Monday, August 01, 2011

Cactus Pants Cowboy, August 19-20

Beowulf Alley’s Late Night Theatre presents

Cactus Pants Cowboy

The Comedy Collective

 

Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley, 11 South 6th Avenue, Downtown between Broadway and Congress, presents Cactus Pants Cowboy (formerly Grendel’s Mom). Performances for this very special event are on Friday and Saturday August 19th and 20th at, 10:00 p.m.

 

Take advantage of the pre-performance ticket price of $8 each until August 18! Purchase online at www.beowulfalley.org or by phone at (520) 882-0555. On the days of performance, all tickets are $10 at the door the night of performance. For additional information, please call (520) 977-5218 or (520) 882-0555.

 

 

Cactus Pants Cowboy is Tucson’s own premiere comedy troupe featuring the comic stylings of

Evan Engle, Brian Hanson, Tara Kleinbrink, Eric and Scott O’Brien and Tristyn Tucci. The troupe presents brand new material as well as classic sketches like Hobo Cop and I Love You, Sean Bean. This comedy group has adult themes and language, and may not be appropriate for younger audiences.

 

 

Cactus Pants Cowboy has performed previously under the name Grendel’s Mom but became distraught by the tenuous connection to Angelina Jolie and classic Old English literature. The performance lasts a little less than an hour. Is there any better way to celebrate Tucson’s birthday than to laugh? Wait, we didn’t mean it like that. Happy Birthday, Tucson!  Come see Cactus Pants Cowboy!

 

 

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Visit the website for TTA Listserv subscription information

 

 

 

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Final Weekend Beowulf Alley Theatre's PAGE ON THE STAGE

Beowulf Alley Theatre’s

PAGE ON THE STAGE

THE OUTRAGEOUS NEW PLAY FESTIVAL 2011

Final Weekend

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre’s Page on the Stage program offers its three new and exciting plays in FINAL workshop productions July 21st through the 24th at Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 South 6th Avenue, downtown between Broadway and Congress.

 

Devin Gorman’s Icon tells the funny and moving story of a writer and artist who is catapulted to fame, and her dark secrets to get her there. Performance dates and times: Thursday, July 21; Saturday, July 23, both at 7:30 p.m.

 

“In Icon, Devin Gorman keeps the secret motivations of her characters so well disguised that when the neurotic muse-for-hire, hilariously played by Richard Cheney, uncovers the truth, you still can’t believe it.  I found myself wanting more when the lights came up.” – a patron at post-show discussion

 

Jonathan Northover’s You Do Not Want to See This is a twisting, turning mystery of two defense lawyers and two suspects to a terrible crime. Performance dates and times: Friday, July 22 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, July 24 at 2:00 p.m.

                 

“The relationship between the two childhood friends accused of a heinous crime was artfully played in the fashion of George and Lennie in Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men; and Northover scripts a twisting plot to a surprising conclusion making You Do Not Want to See This something you can’t stop watching.” – a patron at post-show discussion

 

Gavin Kayner’s Stephen’s Syndrome is a dark, funny, frightening meditation on illness, the past and the power of (dysfunctional) love. Performance date and time: Saturday, July 23 at 2:00 p.m.

 

“Awesome play, fantastic actors. Go see it if you can.” – a patron’s Facebook comment

 

Tickets are available online at www.beowulfalley.org, by phone at (520) 882-0555 or at the door the day of performance. $36 for 3-play package or 1 play for $15.

 

 

Hamlet at Beowulf Alley, July 29-Aug 13

 

LATE NIGHT THEATRE

HAMLET 1.0

by William Shakespeare

 

 

Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley, 11 S. 6th Avenue between Broadway and Congress, presents Hamlet 1.0 by William Shakespeare, July 29, 30, August 5, 6, 12 and 13 at 7:30 PM. For more information, contact Michael Fenlason at 520-977-5218.

 

Hamlet 1.0 is a multimedia, multiplatform telling of Shakespeare’s classic tragedy using Shakespeare’s language, original music and multimedia. Hamlet’s father has been murdered. Will Hamlet avenge the death?

 

Pre-opening ticket special: just $8, online at www.beowulfalley.org or by phone at (520) 882-0555. After July 28, tickets are just $10 online, by phone or at the door.

