SEASON 2023/2024
Irrevocable
Irrevocable
This season, prepare to be captivated. Welcome to a season where boundaries are shattered and love knows no limits.
From the uproarious comedy of GAY CARD to the enchanting tale of SLEEPING WITH BEAUTY to the timeless romance of SHAKESPEARE’S R & J,' this is a season that celebrates the irrevocable power of our community.
Musical
Musical
Musical
GAY CARD is the hilariously heartwarming story of Logan Kapler, a one-friend loser who has never belonged. But now he's starting college with a trick up his sleeve: he's gay. Gay people are awesome; therefore, he will be awesome. Except his new college housemates don't agree (#fail). They revoke his "gay card" and deem him not-awesome-enough-to-be-gay instead. Determined to prove them wrong, Logan embarks on a quest to earn his gay card. But when his dream life leaves him lonelier than ever, he must learn that there are some insecurities you never grow out of — before he loses the only two people who truly love him.
panto
panto
ADULT PANTO
Princess A’whora has finally come of age though a terrible curse from the wicked fairy Carab*tch means one prick in her hand and she’ll perish! With the help of the fabulously thorny Fairy Hanny, will the Queen and Muddles get in a spin? Or will the scantily clad Prince Albert have to get his chopper out?
Find out in this filthy fairytale strictly for grown ups!
Adaptation
Adaptation
A Modern Adaptation
Four young prep school students, tired of going through the usual drill of conjugating Latin and other tedious school routines, decide to vary their very governed lives. After school, one breaks out a copy of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, and they all take turns reading the play aloud. The Bard’s words and the story itself are thrilling to the girls, and they become swept away, enmeshed in the emotion so much so that they break school rules in order to continue their readings. The rigidity of their lives begins to parallel the lives of the characters in the play: roles in the family, roles in society, and the roles played by men and women soon seem to make all the sense in the world, and then, suddenly, they seem to make no sense at all. Although they had been taking turns playing all the parts, two eventually emerge playing Romeo and Juliet exclusively, bringing a whole new dimension to the proceedings. Perceptions and understanding are turned upside-down as the fun of play-acting turns serious, and the words and meanings begin to hit home and universal truths emerge.