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No plays are currently on stage, but here is a look at the Youth Theatre Season Calendar.
ALEXANDER AND THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD, VERY BAD DAY
November 6 - November 14 2009 [ Peformance Schedule ]
Have you ever had one of those days where everything goes wrong? Alexander has! From the moment he wakes up with gum in his hair, things just don’t go Alexander’s way. At breakfast his brothers Nick and
Anthony reach into their cereal boxes and pull out amazing prizes, while all Alexander ends up with is . . . cereal. The situation doesn’t get any better at school. And after school Alexander’s day goes from bad to worse. It’s no wonder he wants to move to Australia! In Australia, everything is upside down, so maybe a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day can become a wonderful, terrific, really good day. Don’t miss this really great musical about a really bad day!
THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE
March 5 - March 13 2010 [ Peformance Schedule ]
This enchanting stage adaptation of the C. S. Lewis classic captures the spirit of the original with cleverness and charm. Four young adventurers playing hide and seek in the country home of an old professor stumble upon an enchanted wardrobe that will take them to places they never dreamed of. Stepping through the wardrobe into the frozen land where the White Witch now reigns, they must find the courage and faith to join Aslan the Lion in a valiant battle to restore beauty and hope, and to earn their places as kings and queens of Narnia. Join us as we journey to the ends of the world with this timeless classic that children cherish and adults adore.
HOME ON THE MORNIN' TRAIN
April 30 - May 8 2010 [ Peformance Schedule ]
Two historically turbulent times, separated by 100 years and thousands of miles, are beautifully interwoven in this inspirational story of hope and connection.
The year is 1939, Berlin, Germany. Rifka and her little brother Aaron are sent into hiding with the Westemeiers, a rural German family, in the hopes of escaping Nazi persecution. While waiting for a boat that will take them to the safety of Denmark, Rifka reads from a book sent by relatives in America. It is a first-person account of a runaway teenage slave named Brave Mary who escaped an Alabama plantation in the 1830’s. As Brave Mary’s escape unfolds before them and they are introduced to the history of slavery in the United States, the Jewish children realize that those who long for freedom travel the same road.
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