Joe Dulude shares,  "We love playing off 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. He expresses himself in dance and through a myriad of facial expressions paying homage to such incredible performers as Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton."

MAJESTIC THEATER PRESENTING MISGIVINGS

The Majestic Theater in West Springfield will present a one-man comedy show, Misgivings, in March.

Tuesday, March 17, the Majestic celebrates St. Patrick's Day with Misgivings, a comedic one-man, interactive show featuring Dave Kane as Father Patrick Aloysius Misgivings. Topics for discussion include blessings, blarney, bingo and one-liners about growing up Catholic. There will be shows at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m., and tickets are $24 & $26.

To purchase tickets, visit the Majestic box office Monday through Friday 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., or Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. They can also be purchased by calling (413) 747-7797 during box office hours.
The Happier FAMILY Comedy Show
March 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, March 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! 
March 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, March 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.
Playwright and TV scribe Theresa Rebeck to appear at UMass Theater
 
A writer of plays, novels, television, and film, Theresa Rebeck holds a unique perspective on what it means to be a writer today. 
On March 26 at 5 p.m., we are thrilled to welcome Rebeck to the University of Massachusetts Department of Theater for a conversation about writing — and what it means to be a woman writing about other women in a field where men's voices still dominate. The event is free and open to the community and will be followed by a reception.
Rebeck is the most-produced woman playwright on Broadway. Her recent Off-Broadway offering, Seared, featured UMass Theater alumnus David Mason in one of the main roles. Her play, Omnium Gatherum, was a Pulitzer Prize finalist, and she created the TV show Smash, as well as writing award-winning episodes of NYPD Blue. In her book, Free Fire Zone, she deftly combines her quick-witted humor with personal anecdotes detailing both the glamourous and ugly sides of life as a playwright and Hollywood writer. She has used her credibility in the industry to advocate for gender parity, founding the Lilly Awards to honor the work of women in American theater. 
Rebeck comes to UMass Theater through the efforts of MFA candidate in dramaturgy Shaila Schmidt, whose thesis focuses on women who write comedy. "In my thesis, I attempt to highlight the ways in which comedy can be utilized as a tool for social change and the ways in which the work of a dramaturg can support that," Schmidt explained. "There is a rich history of how deeply marginality and difference inform the tradition of comedy, especially comedy written and performed by women."  
Although Rebeck's appearance is presented under the auspices of the Rand Lecture, the format will be less lecture and more Q&A, as Schmidt will interview Rebeck and welcome questions from the audience. The event is open to all members of the community, and no ticket reservations are required. The conversation will be followed by a reception with the artist.
Springfield JCC presents Lucky Stiff
2/26 at 8pm, 3/28- 8 pm, 3/29- 2 pm
Springfield JCC: 1160 Dickinson St,Springfield MA

Tony Award-winning writing team, Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty's, first produced show, Lucky Stiff, premiered Off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons. That incarnation's talented cast included Stephen Stout, Stuart Zagnit, Mary Testa and Julie White. A winner of the Richard Rodgers Award and Washington's Helen Hayes Award for Best Musical, Lucky Stiff is now performed frequently across the country.

Based on the novel, The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo by Michael Butterworth, Lucky Stiff is an offbeat, hilarious murder mystery farce, complete with mistaken identities, six million bucks in diamonds and a corpse in a wheelchair. The story revolves around an unassuming English shoe salesman who is forced to take the embalmed body of his recently murdered uncle on a vacation to Monte Carlo. Should he succeed in passing his uncle off as alive, Harry Witherspoon stands to inherit $6,000,000. If not, the money goes to the Universal Dog Home of Brooklyn... or else his uncle's gun-toting ex!

Featuring a tuneful Flaherty and Ahrens score, an ensemble cast of zany characters and small rock combo orchestra, Lucky Stiff is an audience charmer.

Facebook event.
For tickets- please call the Springfield JCC: 413-739-4715
Turners Falls High School & Great Falls Middle School presents Matilda
7pm on 3/27, 3/28, 4/3, 4/4--------2pm on 3/29, 4/5
Turners Falls High School---222 Turnpike Road, Turners Falls, MA

Come join the talented cast and crew of Turners Falls High School & Great Falls Middle School as they present Matilda: The Musical.

Come follow the misunderstood life of 5 year-old Matilda Wormwood as she endures the anguish of an obnoxious family life and the horrid headmistress, Agatha Trunchbull. She will amaze you with her wit, fearlessness, cleverness and fantastical storytelling. It is through courage and cleverness that Matilda wins the heart of the caring and supportive teacher, Miss Honey, and audiences alike.

