The Fine Arts Center Theatre Company presents a biting social satire, The Women, at the SaG?Ji Theatre from March 25 - April 10.
The Fine Arts Center was founded by three visionary women in April of 1936: Alice Bemis Taylor, Elizabeth Sage Hare and Julie Penrose. In that same year, Clare Boothe Luce wrote a brilliant contemporary comedy that became a modern classic, featuring an all-female cast of nearly 40 characters, set in the world of high society wives in New York City during the height of the Great Depression."Our founders built the Fine Arts Center to serve the community," said Sam Gappmayer, the FAC President and CEO. "As we celebrate our 75th Anniversary, we honor our founders and all female artists, actors, volunteers, instructors, and staff, who make the FAC special."The plot involves the efforts of a group of women to play their respective roles in an artificial society - the established socialites, the up-and-comers - digging under the surface, revealing a human understanding for and sympathy with each other.· Luce was familiar with the New York society scene. She wasn't a fan. As associate editor of Vanity Fair, she began writing satirical pieces about New York society.
· She married Henry R. Luce, publisher of Time and Life magazines in 1935.
· She then wrote The Women in 1936.
· In the 1940s, she traveled to battlefronts in Europe, China, and, Burma as a war correspondent for Life magazine and was a two-term U.S. Congresswoman (R- Conn.).
· In 1951, she was nominated for an Academy Award for screenwriting for Come to the Stable.
· She was appointed U.S. Ambassador to Italy in 1953 by President Eisenhower
· President Reagan awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1983.
Tickets and Show times
Thursday 7:30 p.m. $26 FAC members; $31 non-members
Friday, Saturday 7:30 p.m. $30 FAC members; $35 non-members
Sunday 2:00 p.m. $26 FAC members; $31 non-members
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