Beowulf Alley Technical Crew Needed
Beowulf Alley Theatre, at 11 S. 6th Avenue, has positions open for some of its productions for the spring portion of the 2009-2010 season. We offer stipends according to the position and the production. Please contact the directors for further questions.
Flaming Guns of the Purple Sage by Jane Martin – Stage Manager
Director: Steve Anderson (steve@steveandersonacting.com)
Rehearsals begin the week of January 4 and tech begins on February 19. Performances are Thursdays-Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 1:30 p.m. beginning on February 26 through March 14, 2010.
Big 8, is facing foreclosure on the Wyoming ranch where she rehabilitates injured rodeo cowboys. The arrival of a shocking woman named Shedevil and a one eyed Ukranian biker named Black Dog ushers in outrageous violence and horror in this shoot ‘em up, knock ‘em up, cut ‘em up comic romp that roasts the cowboy mentality of western writers like Zane Grey. This bodacious and macabre cross over comedy mixes horror and hilarity as it pits the code of the West against contemporary darkness. May be inappropriate for persons under 13 years old.
“The funniest and the wildest…Adds still another dimension to this author’s body of work..The laughs are nonstop.” – Center Stage
Produced by special arrangements with Dramatists Play Service
Last of the Boys by Steven Dietz – Costumer and Props Master
Director: Susan Arnold (Smarnold@dakotacom.net)
Periodic production meetings start January 23, rehearsals begin March 1, costumes and props completion are on March 23, media photo shoot is March 24, tech launches April 1. Performances are Thursdays-Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 1:30 p.m. beginning on April 9 through April 25, 2010.
A 2006 Pulitzer Prize nominee. Ben and Jeeter fought in Vietnam, and for thirty years they have remained united by a war that divided the nation. Joined by Jeeter's new girlfriend and her off-the-grid whiskey-drinking mother, these friends gather at Ben's remote trailer for one final hurrah. As the night deepens, the past makes a return appearance, and its many ghosts come flickering to life. This is a fierce, funny, haunted play about a friendship that ends—and a war that does not. – Dramatists Play Service - May be inappropriate for persons under 13 years old.
"Last of the Boys is about the way the past creates the present and the present repeats the past -- Philadelphia City Paper
Produced by special arrangements with Dramatists Play Service.