International City Theatre artistic director Shashin Desai has announced the five plays that will make up ICT's 2009 season.
"We're pleased to offer our audiences a mix of music, comedy and drama that will both inspire and entertain," said Desai.
The 2009 schedule is as follows:
The Threepenny Opera by
Bertolt Brecht and
Kurt Weill - Feb. 20-March 22 (previews Feb. 17-19)
The nefarious thief and murderer Mac the Knife has just gotten married, and his sinister in-laws want his head. With its innovative score influenced by American jazz and 1920s German Cabaret, this first-of-its-kind pop opera became one of the most influential plays of the 20th Century. The trail-blazing musical collaboration of dramatist
Bertolt Brecht and composer
Kurt Weill transformed the musical theater with this deliciously dark satire of "respectable" society that features dashing thieves, saucy prostitutes and lingering melodies.
Is He Dead? by
Mark Twain, adapted by
David Ives - May 1-May 24 (previews April 28-30)
The West Coast premiere of a newly discovered comedy by the master of American humor,
Mark Twain. A struggling artist stages his own death to drive up the price of his paintings in a zany, hilarious and sly critique of the art world. As the riotous scheme unfolds and crazy complications ensue, Twain poses daring questions about fame, greed and the value of art, poking his signature, mischievous fun at everyone involved.
Facing East by
Carol Lynn Pearson - June 12-July 23 (previews June 9-11)
The Southern California premiere of Pearson's eloquent and multifaceted play about the challenging intersections of faith and family, diversity and love. Ruth and Alex McCormick are an upstanding Mormon couple reeling from the suicide of their excommunicated homosexual son. But when they meet their dead son's partner for the first time, they must come to terms with their own inner demons and the love they lost.
Bright Ideas by Eric Coble - Aug. 28-Sept. 20 (previews Aug. 25-27)
The Los Angeles area premiere of Coble's gleeful, Macbeth-ian black comedy about the nurturing instinct gone haywire. Genevra and Joshua Bradley are convinced that placement in the correct preschool will ensure their soon-to-be four-year old son's future success in life. Although the Bradleys registered their son for Bright Ideas Early Childhood Development Academy on the day he was born, he's still stuck on the waiting list, so the fretting couple takes matters into their own hands - with dire and downright Shakespearean results. Macbeth meets MacParenting in this new comedy of homicidal proportions.
Songs for a New World by
Jason Robert Brown - Oct. 16-Nov. 8 (previews Oct. 13-15)
Soaring melodies and irresistible rhythms mark this collection of story-songs by composer
Jason Robert Brown (13, Parade). Sixteen driving, exquisitely crafted songs tell sixteen unique stories peopled by characters of today - songs for a new world.
International City Theatre is the resident, professional theater at the Long Beach Performing Arts Center, and the recipient of almost 200 awards including the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle's most prestigious honor, the Margaret Harford Award for "Sustained Excellence in Theater." For further information, the public should call International City Theatre at (562) 436-4610 or visit online at
www.ictlongbeach.org.
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