News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Dialogue with Three Chords to Present THE PARTING GLASS, 3/24

By: Mar. 15, 2016
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Dialogue with Three Chords (D3C) celebrate a bloodier side of New York City's Irish legacy with THE PARTING GLASS. Set in Hell's Kitchen in 1983, The Parting Glass tells the story of two brothers and their best friend trying desperately to survive a terrible mistake. Written by playwright Stephen Gracia and directed by Michael LoPorto, the show starts at 8pm on March 24, downstairs at Mr. Dennehy's 63 Carmine Street, New York, NY 10014.

Admission is free with a $3 suggested donation, but this month all donations and book sales will be donated to the Brooklyn College BFA Acting Program's showcase. The BFA acting students fund their own showcases, where they present their work to agents and casting directors. As a frequent collaborator, D3C is proud to help support their work.

Gracia joined with LoPorto to co-found D3C in Greenwich Village in 2011. The theatrical collective is now in its fifth season of producing original theatre.

"The Parting Glass" features: Charles Everett, Ramona Floyd, Kendra Leigh Landon, Anthony Marino, Sean Meehan, and Anthony Noto and Greg Skura.

More information on Dialogue with Three Chords can be found at: www.dthreec.org

More information on the Brooklyn College BFA Acting program can be found at: http://depthome.brooklyn.cuny.edu/theater/programs_undergrad_bfa_acting.html

Dialogue with Three Chords was founded by Stephen Gracia and Michael LoPorto and applies the do-it-yourself philosophy of punk to the stage and features short plays and live music. Their work has also been produced at HERE Arts Center, Dixon Place, The SOHO Gallery of Digital Art, Sargent Theatre, Makor Theater, DUMBO Theatre Exchange, Levenson Hall at Brooklyn College, and the Theaters at 45 Bleecker.

The Brooklyn College BFA Acting program offers intensive courses in Stanislavsky-based acting, Alexander technique, improvisation, voice production, diction and dialects, solo performance, stage combat, the business of acting, acting with the camera, and theater history.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos