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May 9, 2025

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6 Arts Notes

Garfield Center for the Arts “Noise Off” Auditions November 9, 11,13

October 11, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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AUDITION DATES:
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2024 at 2:00 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2024, at 7:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2024, at 7:00 PM
NOTE: Auditions are set in Mid-November because the final production of the GCA 2024 Season, “Beauty and the Beast,” opens in early December and will be gearing up for opening in late November. It is necessary to have auditions sooner so that “Noises Off” will be able to start rehearsals just after “Beauty and the Beast” opens.

AUDITIONS WILL CONSIST OF READINGS FROM THE SCRIPT. THE DIRECTOR WOULD LIKE ACTORS TO BE FAMILIAR WITH THE CHARACTERS, SO CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS ARE BELOW. AGES ARE GIVEN IN THE DESCRIPTIONS, BUT THERE IS SOME FLEXIBILITY IN HOW THESE ROLES MAY BE CAST IN THE GCA PRODUCTION.

BRITISH ACCENT IS IMPORTANT TO “NOISES OFF” – THE PLAY CONTAINS A MIX OF AMERICAN ACCENTS AND BRITISH. MOST OF THE CHARACTERS ARE AMERICAN ACTORS WHO PLAY BRITISH CHARACTERS, SO BOTH ACCENTS WILL BE NECESSARY. ACCENTS ARE NOTED IN THE DESCRIPTIONS BELOW. NON-ACTOR CHARACTERS ARE AMERICAN. PLEASE ATTEMPT TO USE AN ACCENT, WHEN APPROPRIATE, AT AUDITIONS TO THE BEST OF YOUR ABILITY. ACTORS WHO ARE CAST WILL BE GIVEN TOOLS AND ASSISTANCE TO DEVELOP THEIR ACCENTS FOR PERFORMANCES.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS:
FEMALE CHARACTERS:

DOTTY OTLEY (offstage)/MRS. CLACKET (character on stage) – Late middle-aged: AS DOTTY: A late-middle-aged American actress. Forgetful. Dating Garry, though she attempts to make him jealous by meeting with Freddy. AS MRS. CLACKET: A Cockney Housekeeper for the Brent’s home in England. Hospitable, though slow.

BROOKE ASHTON (offstage)/VICKI (character on stage) – 20’s: AS BROOKE: A young inexperienced American actress. Pays no attention to other performers, either in performance or backstage.  She seems as though she is not really present – like she is somewhere else inside her head.  Is always losing her contact lenses. One-third of a Lloyd–Poppy–Brooke love triangle. AS VICKI: An English woman who works for the tax authority and is trying to woo Roger.

BELINDA BLAIR (offstage)/FLAVIA BRENT (character on stage) – 30’s: AS BELINDA: Cheerful and sensible, a reliable American actress. She may have feelings for Freddy. AS FLAVIA: Phillip Brent’s English wife. She is dependable, though not one for household duties.

POPPY NORTON-TAYLOR – 20’s: American Stage Manager. Emotional and over-sensitive, and envious of Brooke, whom she understudies. Carrying Lloyd’s child. One-third of a Lloyd-Poppy-Brooke love triangle.

MALE CHARACTERS:
LLOYD DALLAS – Middle-aged:  The director of the play “Nothing On.” Temperamental. One third of a Lloyd–Poppy–Brooke love triangle.

GARRY LEJEUNE (offstage)/ROGER (character on stage) – 30’s: AS GARRY: An American actor who never finishes a sentence.  Always is completing sentences with, “you know…” Easily fired up, repeatedly tries to attack Freddy after believing that Dotty was cheating on him with Freddy.   Speech affectations disappear onstage but are ever present offstage. Dating Dotty. AS ROGER: An English Real estate agent who is attempting to rent Flavia’s and Phillip’s home, but uses it for his own personal benefit.

FREDERICK FELLOWS (offstage)/PHILLIP BRENT & SHEIKH (characters on stage) – 30’s: AS FREDDY: An American actor with a serious fear of violence and blood. Gets nosebleeds easily. Often questions the meaning of his lines and moves. Blames himself often for things going wrong. AS PHILLIP BRENT: An Englishman who lives out of the country with his wife Flavia to avoid paying taxes. He enters the country knowing that if he is caught by Inland Revenue, he will lose most of the year’s income. AS SHEIKH: A Middle-Eastern, interested in renting Flavia’s and Phillip’s home and is the spitting image of Phillip.