 

Tucson: Old Time Radio Theatre at Beowulf Alley, Sept 2011

 

OLD TIME RADIO THEATRE

Beowulf Alley Theatre

Performances for the Month of September, 2011

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre’s Old Time Radio Theatre Company will present classic productions and reproductions from the golden days of radio at the theatre, 11 South 6th Avenue (Downtown between Broadway and Congress). Performances in (month) will be at 7 p.m. on September 6 and September 20. Tickets purchased online at www.beowulfalley.org at least the day before a performance are $8.00. Tickets by phone or at the door are $10. Children 12 years and under are free. The box office phone number is (520) 882-0555.

 

September 6, 2011

 

RAISING JUNIOR

SUSPENSE: The Dark Tower

 

Raising Junior was a 15-minute comedy-strip show broadcast on the Blue Network from 1930-32. The show was heard daily, six days a week at 6 p. m. A domestic comedy, its major claim to fame was the discovery of Walter Tetley as a major radio character. Actor Ray Knight snatched the 9-year-old Tetley off an elevator and placed him before a microphone when the actor who was to play Bobby failed to appear. Tetley went on to appear on thousands of broadcasts (over 2,300 appearances on 150 separate series) in the late ‘30’s. He appeared on such notable shows as The Fred Allen Show, Easy Aces, The Great Gildersleeve, and The Phil Harris/Alice Faye Show.

 

Suspense was one of the premier drama series of the Golden Age of Radio,  broadcast on CBS Radio from 1942 through 1962. Subtitled "radio's outstanding theater of thrills," it focused on suspense thriller-type scripts, usually featuring leading Hollywood actors of the era. Approximately 945 episodes were broadcast during its long run, and more than 900 still exist. Suspense went through several major phases, characterized by different hosts, sponsors, and director/producers. Formula plot devices were followed for all but a handful of episodes: the protagonist was usually a normal person suddenly dropped into a threatening or bizarre situation; solutions were "withheld until the last possible second"; and evildoers were usually punished in the end. This lighter episode, The Dark Tower, was adapted from a story by George S. Kaufman and Alexander Wolcott, and starred Orson Welles as a parody of himself. 

 

(2nd  Date)

 

EASY ACES: Jane Thinks Mink

ESCAPE: The Abominable Snowman

 

Easy Aces, a long-running American serial radio comedy, ran from 1930-1945. It was trademarked by the low-keyed drollery of creator and writer Goodman Ace and his wife, Jane, as an urbane, put-upon realtor and his malaprop-prone wife. A 15-minute program, it aired three times at week at first and later, twice a week for 30 minutes. Its unobtrusive, conversational, and clever style, and the cheerful absurdism of its story-lines, built a loyal enough audience of listeners and critics alike to keep it on the air for 15 years. “The laughs on the other foot.”

 

ESCAPE was first performed on September 13, 1953. The famous opening to the show, often worded to suit the events of the moment or season, warns the intrepid radio listener of adventure that is anything but... everyday. Like its sister show on the radio, Suspense, it is considered one of the top shows ever done on radio. Escape takes you on a ride into a world where danger comes in many forms, and you are on the edge of life and death, and perhaps you are being pushed! When Escape says romantic, we're not talking kissing, perhaps those kisses might be from teeming piranha! Escape is more Devil's Island than Fantasy Island. And it is wonderful adventure radio for the whole family, especially Dad.

 

The Abominable Snowman begins in Darjeeling, India as three men are about to embark on an expedition to capture one of the Yeti, the mysterious creatures reported by mountain climbing expeditions in the Himalayas since the early Twentieth Century. They hire a sherpa guide named Nasang who claims to have seen one. We learn from Nasang that the Yeti, also called the "Metoh-Kangmi", have evil faces. Nasang informs them that he is unable to hire any porters for their expedition because the locals are afraid of upsetting the Yeti, who are cannibals. So, the four men start climbing Mt. Everest on their own. One by one, their small expedition faces the challenges of the mountain and an Abominable Snowman. They sometimes leap and sometimes they run in great strides. He warns them that trying to capture one "will be a difficult thing." Tired of the everyday grind? Ever dream of a life of … romantic adventure? Want to get away from it all? We offer you … ESCAPE!

