PUFFS Will Open in Denver This Friday
Lost and Found Productions will present the regional premiere of PUFFS or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic. Performances will be February 7 through 29, 2020 with shows Friday and Saturday nights at 7:30 PM. Tickets are $15 in advance/$20 at the door/$13 for groups of 6 or more in advance only. All performances will be at The Evanston Center at 2122 S Lafayette Street. Tickets and more information available online at www.LostandFoundProductions.net.
Lost and Found Productions Brings PUFFS To Denver!
Lost and Found Productions is thrilled to present the regional premiere of PUFFS or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic. Performances will be February 7 through 29, 2020 with shows Friday and Saturday nights at 7:30 PM. Tickets are $15 in advance/$20 at the door/$13 for groups of 6 or more in advance only. All performances will be at The Evanston Center at 2122 S Lafayette Street. Tickets and more information available online at www.LostandFoundProductions.net.
CenterStage Theatre Company Emerging Artists Series to Present TRIUMPH OF LOVE, 7/25-8/11
CenterStage Theatre Company Emerging Artists Series is proud to present the regional premiere of "Triumph of Love," a delightfully witty musical based on the French eighteenth century Commedia dell'Arte play by Marivaux about philosophy, deception, and what happens when the messy world of love smashes into a world of idealism and rationality. Performances run July 25 through August 11at the Louisville Center for the Arts, 801 Grant Ave., Louisville 80027.
Vintage Theatre Presents CITY OF ANGELS, 2/1-3/3
Winner of the 1990 Tony Award for Best Musical, "City of Angels" is two shows in one. It is the interweaving of two plots, one dealing with the writing of a screenplay in the legendary Hollywood of the '40's; the other, the enactment of that screenplay. This double feature quality leads to many other unique production values, the most notable being the fact that "City of Angels" is perhaps the only "color coded" show any theatre audience is likely to see. The movie scenes appear in shades of black and white, and the real life scenes are in Technicolor. The show boasts two musical scores. One provides the cast with numbers to help reveal certain emotions or to celebrate particular moments in the way that only music can. The "other" score was written to emulate pure move soundtrack music, 1940's vintage. It is entirely appropriate, then, that the final curtain comes down on two happy endings.