Showing posts with label Theater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theater. Show all posts

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Theater Review: Medea | Resident Ensemble Players

By Steve Lanahan
Theater reviewer Steve Lanahan was born, raised, and lives in north Wilmington. He is a nerd, mead enthusiast, and servant to his cats.

The Resident Ensemble Players (REP) brings the ancient Greek tragedy Medea to the stage at the Roselle Center for the Arts. First produced in 431 B.C.E., this play asks important questions that remain relevant, even in this modern day. What is the role of a woman in society? How far is too far? Are the Fates truly so cruel?

Medea’s (Elizabeth Heflin) nurse (Kathleen Pirkl Tague) opens the performance with the tale of how they came to be in the kingdom of Corinth. She tells of how Jason (Stephen Pelinski) came to Medea’s home of Colchis, how she fell madly in love with him, and her terrible acts on his behalf. They were wed, she bore him two children, and they made a life together in Corinth. Now Jason has betrayed her and intends to marry Princess Creusa, daughter of King Creon (Hassan El-Amin). The nurse does not hold back her anger at Jason or her fear of what Medea will do.

This betrayal leaves Medea heartbroken, ashamed, and furious, and she vows revenge. Her despair and rage are so great that King Creon, fearing for his life as well as his daughter’s, banishes her from his kingdom. She begs him for a single day to prepare for her travels, pointing out that her sons (Nicholas Farrel and James Muzzi), Jason’s sons, would suffer. The king relents and grants her a single day.

Medea only needs one day to plan and take her revenge. Though she struggles with what she feels she must do, Jason helps by coming to chastise her for ruining his plan to give her and their children a better life by marrying this young princess. He feels his betrayal of their marriage is justified by his goals. She names him an oath breaker, and he counters that she got the better end of this deal. After all, he brought her from her barbarian home to civilization, and now she speaks to kings and gods.

In the end, Medea’s revenge takes everything from Jason, even his children. All throughout this chilling tale, the Chorus speaks in despairing tones, taking on the voices of the women of Corinth. They speak in disjointed patterns, sometimes from the sides of the stage, other times on the stage, and later among the crowd. They never hesitate to add context for their reactions nor show horror at what is happening.

Elizabeth Heflin's stunning performance as Medea embodies the range of her suffering. Despair, rage, and grief are plain and raw. Every time Medea steps on to the stage, there is a feeling of dread, because the tragic end is coming. Heflin ensures that none can look away from the wrath of Medea's revenge.

Kathleen Pirkl Tague, as Medea's nurse, sets the tone for the play and leaves dread hanging in her wake. The first to take the stage, her anger at Jason's actions is palpable, eclipsed only by her fear at what Medea might do. In the final lines, she leaves no question that what is to come will be spoken of in horror for all the ages. The performance is powerful, a fitting opening and final note that leaves no choice but to stare this tragedy head on and think about it for days to come.

The simple stage setting focuses attention on Medea’s suffering, King Creon’s fear, and Jason’s unrepentant pride. Theatrical fog hangs about the stage, giving everything a gloomy edge, a feeling intensified by the haunting music. Strobe lights are used in concert with the soundscape to highlight thunder and Medea’s escape.

This tragedy has withstood the test of time, and the REP’s excellent adaption shows that it will continue to endure. The ending is not a happy one, but it is cathartic. The questions this play will raise will continue to haunt us through the ages.

Medea will run Thursday through Saturday at 7:30pm, with an additional show on Sundays at 2pm, until April 30. The run time is approximately 90 minutes with no intermission. The Roselle Center for the Arts is located at 110 Orchard Road, Newark, DE 19716. Visit the REP's website or call the box office at 302.831.2204 for details.

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

A Taste of "Arsenic and Old Lace" at The REP

By Mike Logothetis
Theater reviewer Mike Logothetis grew up in North Wilmington, performing in school and local theater productions. He lives in Newark, but you can find him wherever the arts are good.