SELSDON MOWBRAY (offstage)/BURGLER (character on stage) – Elderly: AS SELSDON MOWBRAY: An elderly alcoholic Englishman who hides his bottles onstage. If he is not in sight while rehearsing, the stage crew must find him before he passes out. Is hard of hearing when he wants to be. AS BURGLER: Old Cockney man in his seventies, breaking into the Brent’s home.

TIMOTHY ALLGOOD – 20’s: An over-worked American Assistant Stage Manager. Understudies Selsdon and Freddy.

For any additional questions about auditions, contact Director Steven Arnold by email at [email protected].

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Cast and production team announced for Garfield Center’s “Disney’s Beauty and the Beast”

October 8, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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In rehearsal for the Garfield Center’s upcoming production of “Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” are (left to right) Jennifer Kafka Smith (Director), Michael Casey (Music Director), JW Ruth (“Lumiere”), Shannon Carter (“Belle”), and Mattew Rein (“the Beast”). The show runs December 6 – 21.

In 1991, Disney released an animated film that became an immediate classic. “Beauty and the Beast” was instantly loved by critics and audiences alike. It became the first ever animated film nominated for Best Picture at the 1992 Academy Awards. Though it did not win the big award, its title song, by music writer Alan Menken and lyricist Howard Ashman, won for Best Song, and Menken won for his score.

The success of the film encouraged Disney to turn it into a stage production. All eight songs from the animated feature were reused in the musical, including one musical number that had been cut from the film. Original songwriter Menken composed six new songs alongside lyricist Tim Rice, replacing Ashman, who died during the production of the film.

“Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” premiered on Broadway on April 18, 1994, starring Susan Egan and Terrence Mann as Belle and Beast. The musical was a massive commercial success and well received by audiences. It ran on Broadway for 5,461 performances for thirteen years (1994–2007), and became Broadway’s sixth longest-running production at the time of its closure.

The Garfield Center production, sponsored by Chesapeake Bank and Trust, Kent School, and Duke Law, opens on December 6th and runs for 11 performances through December 21st.

Performances will occur at special times and special days that veer from the GCA’s typical schedule.

Playing the central character of Belle is Shannon Carter. Well known for her incredible singing and acting talent, she has recently played the leading roles of Fiona in “Shrek the Musical” and Annabel Glick in “Lucky Stiff” for the GCA. Playing the Beast is Matthew Rein. Matt recently made his GCA debut in April as Dr. Watson in “Baskerville.” A regular performer for Tred Avon Players, he has appeared there in “Little Women” and “Camelot.” Max Hagan plays the hyper-masculine, narcissistic Gaston. Known for playing Donkey in “Shrek” and the leading role of Harry Witherspoon in “Lucky Stiff,” Max was also the Assistant Director for “The Addams Family.”

 As the famous animated decor within the Beast’s castle, JW Ruth (Fester in “Addams” and Vinnie in “Lucky Stiff”) plays Lumierre, Annie Sparks (Alice Beineke in “Addams” and Grace in “Annie”) plays Mrs. Potts, Natalie Hagan (Morticia in “Addams” and Dominique in “Lucky Stiff”) is Babette, and Maya McGrory (Star-To-Be in “Annie”) is Madame de la Grande Bouche. GCA newcomer Divya Shajwani plays Chip, and newcomer Colby Crawford is Cogsworth.

As Gaston’s buffoon sidekick Lefou, Russell Laing returns to the GCA stage after performing as Pugsley in “The Addams Family.” Playing Belle’s eccentric inventor father, Maurice, is Shannon’s real-life father Brian Whitaker. Brian has appeared at the GCA as Columbo in “Prescription: Murder” and in various roles over the years in “Short Attention Span Theatre.”

 Narrator is Todd Steffes, the Young Prince is Camden Hubbert, the Silly Girls are Grace Sutherland and S.R. Mohen. The Adult Ensemble includes John Mann, Bob McGrory, Heather Campbell, Maryann Shoge, Suzanne Thuecks, Steffi Ricketts, and Heather Robuck. The Teen Ensemble (Villagers, Enchanted Characters) include Olivia Coppage, Carly Mourlas. The Kids Ensemble (Villagers, Enchanted Characters) include Caroline Curran, Camden Hubbert, Clover King, Henry Mann, Mila Shepherd, Claire Williams.

The Director of the production is Jennifer Kafka Smith, the Music Director is Michael Casey, and the Choreographer is Natalie Hagan. The Producers are Steven Arnold, Nic Carter and the Garfield Center. Steffi Ricketts is the Production Assistant, Butch Clark is the Technical Director, Steven Arnold is the Scenic Designer and Photographer, Kayti Didriksen is the Scenic and Digital Projections Artist, Adrienne Wrona oversees Makeup effects, Heather Robuck oversees Costumes, Samantha Branham oversees Properties, and Francoise Sullivan does the Poster and Program.

 

“Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” will be presented at special times and with additional dates than are typical for the Garfield Center. Evening performances on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays will begin promptly at 7:00 PM, and the Sunday performances begin at 2:00 PM. Dates are December 6, 7, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20 and 21. There is no final Sunday matinee – instead, there are 2 performances on Saturday the 21st, the first at 2:00 PM and the second at 7:00 PM. Tickets are now on sale and can be purchased online at www.garfieldcenter.org or by calling the Box Office at 410-810-2060 on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM.

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Filed Under: 7 Ed Notes

The Garfield to present The SOBs, Yale’s Society of Orpheus and Bacchus, Friday, October 18th.

October 2, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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Yale’s SOBs (The Society of Orpheus and Bacchus) pose on campus.

On All Hallows’ Eve in 1938, twelve of the sweetest voices at Yale converged on Mory’s Temple Bar to form an a cappella group unlike any other. The group went without a name until they capitalized on a backhanded compliment received at a party – heard above the tinkle of ice was “These SOBs are good!”

These groundbreaking singers invoked the talents of Orpheus, minstrel to Olympus, and the legacy of Bacchus, god of revelry, knowing quite well that good music and good spirits are essential to the success of any party. Since that fateful night, the Society of Orpheus and Bacchus has seamlessly fused the ancient traditions of music and revelry with the hip attitude of every rock band that has ever made thousands of teenagers scream for an encore.

The Society of Orpheus and Bacchus is the second-longest-running collegiate a cappella group in the nation. They have an enormous repertoire spanning more than seven decades that includes traditional, jazz, blues, rock and roll, and original compositions. They also pride themselves on injecting a healthy dose of comedy into their performances to make each concert engaging and unique. They have brought their unique blend of showmanship all around the nation and the globe: from the White House to the shores of Aruba to the Pushkin Museum in Moscow. Their blend of musical excellence, spontaneity, and laughter has kept audiences around the world entertained for 85 years and promises to continue to do so for decades to come. Don’t miss this wonderful event!

Tickets are $25.00 and may be purchased via the GCA website at www.garfieldcenter.org anytime, or may be purchased by calling the GCA Box Office at 410-810-2060 on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 10 AM to 3 PM.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

The Garfield to Present Staged Reading of Local Playwright Earl Lewin’s “Tinker Street”  Oct. 12th at 7 pm

September 23, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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Chestertown playwright Earl Lewin has written a new play about the ways in which finding one’s true inner self can change the lives of everyone involved. “Tinker Street,” will be presented as a staged reading at the Garfield Center on Saturday, October 12th as a pay-as-you-go fundraiser. Tickets will not be sold in advance.

The Garfield Center is in its earliest stages of formalizing a capital campaign to address facility needs including the need for a new stage and rigging, electrics, and a variety of other needs. Stage Consultants, of Highland Park, New Jersey, is performing a needs assessment for the Garfield Center that will become the foundation for fundraising in a structured campaign to start over the year. A variety of early fundraising presentations will occur prior to the formal kickoff of the campaign.

A new work, Lewin will bring the script to the Garfield stage to workshop it and gauge its success as a performance piece. Staged readings are typically presented for this purpose. The presentation will not involve a formal ticketing process. Rather, attendees are encouraged to make a pay-as-you-go type of donation in the lobby upon arrival.

“Tinker Street” is a very timely play about self identity and transitioning. In the play, we meet Jamie (who has thus far been known as Jimmie to friends and family) as she makes a courageous confession to Harry, her best high school friend, about her self discovery and identity. Her inner search, and her courage to become her true self, ignites a series of events that impacts the lives of everyone she knows. Her mother, Mary, doesn’t know how to help. Her father can’t accept it. As their marriage disintegrates, Mary’s search for knowledge and acceptance leads to a local bar where she discovers that everyone there is coping with something. Friendships bloom for Mary, bringing growth and understanding. As for Jamie, her need for support from Harry, who she has trusted her whole life, holds them tenuously together as their lives develop and change through college years and into their careers. But can this enlightened friendship survive when Harry marries into a very right leaning family?