Adults $12
Students/Seniors $8
Kids under age 5 $4
Tickets available at the door
The Happier Valley Championship! 
March 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, March 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.
About The Play
Abuelita’s spirit guides us through various time periods illuminating intergenerational struggles and experiences of survival.  

 

The piece is predominantly performed in English accompanied by bits in Spanish. Ticket sales will go towards the ReclaimPR fundraiser that focuses on supporting entrepreneurs in Puerto Rico.

*Mature content - may not be suitable for young children*

 

SHOWTIMES

3. Holyoke, MA | Wistariahurst Museum | Sat 3.28.20 - 7pm

 

TICKETS  

Pay What You Can. 5 tiers of pricing:

$25 and up - RPR Supporter $25 - Full Ticket Value

$20 - I Can Do $20 

$15 - I Can Do $15 

$10 - Student/Senior Citizen Discount (students must bring valid student ID) 

Nina Dabek in collaboration with the Play Reading Co-op presents
Invitation to the Dance by Nina Dabek: A Play Reading
March 29 at 7:30 PM
Northampton Friends Meetinghouse

Come to a reading of Nina Dabek's play "Invitation to the Dance," on Sunday March 29 at 7:30 pm at the Northampton Friends Meetinghouse, in collaboration with The Play Reading Co-op.  Admission is free.  The space is accessible.

The play takes place in Northampton in 1980.  Naomi's older sister is about to get married.  Naomi and her partner will attend the wedding, but Naomi's mother, fearing her own mother's judgment, requests that Naomi not come out to her grandmother until after the wedding is over.  Naomi resists.  Meanwhile, her grandmother has her own plan for the wedding.  The play deals with secrets and misunderstandings and the possibility of change between three generations of women as each struggles to be true to herself while also grappling with the fear of rejection and the desire for love and approval.  It is both serious and humorous.

The cast:

LEONORE - Judith Fine
STELLA - Jane Barish
NAOMI - Rachel F. Hirsch*
BETH - Sarah Marcus*
HARRIET - Miriam Sirota
STAGE DIRECTIONS - Nikki Beck

*Members of Actors Equity Association
 
AUDITIONS & OPPORTUNITIES
Academy of Music is hiring a Producer / Community Outreach Coordinator

The Producer/Community Outreach Coordinator has the responsibility of producing the Academy of Music Theatre’s Valley Voices Story Slam, coordinating its workshops and managing communications. As Community Outreach Coordinator, the responsibilities include building relationships and working with the Latinx community through storytelling and our Valley Voices Story Slam.

Duties and responsibilities include:

• Produce show series, coordinating with Academy of Music Theatre’s partner New England Public Radio
• Prepare timelines, manage logistics, and host shows
• Market series and workshops through radio ads, website, and social media
• Develop strategies to reach underserved populations
• Plan and host workshop events
• Build and maintain community partnerships
• Collaborate with WGBY/WGBH to produce nationally televised Stories from the Stage

Requirements:
• BA in English, Theater Arts or related field or experience
• 2 years experience in community outreach and/or event planning
• Experience working directly with people of diverse racial, ethnic, gender identity, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic backgrounds.
• Ability to flex communication style to multiple cultural environments, Spanish speaking preferred
• Ability to present to diverse audiences, specifically racially, ethnically, culturally, and socioeconomically diverse communities.

Full Job Posting
Auditions for the first production of Ilan Stavans' one-person play Kaddish for My Father; or Why We Lie.

Latino/Hispanic actor, 40s - 50s


Full Length, One-Person Drama

1 hr. 10 minutes

Total Cast: 1,  Latino male, 50s

Flexible Set

Email for more information or to schedule an audition.

The Play

After Abraham Stavans, a famous Mexican stage and telenovela actor, dies, his son, Ilan, tries to come to terms with the tension between the public figure and the private man. How can a son grieve when his father’s life seems based on make-believe?  And how can he face his own struggle for Jewish/Mexican identity?

The Playwright

From Mexican-born, Internationally renowned essayist, playwright, and cultural commentator Ilan Stavans. His previous play, The Oven, has toured the country for three years. The script was published in book form by UMass Press. Stavans’ work has been on PBS, NPR, BBC, the New York Times, and many other outlets. Kaddish for My Father or Why We Lie will published by Duke University Press in the fall of 2020.
AUDITIONS MARCH 14 & 21 FOR CHILDREN'S THEATER AT MAJESTIC THEATER

Auditions are currently being booked March 14 & 21 for parts in Children's Theater at West Springfield's Majestic Theater. On all three dates, the auditions will take place from 12pm - 6pm at the theater.

