Showing posts with label Steve Lawson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Lawson. Show all posts

Monday, July 8, 2013

NUNSENSE, a musical comedy by Dan Grogan, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, August 23 - September 14, 2013




Gaslight Baker Theatre Lockhart TX











[216 S. Main Street, Lockhart, TX - click for map]

presents

nunsense


NUNSENSE
A Musical Comedy
Written by Dan Goggin
Directed by Steve Lawson
Aug. 23 - Sept. 14, 2013

With wacky fun, uproarious horseplay, and side-splitting jokes, Nunsense is a madcap revue that satirizes convent life with a hysterical anything-goes sense of fun. Five nuns develop their song-and-dance routines, conduct an audience quiz, and indulge in other hilarious shenanigans. Jokes, songs and dancing nuns add up to one of the silliest musical celebrations ever! This “Sister Act” will convince you once and for all that nuns do have a serious funny bone! 

Click Here to Purchase Tickets Online

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Friday, May 24, 2013

Auditions in Lockhart for Nunsense by Dan Grogan, Gaslight Baker Theatre, May 29 and June 1, 2013



Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, TXAuditions for the musical comedy Nunsense written by Dan Goggin, directed for the Gaslight-Baker Theatre by Steve Lawson, are being held Lockhart Wednesday 5/29/13 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday 6/1/13 3 p.m. - 5 p.m., and other times by appointment.
Five women (or four women and a very special guy) are needed. We want actors who can sing, singers who can act, and if you can throw in a couple of dance steps that would be even better! Age range about 20 - 60. Rue McClanahan played the Mother Superior in a TV version of the play.

For the audition - Be prepared to sing a minute or two. You choose your selection and you bring accompaniment, or you can sing acapella. You will also be given a few lines of script to perform. If you are not available for the above scheduled times, for an audition appointment and more information call 512-775-6541 or email sclbase-classact@yahoo.com.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Video: Dashing through the Snow by Jones, Hope and Wooten at Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, November 30 - December 15

Gaslight Baker THeatre Lockhart TX







presents
Dashing through the Snow
November 30 - December 15



The Gaslight Baker Theatre in Lockhart, Texas presents the Christmas comedy Dashing through the Snow by Jones, Hope and Wooten . Shows are weekends Nov 30 - Dec 15, 2012 on Fri. and Sat. at 8 pm and 2 pm matinees on Sun. 11/09 and Sat. 12/15. For tickets and information see www.MyGBT.org or call 512-376-5653

Friday, June 1, 2012

Upcoming: Our Town by Thornton Wilder, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, July 12 - August 4


Gaslight Baker Theatre Lockhart







presents


 Our Town Thornton Wilder Gaslight Baker Lockhart

OUR TOWN
An American Classic

By Thornton Wilder
Directed by Steve Lawson

Performance Dates – 4 Weekends!

EVENINGS - 8pm Fridays and Saturdays, July 13 – Aug. 4, 2012

SNEAK PEEK - 8pm Thursday, July 12, 2012

MATINEES - 2pm Sun July 22 & Sat July 28, 2012

Regular Adult Tickets $12; Senior & Children Tickets $10
he Stage Manager welcomes the audience into the theater as he introduces the people and places of Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire. Grover’s Corners is the perfect picture of an American town before urbanization – automobiles are a novelty, everyone is up in each other's business, and milk is still delivered fresh every morning.

After that introduction to the town, the Stage Manager zeroes in on two neighboring families: the Gibbs family and the Webb family. Each household has two children (a boy and a girl). We witness some childish interactions between Emily Webb and George Gibbs. The two are friends. By the second act, three years have passed, and friendship has blossomed into love. George and Emily are about to get married. The third act takes place in the town cemetery. Emily has died in childbirth, and she joins other deceased members of Grover’s Corners. As soon as the funeral is over, Emily realizes that she can relive her life, and decides to return to the morning of her twelfth birthday – despite warnings from her fellow dead that it’s a terrible idea. Emily soon realizes that they’re correct. Death has brought Emily a heightened awareness of life; it is too painful for Emily to watch living people who take their time for granted. Emily returns to the cemetery where George is crying over her grave.


