PHOTO CREDIT: LARRY SANDEZ


What if you awoke to find yourself married to someone you didn’t know?  With a daughter you’ve never met?  And what if you spent each day re-learning things about your past that only proved you never really knew what your life was like?  From Tony/Pulitzer-nominated playwright Lee Blessing, comes the story of three people searching for lifelong answers to fundamental questions about our purpose, our past and our future.  And all the answers may be found in A Body of Water. Taken from the website.

Great Show!
Review
8.7 Overall
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Story8.5
Set & Design8.5
Entertainment9
Acting9
Costumes8.5
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February 7 – March 15,2020

PHOTO CREDIT: MATTHEW GILMORE


Set in a small town beauty salon in Louisiana, Robert Harling’s Steel Magnolias celebrates the bond of friendship between six women in the midst of life’s challenges. Based on the playwright’s upbringing, and later adapted into the critically praised film, Steel Magnolias is a humorous, yet devastating journey of friendship, loss, and love. Taken from the website. 

March 22 – May 5, 2019

GREAT SHOW!
Review
8.5 Overall
Users 0 (0 votes)
Story8
Set & Design8
Entertainment9
Acting9.5
Costumes8
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(PHOTO CREDIT: LARRY SANDEZ)

Helen Edmudson’s Anna Karenina is an upside-down telling of Leo Tolstoy’s classic tale. A story wrapped in temptation, passion, and moral conflict, this eight-person dramatic event is a fast-paced examination of love, adultery, and marriage. Taken from the website. 

Feb 8 – March 17,2019 

Exceptional Show!
Review
9.3 Overall
0 Users (0 votes)
Story9.5
Set & Design9
Entertainment9
Acting10
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(Photos: Lindsay Schnebly)

March 24 – April 30, 2017


William Mastrosimone’s gripping drama about a terrorist who has wreaked madness and destruction on America and is about to use a news reporter to exploit just one more valuable hostage – the world’s supply of clean water. Taken from the website.


Synopsis: Winner of the 1992 Tony Award for Best Play, this is master playwright Brian Friel’s best. Set in a small village in 1936 Ireland, five unmarried sisters share a small home and dreams of life beyond their native land.  Taken from the website 

MAY 6 – JUNE 12, 2016

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Above Average
Review
7.8 Overall
10 Users (1 vote)
Story9
Set & Design6.5
Entertainment7.5
Acting9
Costumes7
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Actors Co-op Dancing at Lughnasa is true to Brian Friel
I am a fan of 99 seat theater and frequent the Actors Co-op. I was lucky enough to see Brian Friel's (pronounced Freel) Dancing at Lughnasa (pronounced loo-na-sah) opening weekend. I was excited to see what reviewers had to say and this review is unfortunate. I know the play well and the Actors Co-op did a beautiful job. The actors were, as stated, remarkable and play the story gorgeously. The play is dialogue. However, what is not being said, is what is fueling the story. The Mundy sisters beautifully walked the line of ordinary discussion while peeling back moments of deep regret and fear. The magic of these characters shows when each of them reacts and copes differently with challenges they face. We are given three solid examples: Jack's return, Gerry's(pronounced Jerry) return and Rose's return. Kate is mad in all of those moments, Maggie covers but is curious, Agnes & Chris are afraid. But each sister is written to show the wide array of human reaction. While this review is right, the story is Michael looking back on his life and seeking his purpose, the show is not trying to tie up the story with a bow. The story is flawed. The last monologue of the play describes the memories as floating and without fact, images and nostalgia carried through music. We, the audience do not get every detail because Michael himself, does not have every detail. That is why Brian Friel wrote the character of young Michael to be invisible. That is why Michael walks through the show as its narrator. That is why it is told out of time. The show is in a thrust theater, so while you may not see the faces of all characters the story is told beautifully across the room , many moments are in reaction. Depending on where you sit decides who you see speak, who you see respond. I thought it was beautifully staged and reflective of memory. While you may not leave the theater understanding everything, you will have connected and engaged in the story. This reviewer didn't understand the theater's space, the story's convention and he missed the point of the play. That being said, Actors Co-op did not. They were stunning. If you are a theater person and love this classic, you will not be disappointed. I rate this play five stars.
May 17, 2016, 5:06 pm
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