Arsenic and Old Lace playing now through November 20.
Photo courtesy of The REP.
The University of Delaware’s Resident Ensemble Players (REP) kicks off its 2022-23 season with the great American farcical black comedy, Arsenic and Old Lace by Joseph Kesselring.

This enduring play, originally staged on Broadway in 1941, continues to astound audiences with its ingenious and brilliant construction. The current production at the REP carries on the grand tradition of the show and entertains from opening curtain to curtain call.

“Some of you may have heard the pandemic radio version of the play and now you can see the real thing. It’s about two older women that relieve older gentleman of their loneliness by killing them with arsenic. You can think of it as a euthanasia comedy.”
— Steve Tague, the REP's new Interim Producing Artistic Director.

The show revolves around the odd members of the Brewster family in their stately Brooklyn home. Mortimer Brewster (Mic Matarrese) is living a happy life in the large old mansion. He has a good job as a drama critic at a prominent New York newspaper and he’s just become engaged to his neighbor Elaine Harper (Erin Partin). His spinster aunts Abby (Kathleen Pirkl Tague) and Martha (Elizabeth Heflin) dote on him and are adored by the community. They even look after and protect Mortimer’s quirky brother Teddy (Lee E. Ernst) who believes he is Teddy Roosevelt.

Mortimer’s world is turned upside down when he discovers that his dear aunts have been quietly poisoning lonely old men and burying them in the basement for years. Aside from this new revelation, long lost maniacal brother Jonathan (Stephen Pelinski) returns on the night that the aunts are planning to bury their newest victim. His somewhat unwilling partner Dr. Einstein (Michael Gotch) adds ghoulish layers to Jonathan’s mysterious past. Mortimer must rally to help his aunts, foil his brother’s nefarious plans, and protect his fiancĂ© – all while trying to maintain his own sanity. Even the local cops (Rob Hancock and John Plumpis) become part of the action, both good and bad; albeit unwittingly. Put it this way, the plot is always swirling… As Abby Brewster says, “How delicious!”

The beautiful set design and construction is the first thing that catches the eye upon entering the theater. It is a wonder of planning and carpentry that includes fine wooden details, wallpaper, portraits, animal heads, and doors…so many doors. Kudos to Stefanie Hansen and her crew.

The actors all shine, but the menace is real when Pelinski’s Jonathan looms on stage. Matarrese does a great job of looking peaceful one minute and utterly distressed the next. His physical and mental exhaustion from the escapades he faces puts the audience on his side. 

The show is funny throughout, but the comedic highlights mostly happen in the second act with many quick and clever jokes. Aunts Abby and Martha (Heflin and Tague) always aim to please and drop some great deadpan one-liners while doing so. The old women just want what’s best for everyone they meet, even believing that serving their killer elderberry wine is a neighborly service. It is, but solely for our entertainment!

My suggestion is to plan an evening out in Newark to enjoy some great theater, but watch out for the apparent kindness of elderly female strangers.

Arsenic and Old Lace will run through November 20 at Thompson Theatre inside the Roselle Center for the Arts (CFA) on the campus of the University of Delaware. Evening shows start at 7:30 and curtain is at 2 for matinees. The performance runs approximately 2 hours and 40 minutes, with two 10-minute intermissions. 

Tickets ($35-39) can be purchased at the theatre box office or online. Please call the box office at (302) 831-2204 or e-mail cfa-boxoffice@udel.edu for information. 

For more information, visit www.rep.udel.edu.

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Writer-Director Returns to Delaware to Film Newest Project at Cab Calloway

Delaware Arts Info connected with Maren Lavelle and Matt Steiner, Co-Founders and Executive Producers at film and television prodcution company One-Eyed Rabbit, to talk about their new film Wendy, which was filmed onsite at Cab Calloway School of the Arts, with current Cab students. Here Maren talks about the development of the film and the process of creating it here in her hometown. 

P.S. This interview's a bit lengthy, but it was so great, we didn't want to cut anything! ENJOY!

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?
Images from the filming of Wendy, which was
shot on location at Cab Calloway School of the Arts.