Performers aged 14-19 are encouraged to call the theater at (413) 747-7797 during business hours (Monday through Friday 10am-5pm and Saturday 10am-1pm) to schedule an appointment. They will be asked to read scenes during their audition. Performing a monologue (not to exceed two minutes in length) and singing are encouraged, but not required. If singing at the audition, performers may bring an instrumental CD to accompany themselves or use their phone to connect to a Bluetooth speaker, provided b the theater.

Shows being performed on a rotating schedule this July and August are “Disney's The Little Mermaid,” “Curious George & The Golden Meatball” and “Schoolhouse Rock Live.” Tickets can be purchased by calling (413) 747-7797.
Ghost Light Theater announces auditions for Cloud 9, by Caryl Churchill. Directed by Janine Corman.

Gateway City Arts
Sunday March 22nd, 6:00-9:00 PM.
Tuesday March 24th, 7:00-9:00 PM.

Callbacks (by invite only) Sunday March 29th, 6:00-9:00 PM.

--

Caryl Churchill’s wickedly comic and compassionate study of sexual politics glimpses the relationships of a family and their lovers, with an interval of twenty-five years of their lives, and around a hundred years of history. Cloud 9 is about relationships - between women and men, men and men, women and women. It is about sex, work, mothers, Africa, power, children, grandmothers, politics, money, Queen Victoria and Sex. Cloud 9 premiered in London at the Royal Court Theatre in 1979 and has since been staged all over the world

In colonial Africa, a Victorian English patrician represses the natives, his wife, his children, homosexuals—and still finds time for an affair with a widowed neighbor. The same family appears in Act Two 25 years older and back in London, only now it’s 1979.

Highlighting the parallels of sexual and colonial oppression, the first act is set in a British colony in South Africa at the height of the Victorian era. Clive is the traditional colonial patriarch, proud of his perfectly domesticated wife, Betty (played by a male actor) and his native servant, Joshua (played by a male actor), and striving conscientiously to ensure his son, Edward (played by a female actor) and daughter, Victoria (played by a doll)  play with gender appropriate toys. Adultery, secret homosexuality, and unrest among the natives, threaten to subvert the “moral order” of the household.

The second act finds some of the same characters (Betty, Edward, and Victoria)  living in 1979, twenty-five years older (and played by different actors), finding new liberations in bisexuality and polyamory, but finding new anxieties about gender and fulfilment. The intricacies of these relationships and the play’s doubling create a complex and moving account of the multiplicity of individual sexualities.

--

Character Breakdown

Clive/Cathy: Male, 30-50
Clive is a colonial administrator in Africa in the Victorian period, a strong patriarchal figure who is becoming overwhelmed by the pressures of his job and family. Cathy is a five-year-old girl in 1970s London.

Betty/Edward: Male, 25-40
Betty is a traditional Victorian wife and mother figure. Edward is a sexually-confused young man in 1970s London.

Joshua/Gerry: Male, 30-40
Joshua is Clive's African manservant who is torn between his racial identity and the needs of serving his English bosses. Gerry is a working-class gay Londoner in 1970s London.

Edward/Betty: Female, 40-60
Edward is Clive and Betty's nine-year-old son whose innocence is challenged by the sexual politics of his family. Also plays Betty: the Act One character 25 years older in late 1970s London--who struggles with her children's sexuality.

Maud/Victoria: Female, 25-40
Clive's mother-in-law, a battle-axe of a woman who is blunt with her opinions. Victoria is Edward's sister who is stifled by an overbearing husband in an unhappy marriage in 1970s London.

Ellen/Mrs. Saunders/Lin: Female, 25-40
Ellen is a repressed family governess in colonial Africa. Mrs. Saunders is an independent and confident woman who runs an African farm on her own. Lin is a working-class lesbian woman raising a child alone in 1970s London.

Harry Bagley/Martin: Male, 30-40
Harry is a handsome, intrepid, repressed homosexual Victorian explorer. Martin is Victoria's husband struggling with a crisis of masculinity in 1970s London.
For an in depth summary and detailed character list.


