Showing posts with label Salado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salado. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2013

Austin Statesman's Gary Dinges Reports Closure of the Silver Spur Theatre, Salado


It's ironic that ArtsJournal.com picked up this short article about the closing of the Silver Spur Theatre, Salado from the Austin Statesman's business page and circulated it nation-wide.


 A search of the Statesman establishes that other than occasional mention in arts events listings, the paper has published only three articles about the Silver Spur: this one about the closing, an elegiac March 2 photo essay by Andy Sharp, and a November, 2012 piece about a Christmas radio play. 


Austin Live Theatre published 36 'upcoming' pages for the theatre over the past four years, drawn from the extensive releases crafted by Preston Kirk.


By the way, the Silver Spur wasn't a 'community' theatre. It did indeed serve a community, but it wasn't an amateur outfit. The Spur was the enterprise of a handful of hard working artist-entrepreneurs who didn't manage to find a way to attract enough customers to keep the lights on.


Austin Statesman



Grainger Esch Silver Spur Salado Andy Sharp
(photo: Andy Sharp)

  Salado community theater shutting down


By Gary Dinges, American-Statesman Staff
Business section, March 18, 2013



A community theater in Salado has fallen on tough times and will close its doors for good at the end of this month.


While Silver Spur Theater’s attendance and revenue have grown since it opened in 2004, co-owner Grainger Esch said rising expenses have made it financially unfeasible for the venue to remain open.


The theater, home to a variety of Vaudeville-style shows, film screenings and live music, garnered national attention in 2008 when it hosted a wedding rehearsal after-party for Jenna Bush, daughter of former President George W. Bush.


“It’s just not sustainable,” Esch said. “The locals in Salado always thought this was a good thing to have, but there aren’t enough people to support it.”


Salado, which is about an hour north of Austin in Bell County, had 2,161 residents as of July 2011, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.


Out-of-towners helped boost business during peak tourism periods – spring, summer and the holiday season – but at other times of the year there were more than a few empty seats, Esch said.


“We needed tourism traffic to help this work, and there hasn’t been as much as we’d hoped,” he said.

In a bit of irony, the Silver Spur’s final production, “Schtick Happens,” sold out this month, according to Esch, and encore presentations were added.


“It was great, a joy,” he said. “Everyone had a blast.”


A few private events are scheduled to take place at the Silver Spur through the remainder of March, then Esch will begin selling off props and other items to theater groups elsewhere. Anything not sold will likely be auctioned, he said.


While the theater’s closure might be unfortunate, a Salado hotelier said he doesn’t expect it to significantly impact other businesses in the area.


“Tourists would come here to do other stuff, then wind up there – not the other way around,” said Rob Petro, owner of the Inn at Salado. “It was more of a distraction than a destination for most of them.”


While the Silver Spur is gone for now, Esch said he expects theater will one day return to Salado.


“It’s been a good run,” he said. “I’m proud of what we did, and I’ve got a good outlook about what’s ahead.”


Grainger Esch (photo: Andy Sharp via Austin Statesman)
Grainger Esch (photo: Andy Sharp)

Monday, February 18, 2013

Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, Closes Doors with Final Variety Show on March 1, 2013




Salado Silver Spur Theater Closes Permanently on March 1  

Professional theater shuttering after eight years of shows, concerts, events, weddings

  For more than eight years, the Silver Spur Theater and its diverse band of entertainers – The Spuradical Players – delighted in reviving a bygone era of family entertainment, offering its trademark blend of vaudeville acts, live music, stage plays and classic cinema.

Business conferences, reunions, concerts, fundraisers and field trips also filled the first class venue, lovingly renovated in the historic Guest & Sanford Grain & Feed Co. at 108 Royal St.


In the Village of Salado, a major IH-35 tourist destination long known for its Stagecoach stop and inviting Hill Country creek, park museums, art galleries, B&Bs and festivals, the Silver Spur Theater was a bastion of night-time entertainment.

 
Even President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura had “tripped the light fantastic” within its walls for the wedding rehearsal after-party for daughter Jenna Bush and fiancĂ©e Henry Hager. 


Now it’s time for the last dance. The theater’s final performance will be a one-night-only variety show, “Schtick Happens,” at 7 p.m., Friday, March 1. Admission is $18 for adults; $15 for senior citizens, military personnel and students with ID; and $10 for children aged 12 and under.
 
For directions or more show info, visit www.saladosilverspur.com. Reservations recommended for the 150-seat venue. Also, the theater will offer expanded food choices in its lobby.



Click for additional information at www.AustinLiveTheatre.com. . . .

