

Davis, a cocky but successful book editor, attempts to cheer up Matt, a down-on-his-luck insomniac writer, by hiring a prostitute. "Red Light Winter," written by Adam Rapp, is about college roommates, Davis and Matt, who take a trip to Amsterdam. "We are providing supplies, logistics, knowledge and connections to foster the growth of young theater artists in the Lehigh Valley."
#Anything goes script online free
"We want to help create a more vibrant, diverse and free theater scene in the Allentown area," says Sottile. Josh Neth of the Allentown Public Theatre is lending the students lighting equipment and John Mortenson provided his Soft Machine art gallery space. This weekend they will get their wish with the help of several groups who are hoping to revive the downtown Allentown arts community.ĭaniel Sottile, the artistic director of the Firebird Theatre, a new Allentown theater company, says Firebird is helping the students stage "Red Light Winter." Firebird helped them find a space, provided lumber and staff to construct a set and is assisting with publicity. Muhlenberg seniors Paul Bayley, Ryan Killeen and Lauren "Saky" Satkwich wanted to work together on stage ever since they took Bill Mutimer's acting class at Muhlenberg during their freshman year. Following the April 29 matinee, there will be a talk with the director and cast. Tickets: $24 $22, students and seniors, Tuesday through Thursday $27 $25, students and seniors Friday through Sunday. May 5, Labuda Center for the Performing Arts, DeSales University, 2755 Station Ave., Center Valley. Sunday, through May 6, with additional performances at 8 p.m. "Anything Goes," opens April 25, then runs at 8 p.m.I will be very happy when this ship sets sail." Building this ship has been hard work but a lot of fun. "They call these ships 'cruise ships' but they are not cruising, they are crossing the ocean. Neuert says people no longer understand the mystique of ocean liner travel. The show opens in a Manhattan bar and then moves onboard the ship, where there is one scene in a lounge and another in a night club. Neuert says the new script also calls for additional scene changes. In fact this ship can do a lot of things that ships don't do." "This set is built for musical comedy and our stairways can be removed when they need to be removed. In his 1993 design, you could only enter the ship through the gangplanks, but this time there are movable stairways. Neuert has taken some theatrical liberties with his ship. I also liked the streamlined look of the United States, although it was built years later." "I loved the Normandie because its art deco lines fit in with the period. Neuert, who has been in love with ocean liners since he was a boy and his mother took him to see the great liners in New York harbor, researched both the Normandie and the SS United States for his details. "In our former production, we put the orchestra on stage on the third deck, but since we have a larger orchestra this time, we put it back into the orchestra pit, which gives us a larger stage area." "There are a lot of references to such well-known institutions as the Louvre and the Mona Lisa, but some of the names of society people of the day have been changed."Īnother change from the 1993 production is in the set design, says designer Will Neuert. "The new script keeps all his references to Yale," says Razze, adding that Porter was a proud graduate of Yale.

In a way, it is like many of the celebrity cruises of today." "Everyone on this ship is there to be seen and to see celebrities, even criminals. "I love the way the show parodies our love of celebrities," says Razze. The hero, Billy Crocker, stows away to pursue his hopeless love for heiress Hope Harcourt, who is engaged to marry British aristocrat Lord Evelyn Oakleigh.

The story focuses on the madcap antics of society leaders, criminals and con men aboard an ocean liner bound from New York to London. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton, and rewritten by the famous Broadway team of Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse. "Anything Goes" was based on a book by English satirist P.G. The score is filled with Porter's witty lyrics and a lovely score that includes such unforgettable classics as "You're the Top," "Friendship," "I Get a Kick Out of You," "It's De-Lovely," "Blow, Gabriel, Blow" and, of course, "Anything Goes." "His gift for using rhyme and alliteration as tools to deliver wit and pun is virtually unmatched in musical theater history." "Cole Porter is one of the American musical theater's most honored wordsmiths," says John Bell, chairman of DeSales performing arts department.