 

 

Directed by Sheldon Metz, the OTRT Ensemble Company includes: Ryan Amstutz, Jon Benda, Denise Blum, Butch Bryant, Samantha Cormier, Gerri Courtney-Austein, Laura Davenport, Samuel DeJesus, Evan Engle, Bill Epstein, Sydney Flynn, Vince Flynn, Audrey Ann Gambach, Brian Hale,Barbara Glover, Meagan Jones, Bill La Pointe, Elizabeth Leadon, Lois Lederman, Butch Lynn, Steve McKee, Charlie Middagh, Whitney Morton, Joan O’Dwyer, Robert Anthony Peters, Shannon Brooke Rzuildo,  Mike Saxon, Ina Shivak, Pat Timm, Terry Thure, Jared Stokes,  John Vornholt.

 

Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Theater Is Born | Review | Tucson Weekly

Theater Is Born | Review | Tucson Weekly

Theater Is Born

Beowulf Alley shows off three brand-new plays written by Tucsonans

Playwrights need to see their developing plays "on their feet." It's not enough for the play to be given a reading, although readings can be helpful. New plays need a stage, a director, actors who are "off-book," and enough technical embellishment to provide a real sense of how—or if—

the plays actually work. Playwrights—unlike poets and novelists, who can labor alone in their garrets—are collaborators.

Beowulf Alley Theatre is lending its support to developing plays with the "Page on the Stage" event, which happens over the next three weekends. Three new plays authored by Tucson playwrights will be presented to that other critical collaborator—the audience.

Michael Fenlason is the coordinator of this summer's festival, which is in its second year.

"The plays are given almost-full productions—they're not just readings," he explains. "This shows your faults and your strengths almost immediately."

Renata Rauschen and Richard Chaney in Icon, part of "Page on the Stage."

Renata Rauschen and Richard Chaney in Icon, part of "Page on the Stage."

Fenlason says, "This does attract perhaps a more adventurous audience, but these are smart writers talking about interesting things in ways never seen before. This could be the first step to becoming a great play—and you saw it first."

Read the entire article here: Theater Is Born | Review | Tucson Weekly

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Your're Invited - Community party celebrating 10 years in Tucson

Beowulf Alley Theatre

Celebrate with Us!

 

On July 1st, 2011, Beowulf Alley Theatre Company, 11 South 6th Avenue, is hosting a community party. We’re celebrating 10 years in Tucson and you’re invited! Whether you have been involved with Beowulf before, have attended performances, or are new to us, all are welcome to our Downtown location with our brightly lit marquee. Bring your neighbors, friends and family.

Come together, learn what we have to offer, share ideas, explore volunteering, even submit suggestions for possible plays or activities to experience at Beowulf. We invite you to engage with Board Members, the Managing Director, Directors and Program Chairs as well as those who participate as actors and technicians for our various programs.

Thanks to our visual arts partner, The Drawing Studio, we will begin our celebration with a 2 p.m. afternoon gallery display by noted artist Andrew Rush of his enlarged giclee prints of Tucson cultural program booklet covers from 1977 to 1984. There will also be tours of the theatre. As the evening progresses, from about 6p – 11p, look for live performances, including live music, samples of what is to come from Beowulf and its various programs and even a video presentation. A silent auction with some wonderful items will be part of the event. Drinks and light food will be available. A donation to support our community work is appreciated. PLEASE bring your friends, your family, EVERYONE! Please help us spread the word via Facebook, Twitter, whatever you can. This is a great way for you to experience and learn about our community of theatre.

Do you work with another non-profit organization in the community that might like to team up with Beowulf to do some good? PLEASE let them know that we want to partner with other organizations to pursue a common goal of building and sustaining a strong, thriving, caring community. We are seeking volunteers for this event so if you can share a few hours, please contact Tristyn at contactlatenight@gmail.com.

We know how spontaneous our community is but we need some idea of how many will be attending. Please send us a reply to contactlatenight@gmail.com. Tell us Yes, No or Maybe, your name and how many might be coming just so we can get a rough idea of attendance, and please do not hesitate to ask questions. Please help support and promote not only Theatre Arts, but All Arts and the impact they have on the community and local economy, and the way they can truly help a community learn, grow and thrive. Thank you for your support throughout our 10 years.

