Cortland Repertory Theatre's second production of the 2010 summer hits the ground running as they present "the funniest farce ever written" according to the British Theatre Guide: "See How They Run" by Phillip King. First produced in London in 1943, when wartime evening blackouts were the routine, the West End theatres defiantly stayed lit to show this and other similar hysterical plays and farces. In fact, during one performance, three bombs went off far above the theatre, but not a single person left. The only reaction was one of the actors complaining that the sounds of the bombs drowned out his best laugh lines!
Performances of CRT's "See How They Run" will literally ‘run' from June 23rd - July 2nd with evening performances at 7:30. Matinees are available on June 25th, 27th and 30th at 2:00 PM. The show will close one evening earlier than usual, on Friday July 2nd, to accommodate the annual July 3rd holiday in Dwyer Park. Consequently, a performance has been added on Sunday night, July 27th at 7:30. Tickets may be purchase by calling 800-427-6160 or at the CRT Box Office at 37 Franklin Street in Cortland. Tickets are also available for sale 24 hours a day through the CRT website at www.cortlandrep.org.The story takes place in the vicarage of the sleepy village of Merton-cum-Middlewick where a new addition to the community - Penelope Toop, a former American actress and the new wife of the local vicar - riles the church ladies because she is seen wearing pants in public. When Penelope is visited by a former acting partner and current American soldier, Corporal Clive Winton, the pair plans to relive their glory days on stage by sneaking out to see a local production of "Private Lives". Since the theatre is out-of-bounds for troops, and since the vicar is away for the evening, Clive slips on the vicar's "second best suit", and off they go. This begins a night of confusion and mistaken identity when soon, no less than five vicars (though not all genuine) are joined by a cockney maid, an escaped Russian prisoner, and a tipsy church prude tasting alcohol for the first time, all running in and out of the numerous doors of the vicarage, trying to either catch or avoid each other.Videos