PCPA's 2016 Summer Season to Feature IN THE HEIGHTS, THE GLASS MENAGERIE & More

By: May. 05, 2016
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PCPA has announced its 52nd summer season, running June 16 - September 25, 2016.

Among the most important American dramas of the 20th century, Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie opens the summer in the beautiful Solvang Festival Theater, June 16 - 26. Amanda Wingfield, a faded remnant of Southern gentility, lives in a dingy St. Louis apartment - abandoned by her husband - and prefers the memory of her earlier and more gracious life when she was pursued by gentlemen callers. Her son Tom longs to escape from his mother's suffocating embrace while Amanda's shy and crippled daughter tends to her glass menagerie. Williams' poetic drama of internal and familial conflict is a masterpiece of deep tenderness and fragile beauty.

Based on the Oscar-winning animation film, Shrek The Musical is the Tony Award-winning fairytale adventure playing in the Marian Theatre June 22 - 25 then June 30 through July 31 in the Solvang Festival Theater. An unlikely hero, Shrek finds himself on a life-changing journey alongside the wisecracking Donkey and a feisty princess who resists her rescue. Featuring fantastic songs from Jeanine Tesori and a sidesplitting script by David Lindsay-Abaire, Shrek The Musical brings the beloved characters you know from the film to life on their way to discovering the big bright beautiful world at the end of this fabulously fresh fairytale. Shrek The Musical is irreverent fun for the whole family and proves that beauty is truly in the eye of the ogre.

Jane Austen's timeless novel, Sense and Sensibility, swirls to the stage in a new adaptation by Joe Hanreddy and J.R. Sullivan July 21 - 30 in the Marian Theatre and August 5 - 21 in the Solvang Festival Theater. The story unfolds in romantic Regency England following the death of Mr. Dashwood, whose inheritance has gone to his son but whose greedy wife convinces him he doesn't need to honor his father's wish that he care for his step-mother and half-sisters. As the mourning Dashwood ladies take refuge in a cousin's cottage, daughters Elinor and Marianne, who have very different sensibilities about life and love, find that their lack of fortune and complicated romantic attachments puts a strain on their marriageability. Austin spins the perfect mix of humor, romance, and happy endings.

Exhilarating dance to a hip and joyful score propel the new musical In the Heights, Broadway's Tony winner for Best Musical, which plays in the Marian Theatre August 11 - 20 then under the stars in Solvang August 26 - September 11. Set in New York City's vibrant Washington Heights, where the coffee from the corner shop is light and sweet, the windows are always open and the breeze carries the rhythm of three generations of music. It's a community on the brink of change, and full of hopes and dreams, where the biggest struggles can be deciding which traditions you take with you, and which ones you leave behind. The groundbreaking music and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda (the creator of Hamilton) and book by Quiara Alegría Hudes tell the universal story of chasing your dreams and finding your true home.

Playing in rotating repertory in the Severson Theatre September 8 - 25 are two thought-provoking dramas. Gidion's Knot by Johnna Adams and Trying by Joanna McClelland Glass. Gidion's Knot is about a tragedy involving a child. The mother is emotionally overwhelmed as she shows up for a parent teacher conference. As the mother and teacher try to reconcile the tragedy we are unsure if the student in question may have been bullied severely, or, if he may have been the abuser. Audiences will be hanging on to every plot twist.

Trying by Joanna McClelland Glass explores the relationship between a cantankerous elderly judge in the last year of his life and his young Canadian secretary. The story is drawn from the playwright's personal experience working for Judge Francis Biddle, who had been U. S. Attorney General under Roosevelt and was named by President Truman as Chief Judge of the American Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Trying is filled with wit and poignancy as two opposites are trying to understand each other.



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