 

PAGE ON THE STAGE - THE OUTRAGEOUS NEW PLAY FESTIVAL 2011


Beowulf Alley Theatre’s
PAGE ON THE STAGE
THE OUTRAGEOUS NEW PLAY FESTIVAL 2011

Beowulf Alley Theatre’s Page on the Stage program presents three new and exciting plays in workshop productions July 7th through the 24th at Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 South 6th Avenue, downtown between Broadway and Congress.

          Devin Gorman’s Icon tells the funny and moving story of a      writer and artist who is catapulted to fame, and her dark        secrets to get her there.

Jonathan Northover’s You Do Not Want to See This is a           twisting, turning mystery of two defense lawyers and two           suspects to a terrible crime

and
 



Gavin Kayner’s Stephen’s Syndrome is a dark, funny   frightening meditation on illness, the past and the power of      (dysfunctional) love.


Page on the Stage plays will play in repertory beginning July 7th. Please check beowulfalley.org for dates of each individual play. Show times are 7:30 PM and 2:00 PM weekend matinees, Thursday through Sunday. 

Pre-opening ticket special: $30 for a 3-play package or 1 play for $12 online at www.beowulfalley.org or by phone at (520) 882-0555. After July 6, $36 for 3-play package or 1 play for $15.

LNT presents HAMLET 1.0 by William Shakespeare


SUMMER PROGRAMMING
LATE NIGHT THEATRE
HAMLET 1.0
by William Shakespeare



Alex Greengaard as Hamlet

 
Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley, 11 S. 6th Avenue between Broadway and Congress, presents Hamlet 1.0 by William Shakespeare, July 29, 30, August 5, 6, 12 and 13 at 7:30 PM. For more information, contact Michael Fenlason at 520-977-5218.
Hamlet 1.0 is a multimedia, multiplatform telling of
Shakespeare’s classic tragedy using Shakespeare’s
language, original music and multimedia. Hamlet’s father has been murdered. Will Hamlet avenge the death?
Pre-opening ticket special: just $8, online at www.beowulfalley.org or by phone at (520) 882-0555. After July 28, tickets are just $10 online, by phone or at the door.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Andrew Rush Giclee Prints | Beowulf Alley Theatre Company | Art | Tucson Weekly

Andrew Rush Giclee Prints | Beowulf Alley Theatre Company | Art | Tucson Weekly

Andrew Rush Giclee Prints

When: Fridays, Saturdays, 6:45-7:30 p.m., Sundays, 1:45-2:30 p.m. and Fri., July 1, 2-6 p.m. Continues through July 31
Enlarged prints of Tucson cultural program booklet covers from 1977 to 1984 are exhibited in the lobby of Beowulf Alley at 6:45 p.m., Friday and Saturday; and at 1:45 p.m., Sunday through Sunday, July 31; and at the theater's anniversary celebration from 2 to 6 p.m., Friday, July 1. Free. The works also may be seen by appointment. Call for more information.

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Hamlet 1.0 Audition - Late Night Theatre

Hamlet 1.0 Audition

Late Night Theatre

Beowulf Alley Theatre

 

Auditions will be held at Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. 6th Avenue, Saturday June 11th from 10:30am-12:00pm to fill the role of Claudius in Beowulf Alley Theatre's Late Night production of Hamlet 1.0. No prepared monologue is necessary. Cold readings from the script sides will be provided. Both men and women will be considered for the role. No appointment is necessary. Please bring a resume and headshot if available or you can email them to contactlatenight@gmail.com.

 

Rehearsals are Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays starting at 10pm and are just beginning. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays, July 29th through August 13th at 7:30pm.

 

For questions, please e-mail contactlatenight@gmail.com.

 

 

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Supplemental Auditions For Rough Crossing

Beowulf Alley Holds Supplemental Auditions For

Rough Crossing

by Tom Stoppard

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre Company announces supplemental auditions for Tom Stoppard’s Rough Crossing, on Wednesday, June 8th, from 6:30pm to 8:00pm at the Theatre, 11 S. 6th Avenue, Downtown.

