NCTC is proud to present The Sugar Witch, by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig. The show previews February 26 - March 5, 2010, opens on Saturday, March 6th and runs through April 11, 2010.
NCTC is proud to present The Sugar Witch, by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig. The show previews February 26 - March 5, 2010, opens on Saturday, March 6th and runs through April 11, 2010.
NCTC is proud to present The Sugar Witch, by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig. The show previews February 26 - March 5, 2010, opens on Saturday, March 6th and runs through April 11, 2010.
NCTC is proud to present The Sugar Witch, by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig. The show previews February 26 - March 5, 2010, opens on Saturday, March 6th and runs through April 4, 2010.
NCTC is proud to present The Sugar Witch, by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig. The show previews February 26 - March 5, 2010, opens on Saturday, March 6th and runs through April 11, 2010.
NCTC is proud to present The Sugar Witch, by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig. The show previews February 26 - March 5, 2010, opens on Saturday, March 6th and runs through April 11, 2010.
The New Conservatory Theatre Center is pleased to announce auditions for their 2009-2010 Pride Season production of The Sugar Witch by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig.
The New Conservatory Theatre Center is pleased to announce auditions for their 2009-2010 Pride Season production of The Sugar Witch by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig.
The New Conservatory Theatre Center is pleased to announce auditions for their 2009-2010 Pride Season production of The Sugar Witch by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig.
The New Conservatory Theatre Center is pleased to announce auditions for their 2009-2010 Pride Season production of The Sugar Witch by Nathan Sanders and directed by Dennis Lickteig.
THE NEW CONSERVATORY THEATRE CENTER (Ed Decker, Founding Artistic Director) is delighted to announce the 2009/10 Pride Season. Now in its fifteenth year, NCTC's Pride Season programming promotes the Theatre's visionary mission to promote exploration and open dialogue among audiences and developing playwrights in order to celebrate diversity and foster community.
Continuing Village Players' mainstage 'Season of Music' is the classic play Amadeus, running February 14 - March 15, 2009.
In this Tony Award winner for Best Play, humor, romance, and revenge are combined into one riveting evening. Titled after the famous composer's pen name, Amadeus follows rival composer Antonio Salieri as he continually tries to undermine Mozart's success. Will Salieri be able to stop him or will Mozart emerge more renowned than ever? Peter Shaffer (author of Equus) has written a rich, exuberant portrayal of a God-like man among mortals, and lives destroyed by envy.
'Is there such a thing as 'God given talent'?,' asks director Doug Long, who has directed extensively as Village Players, throughout Chicago, and teaches at both DePaul University & Victory Gardens. 'In the arts, training and discipline are crucial, but so is talent, and it can't be taught, learned, or bargained for. In the play, Salieri is a successful court composer who aches for the kind of talent he sees in Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He views Mozart as a profane and unworthy vessel for God's gifts. Both men are technically proficient, hard-working composers and musicians, but Salieri cannot find the elusive element to make his mediocre music have some of Mozart's beauty, passion, or inspiration.'
Appearing as Salieri is veteran actor Larry Garner of Chicago. He has performed with Collaboraction, Seanachai, Pegasus, Eclipse, Journeymen, and understudied at Steppenwolf, Victory Gardens and Court Theatre. Recent credits include the Interpreter in Un Robot for Collaboraction, for which he shared an After Dark Award for Best Ensemble. A multilingual actor who has lived in Italy and France, Garner is also serving as Dialect Coach for the production.
Continuing Village Players' mainstage 'Season of Music' is the classic play Amadeus, running February 14 - March 15, 2009.
In this Tony Award winner for Best Play, humor, romance, and revenge are combined into one riveting evening. Titled after the famous composer's pen name, Amadeus follows rival composer Antonio Salieri as he continually tries to undermine Mozart's success. Will Salieri be able to stop him or will Mozart emerge more renowned than ever? Peter Shaffer (author of Equus) has written a rich, exuberant portrayal of a God-like man among mortals, and lives destroyed by envy.
Continuing Village Players' mainstage 'Season of Music' is the classic play Amadeus, running February 14 - March 15, 2009.
In this Tony Award winner for Best Play, humor, romance, and revenge are combined into one riveting evening. Titled after the famous composer's pen name, Amadeus follows rival composer Antonio Salieri as he continually tries to undermine Mozart's success. Will Salieri be able to stop him or will Mozart emerge more renowned than ever? Peter Shaffer (author of Equus) has written a rich, exuberant portrayal of a God-like man among mortals, and lives destroyed by envy.
'Is there such a thing as 'God given talent'?,' asks director Doug Long, who has directed extensively as Village Players, throughout Chicago, and teaches at both DePaul University & Victory Gardens. 'In the arts, training and discipline are crucial, but so is talent, and it can't be taught, learned, or bargained for. In the play, Salieri is a successful court composer who aches for the kind of talent he sees in Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He views Mozart as a profane and unworthy vessel for God's gifts. Both men are technically proficient, hard-working composers and musicians, but Salieri cannot find the elusive element to make his mediocre music have some of Mozart's beauty, passion, or inspiration.'
Appearing as Salieri is veteran actor Larry Garner of Chicago. He has performed with Collaboraction, Seanachai, Pegasus, Eclipse, Journeymen, and understudied at Steppenwolf, Victory Gardens and Court Theatre. Recent credits include the Interpreter in Un Robot for Collaboraction, for which he shared an After Dark Award for Best Ensemble. A multilingual actor who has lived in Italy and France, Garner is also serving as Dialect Coach for the production.