AVT Presents THREE DAYS OF RAIN

4th October
2011
posted by Nalin
work by aj currado

Visit AVThespians.org for tickets!

Note that there is no performance on Sunday, November 13th.

NOVEMBER 4, 5, 6, 11, 12, 18, 19, 20
THREE DAYS OF RAIN
by Richard Greenberg

Produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, New York.

A year after he disappeared on the day of his father’s funeral, Walker Janeway returns to New York. Here he finds a clue to his troubled past: “April 3-5: Three days of rain.” So begins the curious journal of Ned Janeway, the father that Walker thought he knew. In Act II, we travel back in time to the mid-1960’s, where we are offered an alternative, unexpectedly romantic perspective of the family story. A many-layered drama peppered with witty moments that make us smile, Three Days of Rain ultimately questions every one of those little stories that we tell ourselves—the ones we need in order to make sense out of life.

Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 4pm. There is no performance on Sunday, November 13th.

This play contains strong language. We do not recommend it for young children.

Remaining tickets not sold in advance online will be available at the door, 30 minutes prior to curtain, via cash or check only. 

The Friday Nov. 5th performance (opening night) is our PATRON PREVIEW NIGHT. Patrons of AVT get in free, and all other tickets are just $5.

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Antelope Valley Thespians presents:THE AMERICAN CENTURY

posted by Nalin
AJ Currado

Antelope Valley Thespians presents:THE AMERICAN CENTURY
By Murphy Guyer

Produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, New York.

World War II has ended and Tom, just discharged from the Army, returns to his young wife, Margaret, full of hope, enthusiasm, and dreams of a bounteous future. But suddenly they are joined by a brash young stranger who, to their amazement, proceeds to make himself very much at home. He is, he explains, from the future, having arrived via the latest drugs in special psychotherapy session. The stranger fills the young couple in so completely about their past and present lives—and the future which awaits them—that Tom and Margaret soon find themselves moving from incredulity to panic. In the most casual, blithely humorous manner, the stranger tells of a world gone mad in this hilarious and intelligent satire of our modern American lives.

Six performances: May 13, 14, 15, 20, 21, 22 (Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays 2pm).

Starring SARAH ALLEN, MATHEW GRUCA, and DEAN BERG.

All performances to be staged at the Antelope Valley Winery, Avenue M and 20th St. W. Wine tasting and purchasing will be available prior to each performance.

For electronic ticketing, select your performance and enter a contact email below. Clicking “Buy Now” will take you to a secure PayPal transaction page (you will be able to adjust ticket quantities before purchase). Walk-up ticketing will be cash only, and available on a first-come basis. Walk-up tickets cannot be held or reserved. All tickets are non-refundable.

Check the AVT Website for Purchase information and more details.

Antelope Valley Thespians Host Writers Event

Playwrights Concept Workshop

(post written by Nalin for AVThespians.org)

AVT invites local and regional playwrights of all experience levels to join us at a concept workshop next Thursday, March 31st from 6pm to 8pm at Sagebrush Cafe in Quartz Hill. Directors and company members will be on hand to discuss your works in progress or questions you may have regarding your scripts or ideas. Main image

This is a concept workshop intended for early-stage or planned works. Please come prepared with a summary of plot, themes, characters, etc if possible.

This is also a great launching point for ScriptFrenzy! in the month of April, if you will be participating in that.

Please see our Playwrights Page for more information about how we work with local writers. For any further questions, please contact productions@avthespians.org.

Hope to see you there!

Antelope Valley Thespians: February Writer’s Briefing

posted by Nalin

One of the main goals of AVT is to produce original work by playwrights local to Quartz Hill and the Antelope Valley. Seeing your play undergo the production process gives you a great insight into how your script might be interpreted by a director and actors.

This season, we will be bringing to the stage our first production written by a local playwright, HUNGER FOR PARADISE. Check out our 2011 Season for more information.

If you are a local playwright looking to write for the stage, please join us Saturday, February 26th at 1pm at Sagebrush Cafe in Quartz Hill.  AVT will hold a Writer’s Briefing to describe the nature of our company and to discuss upcoming events with local writers.  We will also have our directors available for Q&A on what we are looking for and why.