I don’t think I knew being a filmmaker was an option for me growing up. My mom was disabled and unable to work, so we didn’t have a lot of money and couldn’t afford a camera. Also, I grew up before young people had access to smartphones, so there hadn’t yet been the boom of technology that made filmmaking way more accessible to those outside of Hollywood.

I always knew I wanted to be a writer and a storyteller. When I was very young I wanted to be a journalist. As I grew up I wanted to be an actor. It wasn’t until my senior year of high school that my mentors told me I should focus on directing. I was like… “too late guys, my parents already spent thousands of dollars for me to audition to go to college for acting!” But by the time I graduated from Pace University with a BFA in Acting I knew I should be writing and directing.

Starting to work with Matt Steiner, my producing partner and, now, life partner, is when filmmaking really clicked into gear for me. When it comes to crafting a story for the screen, our strengths seem to fill in the other’s weaknesses. Being able to work in such a strong unit is what has really made filmmaking a reality for me.

When you were a student here, what were your favorite films or films you looked to for inspiration?
When I was a student in Delaware, I was heavily influenced by films like Ben-Hur, Dances with Wolves, Lawrence of Arabia, Amadeus, Singing in the Rain, etc. My Dad was a sucker for a good Oscar winning movie, so we would spend hours upon hours on the weekends watching some of the greats. Some of my favorites growing up were Forrest Gump for its impeccable story structure, Titanic, because you can’t find a better love story than that, and Legally Blonde, which I still to this day think is a perfect movie.

Why did you want to make this film?
Matt, my partner, wrote this film back in 2019. I always loved the story. It was so simple and sweet. One of the big inspirations for Wendy was being able to create something that could give young Queer folks their own over the top, in your face, middle school love story. With an abundance of content out there featuring young boy-girl love stories as the main plot point, we wanted to give representation to the young Queer students that deserve to see themselves reflected on the screen.

But as far as actually taking the steps to produce the film, Cab Calloway School of the Arts and the Cab 8th Grade theatre majors are what made me want to make this film happen! Once we started to ponder the idea of making this film at Cab right now with the current 8th grade theatre majors, it just seemed like we had to make the film and we had to make it now.

Whereas with our previous films we were definitely making the films for ourselves, either as a proof of team, for me to be able to direct, or for Matt to be able to act, making this film was almost entirely for the Cab students. I was very focused on the educational aspect of providing the students with the experience of working on a professional film set at such a young age. I thought a lot about how amazing an opportunity like working on this film would have been to me at that age, as it would’ve opened up so many more possibilities to me than I knew were available at the time. I wanted these students to be able to experience that and see for themselves what it’s like to make a film from scratch!

Do you feel this story represents the culture you experienced at Cab as a student? How do you see Cab's culture now?
It’s so interesting because Cab is a very unique school as far as acceptance goes. Of course, it is still difficult in any setting to be able to navigate the social hierarchy that is middle school or high school when you’re an LGBTQIA student and/or a person of color… but Cab certainly leaves more space than most schools for acceptance of any sexual orientation, gender identity, race, religion, etc.

The story of Wendy is certainly representative of the culture at Cab. At Cab, it’s so easy to talk to your teachers about what you’re going through when you need advice. Identifying as gay or Queer is pretty common place at Cab. Though I think the eponymous character, Wendy, feels more hesitant to be publicly out than she would at the real life Cab, I still think the story of Wendy is something that would 100% happen in the halls of Cab Calloway School of the Arts.

I graduated from Cab nearly 10 years ago, and though Cab was quite progressive in a lot of ways back then, it has grown even more so in the decade since I graduated. Working with Cab students now, I found the students to be way more comfortable in themselves and even more widely accepted, even at younger ages than high school, than was the case during my attendance. The students are also way more politically active and involved than I remember me and my comrades being. They are active and vocal allies for underprivileged folks, and use social media as a tool for making long lasting change in the society they will soon inherit.