--

Auditions will consist of cold readings from the script. British accents are encouraged and will ultimately be required for the production. Also, please prepare approximately 16 bars of a patriotic anthem of your choice to be sung a cappella.. Cloud 9 is not a musical, but some singing is required.

If you are asked to attend callbacks, you will receive sides and/or monologues to prepare in advance.

If you have any questions, please contact the director at Janine.Corman1121@gmail.com.

Facebook Event Link.
The Laramie Project Auditions at Exit 7 Theater

Written by Moises Kaufman and the members of Tectonic Theater Project

Performances:
June 12-14 and 19-21, 2020

Audition Dates:
Monday, March 23 at 7pm
Wednesday, March 25 at 7pm

Callbacks (if needed):
Monday, March 30

Auditions will be held at the Exit 7 Theater, located at 37 Chestnut Street in Ludlow, MA. Parking is available on Chestnut Street, or in the lot at the corner of Winsor and Chestnut Street.

All those wishing to audition must be 16 years or older at the time of the first rehearsal, Monday, April 6, 2020 due to the graphic nature of the show. Those between the ages of 16-18 must have parent/guardian consent to participate.

Those auditioning are asked to prepare a 1-2 minute dramatic monologue, this does not need to be memorized. Please NO monologues from The Laramie Project. Consider a monologue to PERFORM, it should allow for the actor to emote and be similar to the nature of this show. Cold readings will also be used.

Casting size: 8+ (will vary based on those auditioning, meaning 8 may be cast but more may be considered) - actors will be playing multiple roles of varying ages/races/genders/sexualities.

ALL ROLES are open and gender neutral casting will be in place.

Synopsis:

In October 1998 in the middle of the prairie outside Laramie, Wyoming, Matthew Shepard, a 21 year old student at the University of Wyoming, was tied to a fence post, severely beaten, robbed, tortured and left, alone, to die. His body -- battered, bloody, barely clinging to life -- was discovered eighteen hours later. He was rushed to the hospital and put on life support. He died five days later. The reason for this brutal crime? Matthew Shepard was gay. The hate crime attracted vast attention worldwide, bringing sexual discrimination and violence to the forefront of public discourse. The Tectonic Theater Project, led by their founder Moisés Kaufman, traveled to Laramie in the aftermath of the murder with the intent of creating a theatrical portrait of a town coming to grips with horrible, hate-fueled violence. Over the course of a year and a half, the group interviewed over 200 subjects, some directly related to the case and some regular citizens of Laramie. Out of these interviews, journal entries, and found texts, The Laramie Project was born. Hailed as one of the most captivating and encompassing pieces of contemporary theatre, the play shocks, challenges, and moves all who watch it as it reveals the lowest depths of hatred and greatest heights of compassion that lies within all human beings in any seemingly average community.


Director: Chris Climo
Producers: Megan Hoy and Jami Wilson
Stage Manager: Bruce Torrey
Assistant Producers: Leon Jerfita and Chris Torrey

Rehearsals will start April 6, and will be on Sundays (1-4pm), Mondays and Wednesdays (7-10pm) until the last performance. Tech week will be June 7-11, 2020 (Time TBD) and is mandatory.

This production will be performed to benefit the Matthew Shepard Foundation and the Ludlow High School GSA. All profits will be donated to these organizations.

If you should have any questions regarding the production or auditions, please contact the director Chris Climo at LaramieProjectE7@gmail.com. A copy of the audition form is available on exit7players.org
Auditions for Hampshire Shakespeare Company’s 2020 season of Shakespeare Under The Stars!

The Tempest, directed by Peg Duffy
Performances: June 24th-28th, July 1st-5th
Macbeth, directed by Kit Thomas & Luke Dowling
Performances: July 15th-19th, July 22nd-26th

Sign up for an audition slot.

Auditions will take place at the following dates and locations:
Wednesday, March 25th - 6:30-9:30 PM - location: The Workroom (downstairs level), Northampton Arts Trust, 33 Hawley St, Northampton, MA 01060
Thursday, March 26th - 6:30-9:30 PM - location: Mainstage Theatre, Emily Dickinson Hall, Hampshire College, Amherst, MA 01002

Preparation: We’re looking for a 1-2 minute monologue, ideally Shakespeare or other heightened text, but please don't let a lack of prepared monologue keep you from auditioning! We are happy to see you come and read even if you don't have a monologue prepared! Video auditions will be accepted if you can't make the in-person dates - please be in touch with our Production Manager, Ezekiel Baskin (ezekiel.baskin (at) gmail.com) if you're interested in submitting a video audition.

