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Vaudezilla Productions, Inc. Presents
"Rollin' Outta Here Naked: A Big Lebowski Burlesque
Featuring Red Hot Annie, Maria May I, Donna Touche, Trixie Sparx, Viva La Muerte, and Logan Connor as "The Dude"
September 3-25, 2010
Upstairs Mainstage
"Rollin' Outta Here Naked: A Big Lebowski Burlesque" is a nationally-recognized, critically-acclaimed, box-office smash hit that will be remounting in September 2010. Don’t be out of your element! Join Vaudezilla Productions for an epic variety show featuring your favorite Bums, Achievers, and What-Have-You from the classic Coen Brothers film.
So slip on your favorite jellies, grab the ringer, mix a White Russian, and head on down to Greenhouse Theater this September for a night of sexy fun that not even Jackie Treehorn can beat!
And be sure to get your tickets NOW, because we sold out every single show last year. This is going to be one hot ticket, so don’t look for a handout, man! Go out and achieve anyway!
Expect over $200 in gifts/prizes given out at every performance, courtesy of sponsors TBA. Plus Vaudezilla’s infamous swag bags to the first 60 people into the theater each night!
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Time of Your Life Players Presents
What’s to Fear?
Book by Avrum Krause
Music by Bryan Dunn
Directed by Avrum Krause
October 6 – November 6, 2010
Downstairs Studio
“What’s To Fear?” is an original one-act musical comedy about a man who decides to retire and then receives an unexpected call from his doctor after a routine physical. How the ensuing events affect Joe, his family and friends is the basis of this new, life-affirming musical, where we discover what is really important in life.
Group Pricing is available through the Box Office. Call 773.404.7336 for more information.
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Hubris Productions Presents
Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune
by Terrence McNally
Directed by Jacob Christopher Green
November 18 – December 31, 2010
Downstairs Studio
Featuring Patricia Savieo and Dennis Frymire
The setting is a walk-up apartment on Manhattan's West Side where, as the curtain rises, Frankie (a waitress) and Johnny (a short-order cook who works in the same restaurant) are discovered in bed. It is their first encounter, after having met several weeks ago on the job, and Frankie is hopeful that Johnny will now put on his clothes and depart, so she can return to her usual routine of watching TV and eating ice cream. But Johnny, a compulsive talker (and romantic), has other ideas. He is convinced that he loves Frankie, a notion that she, at first, considers to be ridiculous. She has had more disappointments than delights in life, and he is the veteran of one broken marriage already. And neither of them is in the bloom of youth.
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Eclipse Theatre Company Presents
A Memory of Two Mondays
By Arthur Miller
Directed by Ensemble Member Steven Fedoruk
September 2- October 17, 2010
Upstairs Studio
Set in a 1930s Brooklyn automobile parts warehouse with a strong cast of richly detailed characters, Miller draws on his own personal experience to explore the monotonous struggle to make a living and the dreams of a young man yearning for a college education in the midst of people stumbling through life in a haze of hopelessness and despondency.
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