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Upcoming: Christmas Is On The Air, Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, December 1 - 22



Silver Spur Salado TX
Christmas Is On The Air 2012 Silver Spur Salado










Christmas Is ON the Air 2012
at Silver Spur Theater, Dec. 1 - 22

An Oasis of Laughter Amid Holiday Chaos
Seasoned Spuradicals make merry in WSPR-Radio’s annual holiday broadcast

Weekends this holiday season find the hilarious crew of fictional WSPR Radio back “on the air” – and on the Salado Silver Spur Theater stage – readying for its annual live Christmas Eve broadcast. Naturally, nothing goes as planned, and hilarity ensues.

‘Christmas Is On the Air 2012’ is chock-full of the side-splitting slapstick and comedy routines that have made the evolving, annual holiday show a must-see for the entire family and their visitors," said Grainger Esch, Co-founder and Artistic Director of the Silver Spur Theater.

"This holiday show guarantees relief from shopping overload, decorating duties and party planning," Esch emphasized. “Think of the Spur as a safe, family oasis of laughter far from the chaos of Christmas which is on comedic display on our stage.”

The Spur, located at 108 Royal St., is in the renovated Guest and Sanford Granary & Feed Co., a recently designated historic site in Salado, a CenTex holiday shopping destination. The playhouse, with feed signs clearly visible, is a few blocks from the bustling IH-35 Corridor.
Theater patrons will be right in "the studio audience" for the music, merriment and memorable, mirthful staging of an "on-the-air" radio variety show, Esch explained.

The holiday scenario has been conceived, written and performed by The Spuradicals, the theatre’s cast of seasoned actors who continue the Silver Spur's tradition of homespun, heartfelt, original family entertainment.

Performances are at 7:30 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays, with 2 p.m. Saturday matinees: Dec. 1 (eve. only), Dec 7-8, 14-15, 21-22. Admissions are $18 for adults; $15 for senior citizens, military personnel and students with ID; and $10 for children aged 12 and under for evening shows.

Matinees, tickets are $10. Group rates are available. For reservations, call the box office at 254-947-3456. Reservations are strongly recommended for the 150-seat venue. For directions or more info, visit www.saladosilverspur.com.

The eight-year-old professional theater will serve hot cider and expanded food choices at evening shows (only) at The Spuradical Social Club in the lobby. http://www.spuradicalsocialclub.net/

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Upcoming: Talk to Your Dog, Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, November 10 - 17



Silver Spur Salado
Talk to Your Dog Silver Spur Salado


Talk to Your Dog
at Silver Spur Theate
Nov. 10, 16, 17;
Original, Romantic Comedy Benefits Local Theatres

Two local playwright-actors and director produce and perform show

“Talk to Your Dog,” an original, two-act comedy written by and starring both Marjie Rynearson and Gary Gosney, continues its “World Premiere Benefit Tour” at the Salado Silver Spur Theater, (108 Royal Street, just off IH-35), with 7:30 pm performances on Nov. 10th, 16th and 17th.

This traveling show, enthusiastically enjoyed by full houses at its initial performances at the Temple Civic Theatre and the Cultural Activity Center in September, benefits local live theatres. It features a light and lively plot with clever laugh lines.

The play involves two sweethearts, Lillian and Nathan of a “certain age” – portrayed by local playwrights Marjie Rynearson and Gary Gosney – who were in love during high school. The pair, in unhappy and colorless marriages, meets again many years later at their high school reunion.
Their relationship re-ignites, but there are complications – her husband, his wife, their children, and of course, the dogs.

Admission is $20 for all ages. For reservations, call the box office at 254-947-3456. For directions or more play info, visit www.saladosilverspurtheater.com. Expanded food choices are available in the lobby.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Upcoming: The Mystery of Irma Vep by Charles Ludlam, Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, October 5 - 27




Silver Spur Salado TX











Mystery of Irma Vep
at Silver Spur Theater,
Oct. 5-27
A Comedy-Satire-Parody of Gothic Melodramas

 Mystery of Irma Vep Silver Spur Theatre Salado




Two actors, eight characters, 35 costume changes, two hours of laughter
The Mystery of Irma Vep by Charles Ludlam opens Friday, Oct. 5 at the Salado Silver Spur Theater (108 Royal St.) and runs weekends through Oct. 27 . . . IF the two-member cast survives the 35 costume changes during the two-hour show.

“Irma Vep” is the definitive spoof of Gothic-horror melodramas, says Karen Ewton of Salado, who is co-directing the play with Melodee Lenz of Garland. “The New York Times called this show ‘far and away the funniest two hours on…stage’.”