What about Cab Calloway made it your choice for location?
Matt Steiner & Maren Lavelle of One-Eyed Rabbit.
Photo by Dondre Stuetley
Cab was an obvious choice for this film, but funnily enough it took me two years since I originally read the script to realize that. Returning to the Cab halls and working with Cab students was the main impetus for producing this film when we did.

Cab was an ideal location for multiple reasons, for one: the community. Being able to have the Cab community rally around this film and help make it happen was so wonderful and fulfilling. Also, I knew the caliber of student actors at Cab was going to be significant compared to anywhere else we could have filmed.

Also, the full circle nature of returning to Cab as an adult to work with the students and direct this film was a huge part of the choice and experience. It was SO fulfilling to walk those halls and see the imprints I still had on the school: my senior photo and a photo of my childhood dog are still up on the board of one of my high school teacher’s rooms, I’m in a photo of the school jazz choir from 2010 that’s up in the halls, and my name is on a plaque on one of the front row seats in the school’s theatre. Returning to the school and seeing how present I still was, while also giving back to the community and the current students by providing this opportunity was unlike anything I could have ever imagined. The experience was so nostalgic and incredibly rewarding, and I can see the influence that had on the film as well.

Did you tap any of Cab's theater students for this film? Any other Cab 'resources'?
Absolutely. Ava Ramey, incoming Cab freshman, played our lead, Wendy, and Lexie Rubincan played opposite her as Wendy’s crush, Cassie. The rest of the recently graduated 8th Grade theatre class from Cab filled out our featured ensemble. These students are REMARKABLE. The talent is insane. Working with Ava and Lexie was more wonderful than I could have imagined. The two are best friends, which helped provide an incredible intimacy on screen, but besides that, they jumped right into these very challenging and nuanced roles without missing a beat.

Long shoot days are no joke, and these young women were in every scene working for 10 hours a day two days in a row. That’s longer than a typical school day! And I did not take it easy on them! But they were beyond professional and continued to give vulnerable and subtle performances that blew the script out of the water. I can’t believe the luck we had in being able to work with these incredibly professional and remarkably talented rising young actors.

We used the Cab premises for our film, including the theatre, hallways, and classrooms. We were so grateful to work with Amanda Curry, the 8th Grade theatre teacher, who helped us organize auditions for the film and helped us with the logistics of production. Brian Touchette, the theatre manager at Cab, was invaluable in ensuring we had all the equipment we needed for filming and helping us use the recently renovated theatre and all of its capacities to help tell our story as honestly and artistically as possible. Julie Rumschlag was the dean at Cab when I attended back in 2008 - 2012, and she was so supportive of our venture every step of the way.

The support from the Cab community has been incredible, and I’m so grateful to every person who helped make this film a reality.

What do you want audiences to come away with after seeing it? Where can they see it?
Wendy should fill audiences with a sense of wonder, magic, and glee. We want our film to reach young folks who otherwise might not see themselves reflected on screen in this way. We want LGBTQIA students to see their story fully realized in the film: we hope those students leave the film feeling seen, heard, and recognized. I hope non LGBTQIA audiences still leave feeling seen and recognized. It’s a relatable story, we’ve all had that deep, all-encompassing teenage crush that we can’t get off of our mind. I think we’ve captured that essence really well in this film. I hope people leave the film and share stories of their most wonderful and most embarrassing moments with their crushes throughout their lives.

Wendy will be submitted to a wide array of film festivals! @one_eyedrabbit will send updates via social media on where audiences can find Wendy as it makes its way around the festival circuit.

 
Did you always envision this film being shot in here or was that a 'happy accident'?
Originally we conceptualized filming Wendy in the Bronx, in a school that Matt has been teaching in as a teaching artist for several years, the students of which inspired the characters of Wendy. But the making of the film didn’t actually spring into action until I came up with the idea of filming it at Cab and casting the Cab students. Once we latched on to that, there was no stopping it, and there was something beautiful about returning home to make this film.

