Upcoming Events:
“It’s Only a Play” by Terrance McNally
Nov 17th – Dec. 5th.
This riotous comedy explores the collaboration behind the craziness as theatre artists grapple with the fate of their new Broadway play on opening night.
It's the opening night of The Golden Egg on Broadway, and the wealthy producer (Julia Budder) is throwing a lavish party in her lavish Manhattan townhouse. Downstairs the celebrities are pouring in, but the real action is upstairs where a group of insiders have staked themselves out in the producer's bedroom, waiting for the reviews to come in. Included are the excitable young author; the brilliant but unstable director (who courts failure and is devastated when his work is well received); the pill-popping leading lady (who is hoping to revive her career after a series of flop movies); and the playwright's best friend, an egotistical but insecure comic actor who passed up a chance to star in the play for a television series—which has since been cancelled. Also present are a fawning, hypocritical drama critic (who is a closet playwright); a would-be singer working as a part-time servant; and a hard-boiled lady taxi driver who has seen it all, many times over. The good natured bonhommie with which the evening begins grows steadily bitchier—and funnier—as the reviews (all bad) come in, and those assembled seek desperately to pin the blame on each other. But, as euphoria slides into despair, the narcissism, ambition, childishness and just plain irrationality that infuse the theatre and its denizens take over, and as the curtain falls plans are eagerly afoot for their next venture—this one sure to be the hit they have all been hoping for.
Pompadour
by Molly Best Tinsley
Winter 2012
A local playwright with a national reputation has given ACT the premier rights to this one-woman show. Molly Tinsley offers us an intimate look at one of the world's "firsts." Jeanne Antoinette, Madame de Pompadour, Mistress to Louis XV of France, was the first woman to attain political power without being born to it or marrying into it. Though a mere commoner in aristocratic France, Pompadour used her talents as an actress and muse to become the official mistress, confidant, and de facto prime minister to the king. Maintaining her power by her wits for over 20 years, she left an indelible mark on the political and artistic legacy of France for generations to come---though at a terrible cost to herself. Performed by Producing Artistic Director, Jeannine Grizzard
Moonlighting Readings Series of short plays by local playwrights will also be presented from time to time throughout the season.

