The Lyric Theatre and the City of Stuart Community Redevelopment Agency will present a night of mystery and intrigue as it screens two Humphrey Bogart classics: African Queen and Maltese Falcon. The African Queen will be shown at 3pm on Saturday, July 25th and 7pm on Sunday, July 26th.
The Lyric Theatre and the City of Stuart Community Redevelopment Agency will present a night of mystery and intrigue as it screens two Humphrey Bogart classics: African Queen and Maltese Falcon. The African Queen will be shown at 3pm on Saturday, July 25th and 7pm on Sunday, July 26th.
Laurel Mill Playhouse, 508 Main Street, Laurel, Md. will hold auditions for 3 men and 4 women (ages 20's to 40's) on Sunday, August 2 at 7:30 pm and Monday, August 3 at 7:30 pm. Call backs/read through will be Wednesday, August 5 at 7:30 pm. Director Keith Brown will have sides available for cold readings from the script.
The Lyric Theatre and the City of Stuart Community Redevelopment Agency are proud to present Free Film Weekends, a series of great movies over several weekends this summer.
This summer, celebrate your love of classic film as the 12th annual Cinema at the Square series returns to PlayhouseSquare August 6-23, 2009. This years series showcases fifteen classic films from the Golden Age of Hollywood to the special-effects laced blockbusters of the 1980's; all for a very 'retro' price of just $5 per film.
The Lyric Theatre and the City of Stuart Community Redevelopment Agency are proud to present Free Film Weekends, a series of great movies over several weekends this summer.
The personal theatrical papers of Katharine Hepburn, which were acquired by The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts in 2007, will be on view for the first time in the new library exhibition, Katharine Hepburn: In Her Own Files, opening Wednesday, June 10. Her long and rich theater career is documented through typescripts (some, like the script for Coco, annotated in Hepburn?s hand), hundreds of photographs (publicity shots and formal portraits, as well as informal snapshots and rehearsal candids), scrapbooks, promotional ephemera, and sixty years of correspondence (fan mail, congratulatory notes, and general letters from such notable friends and admirers as Judy Garland, Richard Burton, John Ford, Vivien Leigh, Peter O?Toole, Cary Grant, Humphrey Bogart, and Jeremy Irons, among scores of others. She saved telegrams from her friends and from stage crews and even the cards that come with flower bouquets, including many signed ?Pot,? Hepburn?s pet name for long-time companion Spencer Tracy). The exhibition continues through Saturday, October 10, 2009 in the Vincent Astor Gallery of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center, located on the Lincoln Center campus at 40 Lincoln Center Plaza. Admission is free. For exhibition information, call 212.870.1630 or visit the Library?s website at www.nypl.org/lpa. In conjunction with this exhibition, a series of Hepburn films based on stage plays will be screened on Saturday afternoons in July and August at the Library.