Earl Lewin is a Temple University graduate with a BA in theater and an MS in radio, television, and film. He lives in Chestertown. He is a published playwright with forty years of professional experience in writing, directing, and producing for film, video, and theatre. He operates BC Productions to create and support staged readings and full productions of his plays.

Lewin has assembled a top-notch cast of local talent to participate in the reading on stage. The cast includes: J.W. Ruth, Patrick Pearce, Michelle Christopher, Frank Lamont, Herb Ziegler, Amy Moredock, Bonnie Hill, Peggy Chiras, and Tom Dorman.

“Tinker Street” will begin at 7:00 PM on Saturday, October 12th. The GCA lobby will open at 6:00 PM and the House doors will open for general admission seating at 6:30 PM.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Auditions for the Garfield Center’s Beauty and the Beast

July 29, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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Separate audition dates and times for kids and adults.

The Garfield Center for the Arts will produce Disney’s Beauty and the Beast live on stage for 11 performances in December. To audition, please note the following separate dates and times for kids and adults.

KIDS: There are 2 audition dates. The first opportunity is on Tuesday, August 20th starting at 5:00 PM. The second opportunity is on Saturday, August 24 starting at 12:30 PM.

ADULTS: There are 3 audition dates. Those dates are Saturday, August 24th starting at 2:00 PM, Monday, August 26 starting at 6:30 PM, and Tuesday, August 27th at 6:30 PM.

IMPORTANT NOTE: PLEASE VISIT THE FOLLOWING LINK TO READ ALL INFORMATION ABOUT PROPERLY PREPARING FOR YOUR AUDITION:
https://www.garfieldcenter.org/gcaevents/category/auditions/
ONCE THERE, click the link for the Beauty and the Beast auditions and read everything the director wants you to know about to be ready for the audition.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

The Garfield Center opens Kurt Vonnegut’s “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” August 9th

July 27, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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The Garfield Center cast for the Kurt Vonnegut play “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” includes (center, seated) Patrick Pearce as Harold Ryan, (clockwise from bottom left) Riley Rosati as Paul Ryan, Dominic Delcoco as Herb Shuttle, Bob Walton as Dr. Woodley, Adrienne Wrona as Pelope Ryan, Michael Moore as Looseleaf Harper, Suzanne Thuecks as Mildred Ryan, Ian Stotts as Siegfried Von Konigswald, and Rooney Rosati as Wanda June. The play runs August 9 through August 25.

Wanda June was run over by an Ice Cream Truck. Now residing in Heaven, she hangs out with an assortment of odd and interesting characters who, along with Wanda June herself, have a connection to a big game hunter and war hero named Harold Ryan. Ryan has been missing for several years in the Amazon rainforest with his adventurous friend Colonel Looseleaf Harper, a slow-witted aviation hero who had the unhappy task of dropping the atomic bomb on Nagasaki. Wanda’s only connection to Ryan is that her birthday cake, which colorfully displays the words “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” and was ordered before her vehicular demise, was purchased at a discount by one of two men who are in romantic pursuit of Ryan’s wife, Penelope. The cake is meant to help celebrate the birthday party for her long-missing and presumed-dead husband. Things get very complicated, however, when Harold suddenly reappears on the verge of his legal declaration of death. The play is dark and wildly funny. It contains mature themes and language.

In its earliest form, “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” originated under the title “Something Borrowed,” but was later changed to “Penelope” when it was performed at the Orleans Arena Theater in Orleans, Massachusetts, in 1960. A modern interpretation of the return of Odysseus to Penelope, it is a wildly satirical examination of American culture in the Vietnam and post-War era as it takes aim at toxic masculinity, capitalism, and patriotism. It was made into a film in 1971 starring Rod Steiger, Susannah York and George Grizzard. Vonnegut did not much like the film, but the movie version did cement the work under its modern title. While the play is mired in 1960s and 1970s politics, its satirical views on war and killing continue to remain sharply relevant. Vonnegut did not find a great deal of success as a playwright, so it is his novels, which include “Slaughterhouse Five” and “Breakfast of Champions,” that brought him the most fame.