“Begin with a sympathetic werewolf, a vampire and an Egyptian princess brought to life when her tomb is opened,” Lenz noted. “Add in the lightning-quick costume changes, a large number of sound cues, props and special effects and you get a comedy that has everything!”

The play is subtitled "A Penny Dreadful," one of those illustrated thrillers of the Victorian era, half novel and half comic book, maudlin and melodramatic. “Vep” satirizes several theatrical and film genres, including, Victorian melodrama, farce and Alfred Hitchcock’s creepy romantic film “Rebecca” (1940).
"‘Irma Vep’ is a parody with a gimmick, since all the roles, half of them women, are played by two male actors,” explained Ewton, a local teacher who is a regular on the Silver Spur stage and a playwright as well.

“It makes for a hilarious set of broad caricature-izations and a breathtaking stampede of near-instant costume changes,” added Lenz, who wowed audiences in the recent Spur hit, “The Seven-Year Itch.”

Logan Kimes of Dallas and Grainger Esch, the Silver Spur’s Co-founder and Artistic Director, portray eight characters, cross-dressing as required for the rights to perform the production. 



Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, July 22, 2011

Upcoming: Gone to Seed, a summer melodrama, Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, July 29 - August 27

eceived directly:

Silver Spur Theatre Salado

presentsGrainger Esche as Ranger Sam Houston 'Tex' Grainger (image: Silver Spur Theatre)

Gone to Seed -- or

The Fiendish Financier's Nefarious Food Factory Fiasco

July 29 - August 27

Fridays at 7 p.m., Saturdays at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.

108 Royal Street, Salado (click for map)


The seventh chapter in the Silver Spur Theater's annual melodrama series -- "Gone To Seed...or the Fiendish Financier's Nefarious Food Factory Fiasco" -- has the peaceful agrarian village of Salado facing a food crisis brought on by villainous Bartholomew B. Badseed.

The "melo" opens for a five-weekend run at 7:30 p.m., Friday, July 29, complete with popcorn, pie-fights and pernicious ploys plus the locally-made "movieola" (silent film) and John Maverick magic.

Maverick, a well known magician from Austin, portrays the new agricultural agent Badseed. Can Ranger Grainger save Maezy Moonflower and the Salado citizenry from the peril that ensues? This and other questions are answered with a healthy dose of slapstick, song and satire plus the old-style movie in which many of the town's citizens and businesses speed the plot along.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Upcoming: Bedtime Stories by Marjie Rynearson + writing seminar, Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, July 23

Received directly:

Silver Spur Salado





Marjie Rynearson's Marjie Rynearson (from Silver Spur Theatre, Salado)

Bedtime Stories

at Salado Silver Spur, 108 Royal Street, Saldo (click for map)

One Night Only, Sat., July 23, 7:30 p.m.


Marjie Rynearson of Temple, an award-winning, produced playwright and screenplay author and stage and screen actress, will present her semi-autobiographical work, "Bedtime Stories," in a one-night-only presentation at 7:30 p.m., Sat., July 23, at the Silver Spur Theater, 108 Royal St. in historic Downtown Salado. The acclaimed short stories are for adults only.


Earlier in the day, Rynearson will lead a two-hour, special story structure workshop -- "Start Writing Now" -- from 10 a.m. to noon. The evening production, directed by Gary D. Askins of Salado, features the professionally accomplished actress in a reader's theatre program. Askins is a retired master teacher of theatre from Salado High School and playwright for the Silver Spur's annual summer melodrama.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, May 6, 2011

Upcoming: Nunsense, Silver Spur Theatre, Salado, June 3 -

Found on-line:


Silver Spur Salado


Nunsense (image via Broadwayworld.com)







Nunsense


Presented by Salado Silver Spur Theatre at Salado Silver Spur Theatre

Salado Silver Spur Theatre, 108 Royal Street, Salado, Full map and directions

June 3-June 25, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets: Adults-$15 • Kids Under 12-$8 • Seniors & Military-$12
Group rates available. Call for info: 254-947-3456

An hilarious spoof about the misadventures of five nuns trying to manage a fundraiser. Sadly, the rest of the sisterhood died from botulism after eating vichyssoise prepared by Sister Julia, Child of God. Thus, the remaining nuns – ballet-loving Sister Leo, street-wise Sister Robert Anne, befuddled Sister Mary Amnesia, the Mother Superior Sister Regina, and mistress of the novices Sister Mary Hubert – stage a talent show in order to raise the money to bury their dearly departed.