You can find out more information about how we work with playwrights on our Playwrights page.

Go See It! Antelope Valley Thespians present…

posted by Nalin

CROSSINGS
by Barbara Schneider

Produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York.

Nov 12-21
Fri/Sat 8pm, Sun 2pm

Starring Sarah Arnac, Sarah Bialobroda, Joe Gruca, and Kara McCollum.

Directed by Karen Gruca.

A moving and thought-provoking story of the love between a father and daughter, separated by place and perspective. What is right and wrong in times of war? A journey across the years since WWII looks at our own vulnerability to the easy habit of indifference in present-day America.

Tickets $8.

Web ticketing is available now through the day prior to each performance. Walk up purchases for any remaining tickets, via cash or check only, will be available on a first-come-first-served  basis starting 30 minutes prior to each performance.

AVT operates in a fully-functional, blackbox theater built into a private residence at Almond Valley Way, Lancaster, CA 93536.  Business hours are strictly limited to 30 minutes prior to a performance until appx 1 hour afterward.

AVT Presents: CROSSINGS

Written By Nalin @ AVThespians.org

Antelope Valley Thespians presents:

CROSSINGS


by Barbara Schneider

Produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York.

Sept 12-21
Fri/Sat 8pm, Sun 2pm

Starring Sarah Arnac, Sarah Bialobroda, Joe Gruca, and Kara McCollum.

Directed by Karen Gruca.

A moving and thought-provoking story of the love between a father and daughter, separated by place and perspective. What is right and wrong in times of war? A journey across the years since WWII looks at our own vulnerability to the easy habit of indifference in present-day America.

Tickets $8.

Web ticketing is available now through the day prior to each performance. Walk up purchases for any remaining tickets, via cash or check only, will be available on a first-come-first-served  basis starting 30 minutes prior to each performance.

AVT operates in a fully-functional, blackbox theater built into a private residence at Almond Valley Way, Lancaster, CA 93536.  Business hours are strictly limited to 30 minutes prior to a performance until appx 1 hour afterward.

Adding to recent action, AVT announces…

29th August
2010
written by Nalin

AVT is holding open auditions for CROSSINGS by Barbara Schneider.  Rehearsals will be twice weekly for approximately 2 hours per rehearsal, starting as soon as roles have been cast.  There will be 6 performances from November 12-21, Fri/Sat 8pm and Sun 2pm.

Auditions will be by cold reading on Tuesday, September 7th, from 6:30-9:00pm in the AVT garage black box at  [street address information available on AVT’s website] Lancaster, CA 93536.  Please contact the stage manager, Courtney Marietta (cam@avthespians.org) if you intend to audition.

A probing and compassionate look at the constantly changing relationship between a German musician who lived through the Second World War in Nazi Germany, and his daughter who emigrates to the United States to become a political activist.  The play begins in postwar Germany with a father telling his young daughter the old and familiar story of his escape from a prisoner-of-war camp. In ensuing scenes, the daughter grows up and begins to question her father’s passive behavior during the war. Though he tries to defend his actions as a rational response to the time and place he lived, his daughter remains skeptical. It is only when the daughter realizes her own vulnerability to the easy habit of indifference, in present-day America, that she truly begins to understand her father.

There are four roles available, each of which must be able portray a range of age:

Katja (young) – female, character age is 8-12.

Katja (grown up) – female, character age is 20-30.

Papa – male, character age 40+.

Anna Marie – female, character age 40+.

___________________________________________

CROSSINGS is produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York.

Producer: Nalin A. Ratnayake
Stage Director: Karen Gruca
Artistic Director: Kara McCollum
Production Stage Manager:  Courtney Marietta

Announcement Found at: http://www.avthespians.org/productions/category/production/

Read more on Antelope Valley Thespains at their website.

Talk About Art

-by eric martin 

How can you help bring more cultural life to your community? This is a question I have asked myself and discussed with my friends.

As a coffee shop owner with a gallery space in my business, I am especially interested in the arts and in a lively interest in culture in my community, but I am not alone.