 

Rough Crossing is a delightful 1920s show-biz farce (with musical numbers by Andre Previn). Only two roles remain to be cast and they are both excellent parts for men 40-60.  Auditions will consist of cold readings from the script. Actors are asked to prepare a short song* (about 1 minute in length). Character descriptions are below.

 

ALEX GAL (GAHL): Middle aged playwright, half of the famous team of Turai and Gal, who are working on their next smash hit, The Cruise of the Dodo. Mr. Gal is quick, witty, and never far from the buffet table (but he need not look overweight or gluttonous).

 

IVOR FISH: Actor, aged 45 to 50. He has been playing the young and handsome rogue hero for going on 30 years.  He still carries a torch for his perennial co-star Natasha Navratilova, though of course, he is married to someone else.

 

The production is directed by Dave Sewell (Arcadia, Wait Until Dark, The Transylvanian Clockworks) and will run September 8th – October 2nd. Rehearsals are scheduled to begin late July. Email Dave at dndsewell@cox.net for questions or more information. Note: street parking is free downtown after 5, as is the lot at 6th Avenue and Broadway (behind the Chicago Store).

 

*Those concerned about singing outside of the shower need not worry. Both roles involve singing in a group: a great voice is not required. The ability to carry a tune in a wheelbarrow would be helpful.

 

 

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Tolerance in Tucson - Staged Reading

Tolerance in Tucson

What does Igor the Hunchback; Flatulence Jack; a Samurai and an old Arizona cowboy have in common with a Black, Jewish and gay Mayor (the trifecta of hate) and a Hispanic Sheriff with a Greek stepfather who thinks he’s the essence of Dirty Harry and Kojak? 

These quirky, silly and lovable characters are an integral part of the ensemble cast of Tolerance; a staged reading (live theatre performance) of a short film premiering at the Beowulf Alley Theatre, Wednesday, May 25th at 7:30 pm. The Beowulf Alley Theatre is located in Tucson at 11 South 6th Avenue.  Admission to the performance is free but reservations are required and can be made by calling 520-360-0565 or by emailing rhellertucson@gmail.com.  

According to Randall Heller, producer and author of the film, “Tolerance is a political satire that deals with human and civil rights issues including racial and social injustice, intolerance, hate, bigotry and violence.  Ultimately, the message of the film is unity through diversity achieved by non-violent interaction and cooperation.”  

“Besides being a conduit for the compelling issues of our time,” continued Heller, “Tolerance is also a silly, sophomoric project that pays homage to the films of Mel Brooks, to Airplane, Rocky and Bullwinkle, Dirty Harry and Kojak along with a little Abbot and Costello thrown in.”

Heller said he has been working on the project for more than a year. He also said he decided to produce the project as a staged reading, using more than 20 local actors in a live theatre venue, as a way of working out any potential kinks in the script as well as a way to generate some excitement and interest in the project.

“Our country, said Heller, “faces enormous challenges including the economy, jobs, education, lack of affordable health care for all and immigration reform. But instead of working together to solve these issues; certain groups and media pundits are spewing out hateful, divisive rhetoric challenging the legitimacy of our President; or adopting the attitude that ‘I’ve got mine so I don’t need to worry about yours;’ or forgetting the fact that education and affordable health care for all will allow this great country to compete in a global market, notwithstanding that it is a moral imperative and a basic tenet of the Judeo-Christian religions; or simply ignoring the fact that immigrants from all countries including Mexico helped build our great country.”

“Ultimately,” concluded Heller, “Tolerance is about love, kindness, compassion and respect.  And as the Old Cowboy says, understanding that these words and acts are gifts from God, gifts that make us stronger and provide the grit, the backbone we all need to stare down hatred, intolerance and bigotry.”

 

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Some heady fun, for sure

Some heady fun, for sure
by Kathleen Allen Arizona Daily Star | Posted: Friday, May 13, 2011
"Head: The Musical," playing at Beowulf Alley Theatre

The take-off of the 1962 B film 'The Brain That Wouldn't Die' is chockfull of campy characters, ridiculous situations and over-the-top songs. How can you not love it?
SCOTT GRIESSEL / COURTESY OF BEOWULF ALLEY THEATRE

Kristina Sloan is the bodiless Jan, and Jim Klingenfus is the mad Dr. Cortner's assistant (and victim), in "Head: The Musical" at Beowulf Alley Theatre.