What was the most rewarding thing about coming "home" to shoot this movie? What was the most challenging?
Ohmygosh, so many things. The most rewarding thing was working with the Cab recently graduated 8th graders/rising 9th graders on this film. They were so eager to be a part of this process and they were all so passionate about being involved in a Queer love story, whether they indetified as Queer or not. I also got to work with Emma Altrichter, a recent Cab high school graduate, as my Assistant Director. Most of the students hadn’t worked in film before, and I hadn’t either at their age. I felt like I was giving back to Cab and the current Cab students some of the energy and momentum that Cab gave me when I was there. Community is so important, so being able to plug back in to create this beautiful film with such talented people was absolutely fulfilling.

The most challenging part of producing the film in Delaware was the logistics! Producing indie films is no joke, and since we’re filmmakers based in Brooklyn, we had to work to find a local crew that we thought could help us realize our vision despite not having worked with any of them before. But the team we came up with was magic. My first choice for this film, and for most of my films, was to find a non-male cinematographer who I could easily collaborate with, and for Wendy I found that in Sol Tran. Sol rose to the challenge of an incredibly ambitious film schedule, a big cast, and a determined director and turned out remarkably beautiful shots while managing to get all the coverage we needed. We couldn’t have made this film as well without that combination of professionals.

What is your favorite part of this movie and why?
There are so many parts of this film that I love, but my favorite part is a relatively simple scene between Wendy and her mentor, Mr. Hansen (played by Matt Steiner). It’s not the most showy or colorful scene in the film, but that scene is the essence of the film, the idea that you have to put yourself out there in order to live a fulfilled life. You have to try and sometimes fail, but then get back up and try again. That applies to career ventures, life obstacles, but most importantly, love. Mr. Hansen says a line to Wendy: “You can’t live your whole life in your head, you know?”, and that’s exactly what the film is about. At a certain point, you have to jump off the diving board into the pool of the unknown and risk heartbreak or humiliation, but it’s the only way to learn and grow.

Do you get to come back to Delaware often? What do you miss most about Delaware? Any shout-outs you want to give?
I do come back to Delaware quite often! My ever growing family is still in Delaware. My Mom, Tara Bowers, a local costume designer for Delaware theatres who also costumed our film, lives a short drive from Cab and Matt and I come home to Delaware every couple of months. My niece, Charlie, is two years old and we love watching her grow and learn! And I have a nephew who is arriving at the end of July 2021!

I’ve always loved Charcoal Pit and Pizza by Elizabeth’s, and Woodside Creamery is an absolute summer staple. Can’t miss Lewes and Rehoboth Beaches in the summer too!

What is next on your creativity list? What can we see from you next?
One-Eyed Rabbit has two other films in the film festival circuit that folks can look out for, our debut films Maya and Keeper. Next up we’re looking to produce more of our short films including The Lie and Molly: In Progress. We’re hoping to get funding for our horror feature She Howls, or any of our other short film, feature film, and series pitches.

We can’t stop making work though, so one of those projects will be in production as soon as we have funding!

Learn more about Maren and Matt's projects at www.one-eyedrabbit.com!

Friday, July 19, 2019

Candlelight's Classic "South Pacific" Carries Modern Message

By Charles "Ebbie" Alfree, III

Candlelight Theatre continues its 50th season with Rodgers & Hammerstein’s musical, South Pacific. Although written in the 1940s, some of the show’s themes still resonate with our society’s current social climate.

South Pacific runs through August 25 at Candlelight Theatre.
Photo by 
Tisa Della-Volpe.
Director and Choreographer, Renee Dobson does a superb job bringing this romantic show back to the stage. Two relationships are blossoming on a south pacific island during World War II. Nellie Forbush, a naĂŻve U.S. Navy nurse from Arkansas, is falling for Emile de Becque, a debonair French plantation owner who escaped France many years ago to live on the exotic Bali Ha’I island, while Joseph Cable, a lieutenant sent to the South Pacific to perform a dangerous war mission, is falling for Liat, the daughter of a civilian Tonkinese vendor and friend of the American Seabees, “Bloody Mary." Wanting a better life for her daughter, Bloody Mary is hopeful Cable will marry Liat.