The Garfield Center’s production is sponsored by Jim and Diane Landskroener. “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” is presented by special arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc.

JW Ruth directs “Happy Birthday, Wanda June.” This is his first full-length production at the GCA as a director, though he is well known to area audiences. He played the title character in the GCA production of “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” and gave sidesplitting performances as Max in “The Play That Goes Wrong” and Uncle Fester in “The Addams Family Musical.”

 JW is joined on the production staff by Stage Manager Jordan Dixon, Costumer Barbi Bedell, Set Designer and digital projections designer Steven Arnold, and Set Builder and Tech Director Butch Clark. Wendy Wiseman oversees props, Steffi Ricketts provides special digital props, and Francoise Sullivan produces the program.

The cast features a seasoned group of performers. Appearing as Harold Ryan is Patrick Pearce, Adrienne Wrona plays Penelope Ryan, Riley Rosati plays Paul Ryan, Dominic Delcoco plays Herb Shuttle, Bob Walton plays Dr. Woodley, Michael Moore plays Colonel Looseleaf Harper, Rooney Rosati plays Wanda June, Ian Stotts plays Major Siegfried Von Konigswald, and Suzanne Thuecks plays Mildred Ryan.

Tickets are on sale now at www.garfieldcenter.org or via the Box Office at 410-810-2060. Box Office hours are Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 10 AM to 3 PM. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 8 PM and Sundays at 2 PM from August 9 through August 25.

 

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Filed Under: Archives

GCA Playmakers Perform “The Enchanted Bookshop” This Weekend!

July 16, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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Wouldn’t you love to support a great, educational youth theatre camp and a program that holds a long-established legacy of excellence? Well, you CAN! You can come see the excellent production these kids (and the Playmakers staff) have assembled! And it’s free!

The play is “The Enchanted Bookshop.” During the day, A Likely Story may look like any other used bookstore. But at night, it’s a place where magic happens. That’s when the characters inside the books come alive. Six of those characters — Dorothy Gale, Robin Hood, Pollyanna, Sherlock Holmes, Heidi, and Tom Sawyer — long to help Margie, the scatterbrained owner, save her struggling store. But they’re not allowed to leave the building or be seen by human eyes. So when a pair of smugglers comes looking for a stolen necklace hidden inside one of the books, the characters are torn. Should they warn Margie and risk disappearing forever? Or can they find a way to defeat the crooks without being seen? Come see this charming play to find out!

The Playmakers sponsor is Kent School and the Hedgelawn Foundation provided support for arts special presentations by Maryland Artists who performed their work for the kids in camp.

The cast, made up of the children who have attended the camp, are all between 8 and 15 years old. They are Claire Williams as Margie, Maggie Hughes as Bombalurina, Natalie Ritchie as Mom, Shae Thomas as Theresa, Bryan Mann as White Fang, Will Ritchie as Robin Hood, Matthew Williams as Tom Sawyer, Bay Pagano as Sherlock Holmes, Flora Pagano as Toto, Julianne Blevins as Dorothy, Evangeline Wood as Heidi, Delaney Lord as Pollyanna, Mila Shepherd as Book Fairy, Mia Lee as Lady in Red/Queen of Hearts, Vivian Young as Fagin/Wicked Witch, Ayla Wilson as Long John Silver, Caroline Curran as Officer Ketchum, Lilly Keller as Fingers, ELana Cernak as Eddie, Grady Glenn as Doctor Dolittle, Angus Roberson as Frankenstein’s Monster, Hudson Dewey as Hopalong Cassidy.

The Playmakers Director is Kaitlyn Wright, and Michael Tolbert is the Assistant Director. Staff Counselors are Connor Christopher, who also costumed the show, and Tia Glomb. The staff intern is Ariel Stap. The poster design for the play was created by Evangeline Wood and Julianne Blevins, two of the kids attending the camp.

The play is open to the public for free, though you can make a small donation to the program to ensure that it continues well into the future. A $5.00 donation is recommended. Since there is no charge for the show, we do not take ticket reservations. Shows are Friday and Saturday, 7 pm and Sunday 2 pm.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

The Garfield Center Announces Their 2025 Season

July 2, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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Garfield Center for the Arts Executive Director Steven Arnold announces the 2025 Season to the organization’s volunteers and supporters at a special event held on June 27th.