There are some deliciously excessive characters in this, such as Evan Werner as Seductra, one of the candidates for a body for Jan. Seductra is all glittery and sexy and male. And Werner is divine.

So is Jim Klingenfus as Dr. Cortner's assistant (and victim) in the mad doc's transplant experiments. Klingenfus hasn't been on stage in some time - it's clear he ought to pick it up again. He has a keen sense of the macabre, and the audience felt his delight in his character.

Kristina Sloan did the bodiless Jan proud - some impressive eye acting there - and the rest of the cast, Fry, Lucas Rodriguez, China Young, Scott O'Brien and Tashiana Holt, all had so much fun with the production that it was contagious.

Mickey Nugent could be a genius - the choreographer threw in some fancy footwork for the actors and made them look as though they had been hoofing it for years. And Sheldon Metz's set design of a blood-stained laboratory was downright clever.

...it'll be a campy delight to which you can't wait to introduce your friends.

Read the entire review here: Some heady fun, for sure


Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Thursday Specials for Head the Musical!

Thursday Specials for Head the Musical!

Beowulf Alley Theatre

 

“An ‘R’-rated riot!”

- Kathy Allen, Arizona Daily Star

 

“You will never see anything like this anywhere else in Tucson!”

- Chuck Graham, Tucson Stage

 

Now that finals are over, come see what all the fuss is about at Beowulf Alley Theatre! In only its third production ever, Head! The Musical is Tucson’s must-see comedy of the year. This Thursday, May 12th, only you can choose between two special offers:

 

  1. The Groupie Special: Groupies and Head go together like cheese and bread. On Thursday the 12th, buy 2 tickets and get one free! ($23 discount) 

 

  1. The T&A Special: You know what T&A stands for – T-shirt and Admission! On Thursday the 12th, get a T-shirt and admission for just $30! ($13 discount) Just think – for the cost of one measly lap dance you can get 90 minutes of Head AND a sweet new shirt!

 

Bring a copy of this notice to the box office to enjoy one of these special offers.

 

Head! The Musical contains foul language and humor not suitable for children, nuns, priests, or the easily offended. But if you didn’t get that from the title, you probably don’t get out enough.

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre is located at 11 South 6th Avenue, just off Broadway in Downtown Tucson.

 

 

Out to Lunch Theatre's back with "The Reluctant Reunion"

Out to Lunch Theatre's Back with
The Reluctant Reunion

For those of you who like to get out for a different kind of lunch, give Beowulf Alley's Out to Lunch Theatre a try. It's a 30-minute play to entertain you and your friends for a little break in your day. Bring a lunch with you, or, if you like, you can order a lunch from us at least a day ahead of time and we'll have it waiting for you when you arrive. A ticket to see the play is just $6 in advance and $8 the day of the show. Lunches ordered from us are $7 and include a bag of chips and a drink.

Performances are on Fridays, May 13, 20 and 27 at 12:15 p.m. Order your tickets and meals online at http://www.beowulfalley.org/html/tickets.html or call the box office at (520) 882-0555.

This month's story is The Reluctant Reunion. Out to Lunch Theatre is fun for all ages!

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre is located in Downtown Tucson, just off Broadway at 11 South 6th Avenue.

 

 

Active Imagination Theatre presents COWBOYS AND FAIRIES

COWBOYS AND FAIRIES

Active Imagination Theatre at

Beowulf Alley Theatre

 

When greedy developers want to spoil a magical part of the desert, cowboys and fairies have to band together to stop them. This is the story that will be developed with the help of children ages four to eight on the stage with our Active Imagination Theatre at Beowulf Alley Theatre. There are just six more weekend performances at 12 noon through May 29, 2011. This 40-minute venture into creativity is both fun and educational for children and will bring joy to the hearts of their parents as they help to develop the story and find a resolution to save the desert. We encourage them to dress in their cowboy and fairy outfits and help our team of adult actors. Each performance is just a little different as the children who are present help to create the story through their active imaginations.

