Spalte #col1

...

The STUDIO



May 2012
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11
  Friday, May 11, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
12
  Saturday, May 12, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
13
  Sunday, May 13, 2012  
Performance at 2:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
14 15 16 17
  Thursday, May 17, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
18
  Friday, May 18, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
19
  Saturday, May 19, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
20
  Sunday, May 20, 2012  
Performance at 2:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
21 22 23 24
  Thursday, May 24, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
25
  Friday, May 25, 2012  
Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
26
  Saturday, May 26, 2012  
Performance at 2:00 pm
Tickets Available

Performance at 8:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
27
  Sunday, May 27, 2012  
Performance at 2:00 pm
Tickets Available

     
28 29 30 31

roll over dates to see times; click on date to purchase tickets

Single Ticket Prices



Fri & Sat at 8:00 
Sun at 2:00:

Thurs at 8:00
Sat at 2:00:

General $25
Senior (62+) $20
Youth (13-21) $20

General $20
Senior $15
Youth $15

Souvenir



(Souvenir replaces In The Next Room -The Vibrator Play in the 2011-2012 Studio Series)

Written by Stephen Temperley

Directed by John Shillington

For more than half a century the name Florence Foster Jenkins has been guaranteed to produce explosions of derisive laughter.  Not unreasonably so, as this wealthy society eccentric suffered under the delusion that she was a great coloratura soprano when she was in fact incapable of producing two consecutive notes in tune.  Nevertheless, her annual recitals in the ballroom of the Ritz Carlton hotel brought her extraordinary fame. As news of her terrible singing spread, so did her celebrity.  Her growing mob of fans packed her recitals, stuffing handkerchiefs in their mouths to stifle their laughter which Mrs. Jenkins blissfully mistook for cheers.  The climax of her career was a single concert at Carnegie Hall in 1944.  Famously, it sold out in two hours. SOUVENIR, by turn hilarious and poignant, tells her story through the eyes of her accompanist, Cosme McMoon.  Faced with her boundless certainty, Cosme comes to revise his attitude, not only towards her singing but to the very meaning of music itself.  As the play ends the audience enters her world completely, finding there the beauty she'd heard in her head all along.  SOUVENIR is a musical odd-couple for the ages.