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2025 Season

Zephyr Teachout

Artistic Director

Bill Blachly

Producer

 

Lori Stratton

Theatres Manager

Gondoliers

by

WS Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan

 

June 26 - July 12

The Gondoliers, or, The King of Barataria, was the twelfth opera written together by Gilbert and Sullivan. Opening on December 7, 1889 at the Savoy Theatre, The Gondoliers ran for 554 performances, and was the last of the G&S operas that would achieve wide popularity. Its lilting score has, perhaps, the most sparkling and tuneful music of them all and calls, perhaps, for the most dancing.Gilbert returns, in this opera, to satire of snobbery regarding class distinctions and begins his fascination, which will play an even larger part in the next opera, Utopia Limited, with the "stock company act" using the absurd convergence of natural persons and legal entities. Again setting his work comfortably far away from mother England, Gilbert is emboldened to level somewhat harsh criticism on the noble class, and the institution of the monarchy itself.

 

 

 

Loves Labours Lost

by

William Shakespeare

July 17   Aug 2

King Ferdinand and his three attendant lords have vowed to spend three years in solitude, committed to learning and abstaining from the pleasures of the flesh. The Princess of France appears at his Court, together with her three ladies-in-waiting, to negotiate the return of Aquitaine from Navarre. Of course, being men, the Navarrese fall head over heels with the women; and of course, being women, the French are much more interested in the politics of their visit.

 

 

 

Nine Parts of Desire

by

Heather Raffo

June 26   July 12

A well-crafted, absorbing account of Islamic women's lives as seen through the eyes of a secular-minded, Australian-born feminist journalist. Wall Street Journal Middle East correspondent Brooks describes with sensitivity and clarity her conversations and relationships with Islamic women, from the blue-jean-clad, American-born queen of Jordan to a devout Palestinian who shares her abusive husband with another woman in a four-room hovel with 14 children. Many of the obstacles she describes are well known: Some Islamic women are not allowed to show flesh or pray out loud in public (their voices are too arousing and could provoke unholy thoughts in men); many professions are closed to women; and severe sexual double standards still exist.

 

 

 

 

Juno and the Paycock

by

Sean O'Casey

 

Aug 17    Aug 23

A volley of gunshots at the start signifies the violent backdrop to Seán O’Casey’s 1924 tragicomedy, which takes place during the Irish civil war of 1922-23. But it is a distant sound, and musical hall-style comedy and drunken shenanigans take prominence in this production.

The second in O’Casey’s Dublin trilogy, Juno and the Paycock dramatises tenement life for the Boyles, whose breadwinner, Jack), prefers drink to work while his wife, Juno is left to earn their keep.

Crotchety comedy takes the lead. Jack is irked by Juno’s bossiness; Juno is peeved with their daughter, Mary , for striking from work and with Jack for his malingering.

A Flea to Spare

by

Naomi Wallace

 

Aug 17    Aug 23

A wealthy couple is preparing to flee their home when a mysterious sailor and a young girl appear sneaking into their boarded up house. Now, quarantined together for 28 days, the only thing these strangers fear more than the Plague is each other. Definitions of morality are up for grabs and survival takes many forms in this dark, fiercely intense & humorous play. The play deals with the clash of cultural, social, and sexual boundaries.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Curtain Time

7:30  SHARP

Tickets:
Adults $30, Children 12 and under $15.

Cash or checks

No credit cards

Reservations and Information: 


802-456-8968  or at

unadilla@pshift.com

 

501 Blachly Road
Marshfield Vermont 05658