Callbacks: If needed, callbacks will take place on Sunday, March 29th, from 2:00-6:00 PM, at Emily Dickinson Hall, Hampshire College, Amherst, MA 01002. Invitations to callbacks will be sent out following the second day of auditions.

Questions? Please be in touch with our Production Manager, Ezekiel Baskin, at ezekiel.baskin (at) gmail.com.
Scarlet Sock Foundation is an exciting new non profit that provides grants to theaters and individuals who are involved in social justice related projects. We are looking for an intern to enhance our social media presence and do administrative upkeep. The position would be up to 10 hours a month. For more info contact Margaret Russo at scarletsockfoundation@gmail.com
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
CASTING CALL
Seeking actors and actresses for the spring production of SANDY TOES & SALTY KISSES by Michael and Susan Parker, and directed by Joey Grabowski.

Auditions, open to actors 18 and up, will be held on Monday April 6th and Thursday April 9 at 6pm in the Library at South Hadley High School, 153 Newton Street, South Hadley. The cast consists of 3 men and 4 women. Actors should
bring a resume or be prepared to list experience; however, actors of all experience levels are encouraged to audition. Actors with questions about auditions can email
the director at jgrabowski394@gmail.com.

Rehearsals will begin on Monday, April 20 th and will continue on Monday and Thursday evenings. The show is scheduled to be produced at South Hadley High School June 11 th -14 th

If unavailable to be seen in person, please email blackcattheater@gmail.com.
For synopsis and character breakdown please see
www.blackcattheater.pbworks.com.
WORKSHOPS & CLASSES
The Completely Ridiculous 
Training Center

 
Get out of your head and into your body! Rediscover your fun! Reclaim your wonder and willingness to play with abandon! And then pour it all into your Acting!! In this two-part 8-week class Completely Ridiculous students will relentlessly pursue the Fun of Failure and then catapult themselves into text analysis and scene study.

Acting as Play, 1pm-4pm at The Northampton Center for The Arts
March 28th and April 4th, 18th, and 25th
Having completed The Fun of Failure, Completely Ridiculous students will then move on to text, applying the same scale of vulnerability and fun to traditional monologue and scene work. In Acting as Play, students will be asked to get out of their heads and into their bodies; to take big risks before feeling “ready;” to find fun in whatever given circumstances the character has no choice but to endure; and to always lead with hope, regardless of the inevitable disasters laid out in the text.
 
Enrollment: At the moment, these classes are open exclusively to 16-18 year olds. They are meant to be taken together, but can be taken separately if need be. Enrollment priority will be given to students who sign up for both.
Taken separately, each class is $175. 
Taken together, the total cost is $300.
To ask questions, or sign up, please email gabe.levey@gmail.com.

Teacher Bio:
A member of the 3rd graduating class at Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School (PVPA), Gabe grew up in Northampton, received a BFA in Acting from Boston University, an MFA in Acting from the Yale School of Drama and now teaches Clown, Physical Acting, and Acting as Play at NYU Tisch School of The Arts. For more information and student testimonials visit: www.gabriellevey.com/testimonials.html

Improv Storytelling Workshops at The LAVA Center

Improv Storytelling Workshops with Amy Timmins and Marian Kelner
Tuesday, Mar. 31, 7–8:30 p.m.
The LAVA Center, 324 Main St., Greenfield, MA

March 31: https://www.facebook.com/events/727748474420888/ 

 

CONTACT: info@localaccess.org or (413) 512-3063

Improv Storytelling will introduce participants to the principles and techniques of improv through various prompts and storytelling exercises, exploring both verbal and non-verbal formats. No previous acting or improv experience is necessary; just come with an open mind and desire to jump right in!

Amy Timmins has led dozens of improv workshops at regional and international conferences, in schools, churches, and other community settings. She has developed sessions for college students, human service workers, seniors, chefs, executives, and individuals with disabilities. And she has created several original games of her own, with emphasis on improv storytelling. Amy has her undergraduate degree in Performance Studies from Northwestern University, and she’s practiced improv with the Chicago Dream Theatre, Stage 1 Acting Lab in Boston, and the Soho Loco Players in New York City. She earned her MEd from Antioch University, and has worked in the communications and public relations field since the 1980s—now serving as Vice president of Community Relations for ServiceNet.