However, life is not just a bowl of jello for the for the four characters. Both, Nellie and Cable are open-minded, but still have to contend with prejudice ideology instilled in them by their families. Nellie is grappling with accepting Emile’s children from his previous marriage to a Polynesian woman, and Cable is torn about loving Liat because of her ethnicity. Both understand their thoughts are based on what they were carefully taught, not the thoughts that either particularly believe are right or true.

The heaviness of the love stories and the war occurring around them are lightened with comical moments mostly provided by Bloody Mary and the American Seabees working on the island, especially during the service men’s stirring numbers, Bloody Mary and There is Nothin’ Like a Dame. Two songs that get the toes a’ tappin!

Ms. Dobson maintains a great pace for the show. Classic musicals tend to be long and can drag if not under the strong supervision of a talented director like Ms. Dobson. The continuous movement of the show is in part due to Scenic Designer, Jeff Reim, who created stunning sets that move seamlessly on and off stage. Timothy Lamont Cannon’s costumes perfectly capture the era of the greatest generation and allow the actors to move and dance freely.

Colleen Clancy as Nellie and Peter Campbell as Emile are superb. They both greatly convey the emotional turmoil their characters are experiencing. And, both are exceptional singers. Mr. Campbell’s baritone voice is transcendent and melts the room, especially during Some Enchanted Evening, while Ms. Clancy, brings smiles on faces during her exuberant number, I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outta My Hair. 

The leads are supported by many fine performers, including Andy Spinosi as the heroic Cable. He finds the right tone and expression needed to convey the significant lyrics in You’ve Got to be Carefully Taught...truly showcasing his masterful vocal techniques. Angelica Feliciano radiates as Bloody Mary. Her stunning rendition of Bali Ha’i captivates and transports the audience to the enchanted island. She along with the wonderful Jared Calhoun as the loveable but always scheming Seabee, Luther Billis, provide comedic relief for this show about war and suppressed love. I would be remiss not to mention the exuberant Seabees and nurses, who are fabulous during their exciting dance numbers!

Don’t miss this classic that still has lessons for our society to learn about love and acceptance. 

For tickets, visit www.candlelighttheatredelaware.org or call 302.475.2313.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

A Merry Romp at Rockwood with DelShakes

By Carol Van Zoeren
Carol is a 40+ year veteran of community theater and retired from DuPont.

I delight every year in DelShakes’ summer festival in Rockwood Park. As far as I’m concerned, it ain’t summer if I haven’t seen Shakespeare at Rockwood! 

It’s been a joy to watch DelShakes evolve over these 17 years (yes, I’ve seen every show). From their start at Archmere Academy, to staging at Rockwood in front of the mansion, to creatively locating the stage at the perfect spot on Rockwood grounds. As a friend noted, “It just gets better every year!” 

Bradley Mott (Falstaff) and Amy Frear (Mistress Ford) in The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Photo by Alessandra Nicole.
Throughout their history, DelShakes’ mission has been to make Shakespeare accessible to all. And they continue to innovate toward that mission, most notably with the addition of the Community Tour in the fall.

DelShakes is ideal for those with little exposure to, and maybe a little nervousness about, Shakespeare. The program always includes a detailed plot synopsis. And during the delightful pre-show picnicking, the audience can enjoy and learn from the student apprentices’ “regular” language preview of the plot. This year, the preshow highlight is a funny homage to the musical Chicago.

The Merry Wives of Windsor is a particularly accessible play. Shakespeare set the play in his contemporary England, and focuses on the domestic dramas of the middle class. In her notes, Director Krista Apple describes Merry Wives as “An Elizabethan sitcom.” Apple sets her production in the suburbs of the 1950s, but this sitcom is no Father Knows Best. It’s more reminiscent of 1990s sit-coms like Home Improvement and Everybody Loves Raymond. As in many of Shakespeare’s comedies, the men are...shall we say, misguided... and the women are the real brains of the operation.

