The
North Carolina Stage Company in downtown Asheville, North Carolina announces
its 2017-2018 Season. Voted best local theatre by the Mountain Xpress Best of
WNC Poll on ten different occasions, North Carolina Stage Company has been
producing professional theatre for Asheville residents and visitors since 2001.
The upcoming season productions includes witty comedies, insightful dramas,
heartwarming stories, music and more!
Season
Passes for the 2017-2018 season are on sale now at www.ncstage.org and offer several wonderful
benefit. Subscribers can see all six mainstage productions for the cost of
five, receive advanced notice and special discounts to the inaugural Summer
Series, priority seating and free unlimited ticket exchanges.
2017/2018 Season
King Mackerel and the Blues are Running by Bland Simpson & Jim
Wann with Don Dixon & J.L. Mills September 20-October 8, 2017
Tall tales and
rollicking songs transport audiences to the Outer Banks for a pleasant spate of
fun and fishing. Staging a benefit concert to save the Corncake Inlet Inn, the
lively cast of fishermen musicians sing up a storm, tell fish stories and ghost
stories, and relate accounts of first loves and ones that got away.
"A pure
salt watered delight...For a near vacation experience, it would be hard to
beat." - N.Y. Times
Rapture, Blister, Burn by Gina Gionfriddo — October
25-November 19, 2017.
After
grad school, Catherine and Gwen chose opposite paths. Catherine built a career
as a rock star academic, while Gwen built a home with her husband and children.
Decades later, each woman covets the other’s life, commencing a dangerous game
of musical chairs—the prize being Gwen’s husband. With searing insight and
trademark wit, this comedy is an unflinching look at modern day gender
politics.
“…intensely smart, immensely funny…RAPTURE more largely
illuminates how hard it can be to forge both a satisfying career and a
fulfilling personal life in an era that seems to demand superhuman achievement
from everyone.” —NY Times.
All is Calm: The Christmas Truce of 1914 by Peter
Rothstein — December 6-December 30, 2017. This captivating story relives a
poignant moment in history when Allied and German soldiers laid down their arms
to celebrate the holiday together during WWI — with traditional patriotic and
holiday songs from both sides of the Western Front interspersed with the actual
words of the soldiers who lived it.
“These miracles are what make All Is Calm such a pure example
of what was meant when angels first declared, ‘Peace on Earth.'” –Star Tribune
The Twelve Dates of Christmas by Gina Hoben — November 29-December 23,
2017.
After
seeing her fiancé kiss another woman at the televised Thanksgiving Day Parade,
Mary’s life falls apart — just in time for the holidays. Over the next year,
she stumbles back into the dating world, where “romance” ranges from weird and
creepy to absurd and comical. It seems nothing can help Mary’s growing
cynicism, until… This heartwarming story offers a hilarious and modern
alternative to the old standards of the holiday season.
Jeeves Takes a Bow Adapted by Margaret Raether—January 24-February 18, 2018.
British
upper crust meets the New York mob in the witty play JEEVES TAKES A BOW.
Everyone’s favorite hapless hero, Bertie Wooster, embarks on an American
adventure armed only with his handsome fortune, his talent for trouble, and his
remarkable manservant, Jeeves. In less than a New York minute, Bertie finds
himself knee-deep in troubles with vengeful gangsters, chorus girls, and a new
Broadway musical.
Other Desert Cities by Jon Robin Baitz — March 14-April 8, 2018.
Brooke
Wyeth returns home to Palm Springs after a six-year absence to celebrate
Christmas with her parents, her brother, and her aunt. Brooke announces that
she is about to publish a memoir dredging up a pivotal and tragic event in the
family’s history—a wound they don’t want reopened. In effect, she draws a line
in the sand and dares them all to cross it.
“Spending time with these messed-up, complicated people is a
genuine pleasure.” —NY Post.
Burden by Ron Bashford and Willie Repoley – April 25-May 20, 2018.
What do you
gain by lying to yourself? An original play four years in the making, Burden
tells the story of a journalist in pursuit of truth and justice, while being
unwittingly blind to both. It is a new American play inspired by classic
American themes, created by frequent NC Stage collaborators Ron Bashford and
Willie Repoley.
"And the old
hunger returned – the terrible and obscure hunger that haunts and hurts
Americans, and that makes us exiles at home and strangers wherever we go." – Thomas Wolfe
The North
Carolina Stage Company is
located at 15 Stage Lane in downtown Asheville and
has been producing professional theatre in its 125-seat playhouse since
2001. It continues its commitment to artistic excellence, intellectual
exploration and education during the 2017/2018 Season. For information on
season passes, upcoming productions, educational opportunities and much more,
call the theatre’s box office at (828)239-0263 or visit www.ncstage.org.
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