For every one person who wishes out loud that there were more opportunities to show art and more places to see art there are ten people who would take advantages of these opportunities – if they existed. Small scale art events are just as good as large scale art events in my opinion.

Often a good little gallery show can be more stimulating than a vast museum collection. The focus of a smaller show can be more easily concentrated and cohesive than larger shows and can make for an intimate experience. In a gallery setting we can feel often that we are in the presence of the mind of the artist.

Small scale art shows, in a gallery, are as valid and relevant to our sense of cultural experience as larger shows. This is worth keeping in mind when contemplating how to best support, promote and participate in your local arts scene.

Recently in the Antelope Valley of California a community of artists have undertaken some very interesting arts projects. These projects, presented in unique contexts, have successfully created “traditional” cultural experiences in non-traditional contexts.

A group of artists consisting of painters, ceramic artists, and photographers put on a show and workshop based in one of the painter’s houses. The event was open to the public and served to draw in the community at large and to display the fact that people are doing the work of creativity in the Antelope Valley – in their homes and private lives, and they are willing to share that work.

Another project takes theatre into an unlikely space – a private garage. The Antelope Valley Thespians consist of a group of people dedicated to the idea of theatre as an essentially socially engaged medium which can happen anywhere there is a will.

 These are just two examples of small scale culture, where the arts are brought to life in a community of people who desire opportunities to engage in the arts.

Success, for these cultural events, is measured in the same general way that success is measured for any audience-based event. Did anyone come? Of course, the expectations and the specific threshold numbers are adjusted to the scale of the event and the size of the venue. But the challenge for a garage theatre or an art gallery is identical to that of a large playhouse or museum.

In a word, the challenge is communication.

People won’t attend events they don’t know about.

People won’t buy tickets to a show if they have not heard that there is a show going on.

Somehow the fact that these events exist must be communicated to those folks who might be interested in attending.

For a museum like the MOCA (Museum of Contemporary Art: Los Angeles) or the MOMA (Museum of Modern Art: New York City), the public already knows that the institutions exist. The challenge then becomes one of keeping people interested in what is happening now. In the case of smaller groups or galleries or smaller museums, the challenge is larger because there is less awareness that they exist at all.

These cultural purveyors are asking themselves the same question that opened this discussion: How can we help to support and promote the cultural life of our community?

In a way, we have already answered this question. As artists, we can just do things.

Put on a show. Gather a group and host a performance. Open our houses. Invite painters to show work at our businesses. Bring friends to our favorite galleries in our communities.

Talk.

Blog.

Write.

As we said, the small scale cultural events are as valid and relevant as large scale events. This is also true of how we can spread the word about cultural events in our communities.

Two, three or five more people at a gallery opening can make a real difference as to whether or not that show meets its goals for success.

In the end, culture is about the picture we keep in our heads that describes what kind of creatures we humans are, what kind of minds. So the ultimate cultural success lies in the act of communication, in sharing an idea.

For all of us who want to live in a culturally rich and culturally alive community, we can help to make that wish come true by making a simple effort to pass on the idea, pass on the word that an idea is on display at the gallery down the street, or blog about where to find this idea or that idea in a garage or coffee shop near you.

eric martin is a local writer of the antelope valley, slinging coffee at Sagebrush Cafe in the daylight hours.

AV Arts & Culture

 June promises to be a great month for arts and culture in the Antelope Valley.

Gallery News: Static/Electric – paintings by Michael Jones  

            A vibrant new art show is now on display in the Sagebrush Cafe gallery space. Michael Jones paints across genres, with a focus on graphic, urban-influenced imagery as well as purely abstract forms.    

             Static/Electric

            Opening Reception

            Saturday June 5th

            6pm to 8pm

The AV Thespians are performing Beyond a Reasonable Doubt from June 4 -13 (check out their website for details.) Main image

Tickets are on sale now online and at Sagebrush Café.

In addition to a new gallery show at Sagebrush Café, the Lancaster Museum and Art Gallery is hosting an interesting new show based around the four ancient principal elements – fire, water, air and something.

The Lakes & Valleys Art Guild Gallery ( Lake Hughes Road ) is opening a new show as well as holding a photography contest.