At a volunteer appreciation event held at the Garfield Center for the Arts on Thursday, June 27th, Executive Director, Steven Arnold, unveiled the 2025 Season. The evening was designed to provide first access to the 2025 Season selections to the most actively involved part of our community, and attendees were treated to food and refreshments prior to the presentation.

The GCA’s Programming Committee includes Mr. Arnold, Mark Sullivan, Shannon Carter, Melissa McGlynn, Jen Friedman, and Nic Carter. It was their task to review title proposals from interested directors, read scripts, settle on a production calendar, and finalize the selected season. Thursday’s event also featured projections showing the new poster graphics for each 2025 title. All of the Garfield Center’s graphics are designed by Francoise Sullivan, the GCA’s webmaster and Marketing specialist.

Opening the season will be the over-the-top farce “Noises Off.” A contemporary comedy classic by Michael Frayn, It takes a side-splitting look at the foibles of theatre folk and the invitable on and offstage issues that can occur during a play, including out-of-control egos, passionate affairs, actor memory issues, personal props mishaps – all of the things that can turn a performance into a high-risk adventure. This play-within-a-play captures a touring British theatre troupe’s production of a comedy titled “Nothing On” in three stages: Act One in “Noises Off” depicts the final dress rehearsal for “Nothing On,” Act Two occurs backstage at a performance about a month into its run, and Act Three depicts a performance two months later and near the end of its debilitating run. We see the dysfunctional inner workings of “Nothing On” as it progresses from flubbed lines and missed cues, at its start, to all-out warfare between cast members in the final performance. Brimming with slapstick comedy, “Noises Off” comes complete with slamming doors, falling trousers, a ballet of silent backstage warfare between actors, and — of course — flying sardines!

“Noises Off” will be directed by the GCA’s Executive Director Steven Arnold and it will run February 21st through March 9th, 2025.

The second production will be “A Rock Sails By,” by Sean Grennan. The story is incredibly interesting and unique: Dr. Lynn Cummings, a facts-only astrophysicist, has discovered herself at life’s crossroads as she tries to bring science and faith into balance. She is grappling with personal questions, trying to reconnect with her daughter, and mourning the loss of her husband. When an unidentified object is discovered heading toward Earth, a less-than-reputable online magazine misquotes her, casting doubt on her credibility. With her reputation on the line, she invites the ambitious journalist to witness the object with her as it comes closest to Earth. Dr. Cummings hopes to see nothing remarkable and thus salvage her credibility, but there is no telling what she will discover beyond the stars. It is thought-provoking and filled with wit, humor, and meaning.

“A Rock Sails By” will be directed by the GCA’s Theatre Manager Nic Carter and will run April 25th through May 11th, 2025.

2025 will bring yet another installment of the annual crowd favorite “Short Attention Span Theatre.” Frequently hilarious, often heartfelt, sometimes downright dramatic, typically irreverent, but always brief and to the point. That describes Short Attention Span Theatre, our annual festival of ten minutes plays. The festival always brings together an excellent assortment of actors, directors and playwrights in a truly wonderful and fulfilling collaboration, so be ready for more fun, more mayhem, more tradition, where each piece is designed to hold your attention for ‘Just. Long. Enough.’

Mark Sullivan is the producer for Short Attention Span Theatre, which runs July 11th through July 27th, 2025.

Playmakers, the annual summer camp for kids age 8 to 15, starts July 14th and runs through August 8th. The production title for Playmakers is not chosen until shortly after the beginning of the year, but its production will be performed on the weekend of August 8th, 9th and 10th, 2025.

Next up in the 2025 season will be “The Elephant Man,” by Bernard Pomerance. Many know the story of John Merrick or, as some called him at the time, the Elephant Man. In 1880s London, Merrick is a horribly deformed young man – a victim of rare skin and bone diseases. Under the care of celebrated physician Frederick Treves, Merrick slowly evolves from an object of pity to an urbane gentleman, desperate to be recognized as a man like any other. A rarely-produced stage play, due to the incredibly transformative and difficult physicality needed from the actor playing Merrick, it provides astounding tour-de-force performances from its lead actors and is universally seen as a modern stage classic.

“The Elephant Man” will be directed by Talley Wilford, who served as the Executive Director of The Groove Theatre in Cambridge. It runs October 3rd through October 19th, 2025.