 

Saturdays and Sundays:

May 14, May 15, May 21, May 22, May 28, May 29

Online tickets: $8 adults, $5 children 4-12, children 3 and under are free when seated in parents lap. Tickets at the door or by phone are $10 for adults with children the same price as online.

There are just a few limited spaces for birthday parties so call the office today!

To purchase tickets, please go to www.beowulfalley.org, or call (520) 882-0555.

Beowulf Alley Theatre is located at 11 S. 6th Avenue. Doors to the lobby open 30 minutes before performance.

 

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Auditions - The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)

Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley Holds Auditions

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)

by Adam Long, David Singer and Jess Winfield

Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley will hold open auditions for The Complete Works of William Shakespeare on Saturday May 14th 2:00 p.m.- 4:30 p.m. at the theatre, 11 South 6th Avenue (Downtown between Broadway and Congress). Please bring a headshot and resume, if possible. The audition will consist of a cold reading from the script.

 

Rehearsals begin on May 16th and will be scheduled according the production team’s availability, usually some late nights, weekday evenings and weekends. Performance dates are June 17th, 18th, 2th, 25th and July 2nd.

 

Looking for:

Male (2) - 20s to 30s

 

Email Michael at michaelfenlason@aol.com with questions or for more information.

LNT presents The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)

Coming Soon to Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)

by Adam Long, David Singer and Jess Winfield

 

Late Night Theatre at Beowulf Alley, 11 South 6th Avenue, downtown between Broadway and Congress, presents The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) by Adam Long, Austin Tichenor and Reed Martin. Performances are Friday and Saturday, June 17, 18, 24, 25, July 2 at 7:30 PM. For more information, please contact Michael Fenlason at michaelfenlason@aol.com.

 

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) is an hilarious and madcap survey of all thirty-six of Shakespeare’s plays (and maybe some sonnets) in a frenzied and wacky one hundred minutes.

 

Tickets may be purchased, at least a day in advance, online at a discounted price of $8 at www.beowulfalley.org. By phone and at the door, the ticket price is $10.

Auditions - Page on the Stage festival

Beowulf AlleyTheatre’s

Page on the Stage

Holds Auditions

For Three Exciting New Plays!

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre’s Page on the Stage will hold open auditions for Icon by Devin Gorman, Stephen’s Syndrome by Gavin Kayner and You Do Not Want to See This by Jonathan Northover. Tuesday and Wednesday, May 10th  and 11th at 7:30 PM at the theatre, 11 South 6th Avenue (Downtown between Broadway and Congress). Please bring a headshot and resume, if possible. The audition will consist of cold readings from the scripts.

 

Rehearsals begin in late May and will be scheduled according to the production team’s availability.  Performance dates are July 7th through 24th.

 

Looking for:

Female (8) - mid 20s to 40s

Male (7) - mid 20s to 40s

 

Email Lydia at michaelfenlason@aol.com with questions or for more information. Include in the subject line: PAGE ON THE STAGE AUDITIONS

 

Page on the Stage is a festival of new plays performed in a spare, workshop production. The goal is to maximize the relationship between text, actor and audience to further enhance the play’s development, the audience’s enjoyment and the actor’s craft. This is a rare opportunity for actors to work with the playwright in the room and help create a new and exciting piece of theatre.

 

Monday, May 09, 2011

Head the Musical

Head the Musical

THIS TALKING HEAD ALSO SINGS
by Chuck Graham
TucsonStage.com
Nobody embraces risk more enthusiastically than downtown's Beowulf Alley Theatre Company. Eschewing all interest in "regular" stage fare, this fearless band of artists has opened its arms and its theater to a co-production with Phoenix playwright Kevin Fry of "Head: The Musical!"
The word "campy" needs more vowels to make it longer in this way, way over the top romp through naughty words celebrating bad taste and impulsive desires in the spirit of that late-night cinema classic that makes no sense, "The Rocky Horror Picture Show."
But it is the non-stop, damn the torpedoes, full-speed-ahead energy that makes this show so much fun . For sure, you will never see anything like this anywhere else in Tucson.

Read the entire review here: Head the Musical