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And Then There Were None
by Agatha Christie
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| July 14 - July 30, 2006 |
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Performance Dates: July 14 to 16, 19 to 23, 26 to 30 |
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Performances are 8 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday; 7 p.m., Sunday |
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Agatha Christie’s thriller, And Then There Were None, is more than just a ‘whodunit.’ The story is one of the most carefully planned of all Christie's murder mysteries in which ten strangers, with apparently nothing in common, are invited to an exclusive island mansion. Over dinner, a voice on a gramophone record accuses each guest of hiding a guilty and terrible secret. That evening, one of the ten is found murdered and the tension escalates as the survivors realize the killer is not only amongst them, but is preparing to strike again.
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Da
by Hugh Leonard
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| June 23 - July 9, 2006 |
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Performance Dates: June 23 to 25, 28 to 30, July 1, 2, 5 to 9 |
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Performances are 8 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday; 7 p.m., Sunday |
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Themes of exile and homecoming are explored in Hugh Leonard’s Tony Award-winning play, Da. The story revolves around the living memories of Charlie, a grown man who returns home to Ireland after the death of his adoptive father only to find the old man’s presence still very much alive—and trying to make a “nice cup of tea.” Underneath the niceties, a father/son conflict, at turns bitter, comic, and poignant, forms the emotional heart of the play. Will Charlie make peace with the ghostly but irascible Da, or will Charlie close the door on the past before exorcising his own uneasy demons?
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Butterflies Are Free
by Leonard Gershe
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| June 2 - 18, 2006 |
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Performance Dates: June 2 to 4, 7 to 11, and 14 to 18 |
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Performances are 8 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday; 7 p.m., Sunday |
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All Don Baker wants is a place of his own away from hisdomineering and over-protective mother. Don has been blind sincebirth, but that does not stop him from striking out on his own in acramped Manhattan apartment. There Don makes the acquaintanceof his free spirit, actress neighbor Jill. In author Leonard Gershe’stale of love and liberty, Don learns lesson about life from Jill thathis mother never taught him. But, surprisingly, Jill learns from Don what being free really means.
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