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The Miracle Worker - William Gibson

This stirring dramatization of the story of Helen Keller is one of the most successful and warmly admired plays of the modern stage. Being blind and mute, nobody knows what Helen's fate might have been had she not come under the tutelage of Annie Sullivan, an Irish girl who had been born blind. The Miracle Worker is principally concerned with the emotional relationship between the lonely teacher and her blind charge.
Little Helen, trapped in her secret world, is bitter, violent, spoiled and almost animal like. Only Annie realizes that there is a mind waiting to be rescued from that dark, tortured silence. Annie's success with Helen comes only after some of the most turbulent, violent, and emotion packed scenes ever presented on the stage.

February 20 - March 15


Moonlight & Magnolias - Ron Hutchinson

1939 Hollywood is abuzz. Legendary producer David O. Selznick has shut down production of his new epic, Gone with the Wind, a film adaptation of Margaret Mitchell’s novel. The screenplay, you see, just doesn’t work. So what’s an all-powerful movie mogul to do? While fending off the film’s stars, gossip columnists and his own father-in-law, Selznick sends a car for famed screenwriter Ben Hecht and pulls formidable director Victor Fleming from the set of The Wizard of Oz. Summoning both to his office, he locks the doors, closes the shades, and on a diet of bananas and peanuts, the three men labor over five days to fashion a screenplay that will become the blueprint for one of the most successful and beloved films of all time.

April 24 - May 17 dir: Lennon Smith

Rumors - Neil Simon

America's premier comic playwright delighted audiences with this out and out funny offering. Four couples are at the townhouse of a deputy New York City mayor and his wife to celebrate their tenth wedding anniversary. The party never begins because the host has shot himself in the head (it's only a flesh wound) and his wife is missing. His lawyer's cover up gets progressively more difficult to sustain as the other guests arrive and nobody can remember who has been told what about whom. Doors slam and hilarity abounds as the couples get more and more crazed.

June 26 - July 19

Guys and Dolls
Music & Lyrics: Frank Loesser • Book: Abe Burrows

Nathan Detroit is desperate to find a venue for his crap game, but is continually being thwarted by Lieutenant Brannigan. If he can raise $1000 he can hold it in someone's garage, but he hasn't got the dough. To raise the dough, he bets Sky Masterson that he can't get Sargeant Sarah Brown to have dinner with him in Havana. And just why would a "mission doll" go to Havana with a strange man? Because the mission is going under, and Sky promises her "one dozen genuine sinners". But, predictably, this arrangement goes awry when Sky and Sarah develop feelings for each other,
and Sky refuses to cash in on his bet with Nathan.

September 4 - 27 dir: Dave Sikula


A Christmas Story - By Philip Grecian

Jean Shepherd's memoir of growing up in the midwest in the 1940s follows 9-year-old Ralphie Parker in his quest to get a genuine Red Ryder BB gun under the tree for Christmas. Ralphie pleads his case before his mother, his teacher and even Santa Claus himself, at Goldblatt's Department Store. The consistent response: "You'll shoot your eye out." All the elements from the beloved motion picture are here, including the family's temperamental exploding furnace; Scut Farkas, the school bully; the boys' experiment with a wet tongue on a cold lamppost; the Little Orphan Annie decoder pin; Ralphie's father winning a lamp shaped like a woman's leg in a net stocking; Ralphie's fantasy scenarios and more.

November 6 - 29

   
 
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