Closing the season will be the great Rodgers and Hammerstein’s wonderful family-friendly musical, “Cinderella.” Sandwiched between their huge successes with The King and I, Flower Drum Song and The Sound of Music, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote a musical for television. That musical was “Cinderella,” starring Julie Andrews. The show subsequently went on to successful stage productions, a second televised performance, a modern movie interpretation, and a reworked Broadway revival in 2013. The story, as we all know, is about the trials and eventual triumph of a young woman forced into a life of servitude by her cruel stepmother and self-centered stepsisters. She dreams of a better life, and with the help of her fairy godmother, Cinderella is transformed into a princess and finds her prince. The Garfield Center will be producing the 2013 Broadway revival version of the show, with Music by Richard Rodgers, Original Book and Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, and New Book by Douglas Carter Beane.

“Cinderella” will run from December 5th through December 21st, 2025. The show will be directed by Adrienne Wrona, who has appeared on stage at the GCA in several productions, directed several 10-minute plays for “Short Attention Span Theatre” and was once the GCA’s Development Director.

Auditions for all plays will occur throughout 2025, though the auditions for “Noises Off” will happen in early December of this year. To receive Auditions announcement emails, go to www.garfieldcenter.org and look for the “Subscribe to our Audition List” option at the bottom of the main page. To receive emails about productions and events, you may also sign up in the same location by using the “Subscribe to our Email List” feature.

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Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead, Archives

The 2024 Edition of Short Attention Span Theatre 0pens June 21!

June 10, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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A cow on strike. A woman stuck in a tub. An unhelpful customer service agent. Strangers worry over missing an important event. A video game hero stymied at every turn. Zombies eat lunch at a cafe. A long delayed reunion brings hope. Pressure threatens the perfect date. These are the stories that will provide the thrilling, enlightening, hilarious and occasionally touching moments you will find in the Garfield Center’s 2024 edition of Short Attention Span Theatre.

Known also by its participants as SAST, Short Attention Span Theatre is the Garfield Center’s annual short play program. It had its earliest roots in 2005, when it was called 8×10 – The 10-Minute Play Project. The name was changed to Short Attention Span Theatre in 2008. Over the years, iit has seen both the premiere of many original plays by local playwrights as well as featured the performances of hundreds of local actors. The Garfield Center’s SAST has remained a successful, yearly program that has grown every year in attendance and popularity.

Of the 8 scripts for presentation this year, 6 of them are by local playwright participants in Live Playwrights’ Society, an Eastern Shore writer’s forum the Garfield Center helped to establish in 2009. This is the most LPS scripts ever produced in the same year at SAST.

LPS Member and Annapolis playwright R.A. Pauli’s script, “The Very Angry Cow,” features a talking cow on strike, a farmer’s wife with a secret and a mediating farmer who just needs the herd to go back to work. Michael Moore plays the Cow, Wendy Wiseman plays the Farmer’s Wife and Chris Neiman plays the Farmer. The piece is directed by the GCA’s Executive Director Steven Arnold.

In “Brunhilda Got Stuck in the Tub,” by playwright Brent Lewis, an LPS member from Centreville. A woman can’t extricate herself from the bathtub, even with a growing assortment of well-meaning oddballs there to help. The play features Hester Sachse as Brunhilda, Dylan Lyles as Dickie Bird, Craig Stump as Dr. Ners, Sharon Herz as Mrs. Anita Ners, Patrick Pearce as Professor Ninny. The play is directed by Brianna Johnson.

A well-meaning recipient of a package, meant for someone else, attempts to get it returned, but an extremely inhospitable customer service agent stands in the way. The comedy, “The Wrong Box,” was also written by R.A. Pauli of Annapolis. Featuring Jordan Dixon as the Caller and Joseph Fox as the Customer Service Rep, it is directed by Patrick Pearce.

LPS Playwright Mark Sullivan wrote and directs his script “Tribulations.” Two strangers, a man and woman, find themselves alone in a bar during suspicious circumstances, causing speculation about what happened to everyone else. The performance will feature Allison Jones as Maggie and Dominic Delcoco as Clancy.

“Moon Logic,” by Chicago playwright David Lipschutz, takes place in a choose-your-own-adventure game, where the hero can’t seem to find the right way to get the job done. Directed by Adrienne Wrona, performers include Nic Carter as the Narrator, Dylan Lyles as Sir Llewellyn, and Izzie Squire Southworth as Princess Nightingale.

