Show Times:
Evening Performances Fridays and Saturdays curtain is at 7:30pm
Sunday Matinee Performances curtain is at 2pm
Ticket Prices:
Performance Prices:
Adults $10
Seniors $7.00


April 2009 - Red Carnations and Sorry, Wrong Number
by Glenn Hughes and Lucille Fletcher
Directed by Blake Quinlan


Performances:
Apr 24 - May 3, 2009

Red Carnations

Click here to view the cast list.


May 2009 - Pirates and Petticoats
by Pat Cook
Directed by Jessica R. Holmes


Performances:
May 8 - 17, 2009

“So you want to be a pirate?” begins the opening line from the book “Swashbuckling for Fun and Profit”. This phrase captures the imagination of Fisher Cutbait, a librarian with dreams of adventure. So he sets out to join a pirate ship and seek his fortune. Unfortunately for him he falls in with Squire Juan Tumani and his rowdy crew at the ‘Din Of Thieves’ inn. Juan figures to shanghai Fisher in his usual way, “They never feel the wallop ‘til it’s too late”, he reminds Mac, who’s off to Captain Ball to tell him of this new recruit. However, when Juan ups his price for his latest ‘find’, Captain Ball decides to pay a visit to the Inn. Squaring off with Fisher, Ball soon finds himself on the floor at the point of Fisher’s sword. This wouldn’t have been so bad had Fisher not been dueling with one hand and reading a book of instructions on dueling with the other. Captain Ball has had enough and vows revenge! And the unwitting Fisher is his target! Things get really tangled when a British officer arrives with arrest warrants, Jamaica Runfort, Fisher’s fiance’ shows up to try to get Fisher away from the inn and the dreaded ‘Cap’n Gown’ and her all-women crew kidnaps Fisher and spirits him away! Lines fly and swords clash in this pirate spoof, full of seventeenth century characters and surprising twists.

Click here to view the cast list.


July 2009 - Drop Dead
by Billy Van Zandt and Jane Milmore
Directed by Aaron Polk


Performances:
Jul 24 - Aug 9, 2009

A cast of has been actors plan to revive their careers in Drop Dead!, a potboiler murder mystery directed by "Wonder Child of the Broadway Stage" Victor Le Pewe (a psychotic eye twitching megalomaniac). At the dress rehearsal the set falls, props break, and the producer and an actor are murdered. During the opening night performance, the murders continue. The remaining thespians must save the show and their careers, solve the mystery and stay alive for curtain calls.

Click here to view the cast list.


October 2009 - Iliad, Odyssey and all of Greek Mythology in 99 minutes or less
by Jay Hopkins and John Hunter
Directed by Amanda Hammel


Performances:
Oct 9 - 18, 2009

The Gods walk the Red Carpet. The Creation of Mankind is a botched subcontractors job. Man and Pandora try settling down despite an ominous wedding gift. Love stories are a dating show and the Greek Tragedies are sports highlights! And don’t forget the two greatest stories ever told, The Iliad and The Odyssey. Kidnap Helen of Troy and you’ve got a 10 year slap-fight of epic proportions with pouty Achilles, war-hungry Agamemnon and clever Odysseus, destined to wander the seas for 10 more years fighting giants, seductresses and the Gods themselves. All the silly decisions, the absurd destinies, and the goofy characters are presented lightning-bolt fast with hysterical results as the clock is stopped with only seconds to spare.

Click here to view the cast list.


December 2009 - It's a Wonderful Life
by Frank Capra
Directed by Michael C. Nelson
Dramatized by James W. Rogers

Performances:
Dec 3 - 13, 2009

In our American culture It's a Wonderful Life has become almost as familiar as Dickens' A Christmas Carol. The story is a natural for a stage adaptation: the saga of George Bailey, the Everyman from the small town of Bedford Falls, whose dreams of escape and adventure have been quashed by family obligation and civic duty, whose guardian angel has to descent on Christmas Eve to save him from despair and to remind him?by showing him what the world would have been like had he never been born?that his has been, after all, a wonderful life. This faithful adaptation has all your favorite characters: George and Mary Hatch, Clarence, Uncle Billy, Violet, and, of course, the Scrooge-like villain, Mr. Potter. This fine dramatization not only celebrates the faith of the season, it also celebrates the American philosophy of life: hard work, fair play and the love and support of one's family and community will be rewarded.

Click here to view the cast list.