THE FROG & PEACH THEATRE CO., those naughty thespians, are pleased to announce their production of William Shakespeare's CYMBELINE, not your grandmother's Shakespeare, directed by Lynnea Benson. CYMBELINE will play a four-week limited engagement at The West End Theatre (The Church of St. Paul & St. Andrew, 263 West 86th Street, 2nd Fl.--wheelchair accessible). Performances begin Thursday, October 7 and continue through to Sunday, October 31. Opening Night is Saturday, October 9 (7:30 p.m.).
THE FROG & PEACH THEATRE CO., those naughty thespians, are pleased to announce their production of William Shakespeare's CYMBELINE, not your grandmother's Shakespeare, directed by Lynnea Benson. CYMBELINE will play a four-week limited engagement at The West End Theatre (The Church of St. Paul & St. Andrew, 263 West 86th Street, 2nd Fl.--wheelchair accessible). Performances begin Thursday, October 7 and continue through to Sunday, October 31. Opening Night is Saturday, October 9 (7:30 p.m.).
The city of Loudon, unlike most of the country, is at peace. While religious wars swept the country and kept the Protestants and the Catholics at each others' throats, the sects live and have lived together without incident in the city for years, primarily due to the charismatic priest Father Urbain Grandier, who acts as a kind of second Governor of the town, loved and respected (despite his frequent and well-known personal transgressions, mostly involving the women of Loudon), but also due to its secure battlements, which keep the city separate and self-sustaining (and whose security has been guaranteed by King Louis the XIII).
A mind-bending collision of Grand Guignol, David Lynch, Broadway musicals, and police procedurals, A BRIEF HISTORY OF MURDER tells the story of a series of grisly killings in the small town of Sentinel, Oklahoma. The show closes on January 31, 2010.
A mind-bending collision of Grand Guignol, David Lynch, Broadway musicals, and police procedurals, A BRIEF HISTORY OF MURDER tells the story of a series of grisly killings in the small town of Sentinel, Oklahoma.
A mind-bending collision of Grand Guignol, David Lynch, Broadway musicals, and police procedurals, A BRIEF HISTORY OF MURDER tells the story of a series of grisly killings in the small town of Sentinel, Oklahoma.
Frog & Peach Theatre Company's production of Shakespeare's comedy 'MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING,' directed by Lynnea Benson will play its final four performances this weekend at The West End Theatre (the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew), 263 West 86th Street (between West End Avenue and Broadway). The show officially opened on October 4 and will conclude its run this Sunday, October 25.
Frog & Peach Theatre Company (now in its fifteenth season), will present William Shakespeare's comedy 'MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING,' directed by Lynnea Benson. It will be presented at The West End Theatre (the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew), 263 West 86th Street (between West End Avenue and Broadway).
Frog & Peach Theatre Company (now in its fifteenth season), will present William Shakespeare's comedy 'MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING,' directed by Lynnea Benson. It will be presented at The West End Theatre (the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew), 263 West 86th Street (between West End Avenue and Broadway).
Continuing its seventh season, Resonance Ensemble (Eric Parness, Artistic Director; Rachel Reiner, Managing Director) is proud to announce the third production in the 2008-09 season. Reflections: An Evening of Short Plays, will include the world premieres of Their Town by Alvin Eng, What Happened Then by Michael Feingold and Compromise by Ian Strasfogel, with revivals of Catastrophe by Samuel Beckett and Swan Song by Anton Chekhov (with a translation by Marian Fell and adaptation by Eric Parness).
Continuing its seventh season, Resonance Ensemble (Eric Parness, Artistic Director; Rachel Reiner, Managing Director) is proud to announce the third production in the 2008-09 season. Reflections: An Evening of Short Plays, will include the world premieres of Their Town by Alvin Eng, What Happened Then by Michael Feingold and Compromise by Ian Strasfogel, with revivals of Catastrophe by Samuel Beckett and Swan Song by Anton Chekhov (with a translation by Marian Fell and adaptation by Eric Parness).
The Brick Theater, Inc. presents a Gemini CollisionWorks production THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS by Orson Welles: A Reconstruction for the Stage as part of The Film Festival: A Theater Festival.