Co-facilitator Marian Kelner has been improvising her whole life, as all of us living beings do. This includes specifically-themed improv situations, such as classes with Happier Valley Comedy and participation in on-going Greenfield improv groups over the last five years. She brings the thinking on your feet skills and supportive nature developed over a long teaching career.

Come to either or both of the sessions.

FREE (donations welcome)

For more details, visit our website, https://localaccess.org or our Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/theLAVAcenter/.

Join Strident Theatre for The Workshop! The Workshop is Strident's weekly drop-in monologue class at Pine Box Studios in the Arts and Industry Building, 221 Pine Street in Florence, MA, 6:30-8:30pm, taught by Artistic Director Susanna Apgar.

This is a casual workshop setting class, designed for ALL skill levels, and it's a wonderful opportunity to network and toss creative ideas around with fellow actors and directors. No need to sign up ahead of time - simply show up with a monologue. Memorization is encouraged! Cost is a sliding scale / suggested donation anywhere between $5-$25+ per class. For more information, follow the event page!
SILVERTHORNE THEATER ANNOUNCES
MONOLOGUE/ACTING IN SONG WORKSHOP SERIES
 WITH STEPHANIE CARLSON

Silverthorne Theater Company is proud to sponsor veteran Valley actor Stephanie Carlson’s Monologue/Acting in Song workshop series.  Open to all levels of experience, this workshop will strengthen skills in a safe, supportive small group setting. The series runs Saturday mornings, April 25, May 2, and May 9 from 10 am to 12:30 pm at the LAVA Center, 324 Main Street, Greenfield.
 
Participants will receive direct coaching on a prepared monologue and/or song, and will have the opportunity to practice on new material. They will experience playful techniques for keeping the channels of creativity and expression open in their work.  Attendance at the series is limited to 8 participants; the fee for the 3-session series is $95.  To register for the class, call 413-768-7514, or e-mail silverthornetheater@gmail.com.
 
Participants should come prepared with a memorized monologue and/or song* to work on. They will also have the opportunity to practice with fresh material provided in class. Each student’s work is tailored to their personal goals within the context of the workshop. Participants will gain confidence in a non-judgmental atmosphere where they are encouraged to take chances and have fun. (*An accompanist is not provided.  Singers must bring recorded accompaniment or tracks. )

Stephanie Carlson has been an active member of Actors Equity since 1996. She has performed with Silverthorne Theater Company, New Century Theatre, The Academy of Music, Panopera, Pioneer Valley Summer Theatre, The Majestic Theater, The Hanover Theatre, Speakeasy Stage, and toured nationally with Underground Railway Theatre. Stephanie studied theatre at Hampshire College and HP Studios in NYC, and trained in H. Wesley Balk’s Radiant Performer Technique with Joan Barber.  She is a member of Northampton Playwrights Lab, Co-Founder of Passport Theatre Company and most recently co-directed UMASS Opera workshop’s production of The Magic Flute.
 
The Upper Pioneer Valley’s only small professional company, Silverthorne enjoys its status as resident company at the Hawks & Reed Performing Arts Center in downtown Greenfield’s Cultural District. Its office is located in The LAVA Center at 324 Main Street, Greenfield.
Pioneer Valley Theatre Companies
Is your theatre company missing? Email me!
Academy of Music Theatre

Arena Civic Theatre

Black Cat Theater

Chester Theatre Company

CitySpace

Cold Spring Community Theatre

Completely Ridiculous Productions

Drama Studio

Double Edge Theatre

Eggtooth Productions

Exit 7 Players

Franklin County Youth Theater

Ghost Light Theater

Greenfield Community College's Theater Department

Hampshire Shakespeare Company

Happier Valley Comedy

Ja'Duke Center for the Performing Arts

K and E Theater Group

Ko Theater Works/Ko Festival of Performance

Majestic Theater

New Century Theatre

No Theater
Northampton Community Arts Trust

Northampton Playwrights Lab


PaintBox Theatre

Panopera

Pauline Productions

Real Live Theatre

Red Thread Theater

Royal Frog Ballet

Serious Play Theatre Ensemble

Shakespeare Stage

Shea Theater Arts Center

Silverthorne Theater

Smith College Department of Theatre

St. Michael's Players

Starlight's Youth Theatre, Inc.

Strident Theatre

TheatreTruck

Turbulent Times Theater

UMass Department of Theater

UMass Theatre Guild

Valley Light Opera

Westfield Theatre Group

Wilbraham United Players
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Pioneer Valley Theatre Google Calendar
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