In his set design, Lance Kniskern picks up the suburban theme with the structural outlines of two houses. The partial staircase elements tipped me off that these are the quintessential home of the suburbs 
 the split-level. These structures easily represented a number of locations around the neighborhood. My only quibble is that I was a bit confused with the stage left house  the actors sometimes went through the doorway and other times narrowly skirted downstage of the doorframe, making it difficult to know if the scene was indoors or outdoors.

Merry Wives is often considered a showcase for the character of Falstaff, ably played by Bradley Mott. But what struck me in this production is what a wonderful ensemble piece it is. Through voice and physicality, each actor clearly embodies exactly who their character is, as well as the relationships between them. Brett Ashley Robinson and Amy Frear convey the genuine affection between Mistresses Page and Ford. Gregory Isaac revels in the whiplash jealousy of Master Ford. David Pica squeezes every bit of absurdity from Dr. Caius. 

I was pleased that the college apprentices are prominently featured, moreso than I recall from past shows. Each actor embraces their moment to shine, and together, the ensemble delivers non-stop hilarity.

I encourage everyone, especially Shakespeare newbies, to bring a friend, bring a picnic, and enjoy DelShakes The Merry Wives of Windsor. Maybe Shakespeare at Rockwood Park will become as much a cherished summer tradition for you as it is for me.


Thursday, September 6, 2018

Two Organizations to Call The Grand Home This Season

This post content courtesy of a press release from The Grand Opera House...

 In front of The Grand. Pictured clockwise, top left:
Melissa Bernard, actor & Fearless Improv member;
Grace Tarves, actor; Jana Savini, Fearless Improv Director;
Kerry Kristine McElrone, CTC Interim Artistic Director;
Joe Trainor, CTC Music Director. Photo by Joe del Tufo.
Mark Fields, Executive Director of The Grand, is pleased to announce the addition of two new resident companies to The Grand’s roster of artistic partners in the building. Effective immediately, City Theater Company (CTC) and The Rock Orchestra (TRO) will perform their mainstage seasons at The Grand at 818 North Market Street.

“The non-profit Grand Opera House is a shared asset that we manage on behalf of the residents and citizens that we serve,” says Fields. “Having The Grand now be the artistic home for these organizations gives us the opportunity to more fully connect to the community and share the joy of the performing arts with more members of that community.”

"The Grand Opera House has been the heart of the performing arts scene in Wilmington for as long as I can remember," says The Rock Orchestra co-founder, Matt Urban, "Having TRO present our shows in partnership with this treasured community organization is an incredible opportunity." Co-founder Joe Trainor concurs, "Not only is it an honor to perform in these spaces, but it allows us the flexibility to develop our productions into 'must-see' events and make them available to a wider audience."

"As we head into our 25th year of programming, and my first as Interim Artistic Director, I am excited for the possibilities ahead for City Theater Company as we move to a resident space within The Grand,” says Kerry Kristine McElrone, CTC’s Interim Artistic Director. “The Grand is a community built on relationships, and I'm thrilled to be renewing ours so that our patrons can continue to remain an integral part of the art we do. Our brand of up-close-and-personal theater will be well-served in Studio One, where we can create worlds that immerse our audiences in the emotion and the action right alongside our actors.”

Resident companies are local or regional performing arts groups that make The Grand their primary artistic home, sharing their art on The Grand’s stages and collaborating on marketing initiatives and other projects. City Theater Company and The Rock Orchestra join the Delaware Symphony Orchestra, First State Ballet Theatre, and Opera Delaware are all resident companies of The Grand.

“The Grand is all about partnerships,” says Fields. “We partner intensely throughout each season with numerous arts organizations, individual artists, and other types of business to advance our own mission and benefit the entire community. Our resident companies are even more in-depth partners since we share these stages and this wonderful building.”

Patrons can purchase tickets to upcoming performances of The Rock Orchestra, City Theater Company, First State Ballet Theatre and The Grand’s own music, variety, comedy and Broadway seasons:

Online at TheGrandWilmington.org 
• 302.652.5577 • 818 North Market Street, Wilmington.