In “Bone Sandwich,” also by Centreville’s Brent Lewis, two Zombies at a cafe discover turbulence in their relationship. Directed by Michael Moore, the cast features Dominic Delcoco as Spencer, Addyson Crooks as Enid, and Amanda Fry as the Waitress.

In “For The Record,” by F. J. Hartland of Johnstown, PA, a bittersweet and heartfelt reunion, between an estranged father and son, uncovers surprising revelations and exposes the problem with long-held but unspoken assumptions. Directed by Shannon Carter, Patrick Pearce plays Arlo, the father, and Bob Walton plays Spencer, the son.

In “Always A Gentleman,” a man tries to prevent the worst possible ending to a blind date, even as a narrator describes every painful detail. The play by Jon Clark, an LPS member from Centreville, casts Dylan Lyles as David, Kaitlyn Wright as Keri and Sam Holdgreve as the Narrator. It is directed by Nic Carter.

Mark Sullivan is the Producer of SAST, with production organization, design, construction and technical support from Nic Carter, Steven Arnold, Butch Clark and Benji Price. Brianna Johnson is the Production Stage Manager and Production marketing graphics are by Francoise Sullivan.

Short Attention Span Theatre opens June 21 and runs three weekends through July 7, with performances at 8 PM on Fridays and Saturdays and 2 PM on Sundays. Tickets may be purchased online at www.garfieldcenter.org or via our Box Office hours on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 10 AM to 3 PM. Ticket buyers may either stop in at the theatre during Box Office hours, or call at 410-810-2060.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Auditions for “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” Set for June 23, 24, 25

June 5, 2024 by Garfield Center Leave a Comment

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The Garfield Center for the Arts and Director JW Ruth have announced audition dates for Kurt Vonnegut Jr.’s 1969 dark satire “Happy Birthday, Wanda June.”

Auditions will occur at the Garfield Center on Saturday, June 22nd, at 2:00 PM, and Monday and Tuesday, June 24th and 25th, both at 6:30 PM. Anyone who auditions will be asked to do cold readings from the script.

In this postmodern retelling of the Odyssey, famous war hero and big game hunter Harold Ryan returns from an ill-fated 8-year quest in the Amazon to a country and a family that seem to have moved on without him. Penelope, his presumed widow, has begun dating, much to the disapproval of her spoiled son Paul, and is currently between two suitors, vacuum cleaner salesman Herb Shuttle and hippie physician Norbert Woodley. With the turn of a key, Harold is back in the picture, and the household is filled with more tension than the Trojan war, now the Ryan family must make sense of this change as Vonnegut steadily questions if the world still has a place for heroes.

Character breakdowns provided by the Director:
HAROLD RYAN – 50+ – The Midcentury Odysseus. A rich and widely respected hero of WWII, big game hunter, and adventurer extraordinaire. Equally as charismatic as he is bullheaded.

PENELOPE RYAN – 30s – The levelheaded and well-articulated wife of Harold Ryan whose life is completely upended with the return of her husband.

PAUL RYAN – 12 – The growing son of Harold. A pampered mama’s boy who idolizes the father he never met.

DR. NORBERT WOODLEY – 30s – Neighbor to the Ryans, family physician, and suitor of Penelope. A man of science and peace who is deeply engrossed into the hippie counterculture.

HERB SHUTTLE – 30s – Door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesman, boy scout leader, and suitor of Penelope. He equally reveres and fears the legend of Harold Ryan.

COLONEL LOOSELEAF HARPER – 50+ – The dim-witted and talkative best friend of Harold Ryan who accompanied the hero in his Amazonian quest for diamonds. An ex-army pilot who ended his military carrier by dropping the nuclear bomb over Nagasaki.

WANDA JUNE – 10 – an overwhelmingly adorable, Shirley Temple-type who recently celebrated her birthday by getting run over by an ice cream truck. She is now a ghost, in heaven, and is loving every second of it.

MAJOR SIEGFRIED VON KONISGWALD – 50+ – Ex-SS officer known as “The Beast of Yugoslavia.” After famously being slayed by Harold during WWII, he is now a ghost in heaven spending his eternity playing shuffleboard with Wanda June.

MILDRED RYAN – 30s – The ex-wife of Harold, whose marriage later inspired her alcohol-induced death, is now a ghost in heaven who spends most of her time in paradise stuck in AA meetings.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes, Archives

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