Thursday, February 16, 2012

Lend Me A Tenor by Ken Ludwig, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, January 27 - February 18



Lend Me A Tenor Ken Ludwig Gasllght Baker Theatre, Lockhart TX

by Michael Meigs


Ken Ludwig's Lend Me A Tenor is one of those 'sure fire' inventions beloved of theatre companies across the world. Since the 1986 debut in London it has been translated into 16 languages and produced in 25 countries.


The Gaslight Baker Theatre is currently staging a vivid and funny production of this farce, a fable of mistaken identities, dizzy romance and worldly sophistication. Aspiring timidity meets bravado, and bigger-than-life Italian passions transform smaller-than-life American provincials. The year is 1934. Great Itallian tenor Tito Morelli is arriving for a single guest performance of Verdi's Otello at the improbable Cleveland Grand Opera Company, and he's about to overwhelm the locals, the society ladies, the cast of the opera, and above all, our ingénue Maggie (Francine Olguin) and her hapless would-be suitor Max.


Max (David Young) has been appointed by Cleveland's growling opera impresario Saunders (Donald Owen) to keep the visiting star sober, satisfied and out of trouble -- an impossible job, even though Morelli is accompanied by his glamorously shrewish wife Maria (Candice Carr).

Ludwig Lend Me A Tenor Gaslight Baker Theatre Lockhart TX


This is a plot that runs like clockwork, complete with romance, jealousy, officiousness, quarrels, disguises, a pertly intrusive servant (Chris Schnaible as the starstruck bellhop), slamming doors and a potent potion that knocks out the Great Man and gives the Little Man the opportunity to triumph unrecognized as his substitute. Yes, Steve Lawson as Morelli and Dave Young as Max are of different heights and builds, but with the magic of the costuming and makeup of stage disguise, predictably, no one can tell them apart!

Now, is that likely? No! Is it even probable? No! And do we care? Double no!

These two familiar Lockhart stalwarts make us root for Max and give us good reason to like Tito Morelli. They even demonstrate singing voices that are passably good enough to convince us in this make-believe world that either could go out there and give Verdi what-for. Young may overdo Max's nervous tics a bit, especially at the opening, and Lawson's Italian-a accent isn't as consistent as that of Maria (Candice Carr), but we hang on every surprise turn in the plot. Director Todd Martin sets a fine fast clip to this action and displays a keen understanding for the pictorial impact in farce of clever movement and positioning of his actors.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, February 19, 2010

Moonlight and Magnolias, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, January 29 - February 14





Lots of folks turned out for the last Saturday night performance of Roy Hutchinson's Moonlight and Magnolias by the Gaslight Baker Theatre. Word of mouth had been at work down in Lockhart about this guys' screwball comedy.

There is a dame in the cast. Esther Williams has only a few lines in her role as Miss Poppenghul, the earnest and attentive secretary to Hollywood producer David O. Selznick (David Schneider). Most of those are variations on "Yes, Mr. Selnick" and "Right away, Mr. Selznick." In the midst of the rowdy five-day shouting match carried on by Selznick, screenwriter Ben Hecht (Randy Wachtel) and film director Victor Fleming (Steve Lawson) as they labor to save the script of Gone with the Wind, Miss Poppenghul's increasing disarray and wide-eyed apprehension are a running gag that neatly upstages the battle royal.

Playwright Hutchinson latched onto a remarkable moment in Hollywood history. Wikipedia quotes Ben Hecht's biographer William McAdams: "At dawn on Sunday, February 20, 1939, David Selznick ... and director Victor Fleming shook Hecht awake to inform him he was on loan from MGM and must come with them immediately and go to work on Gone with the Wind, which Selznick had begun shooting five weeks before. It was costing Selznick $50,000 each day the film was on hold waiting for a final screenplay rewrite and time was of the essence." The three men locked themselves up in Selznick's office for five days (Hecht later said it was for eight days). Because Hecht hadn't read the novel, the other two acted out the principal scenes and Hecht turned that into a script.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Upcoming: Moonlight and Magnolias, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, January 29 - February 13

More about the play, received directly from the Gaslight Baker Theatre in Lockhart:

Hollywood never looked so funny
By Janet Christian

Have you ever seen a grown man lying atop a desk, pretending to be in labor? No? How about three grown men standing in a triangle performing a mesmerizing array of cheek slaps, to see which will look best on camera? Not that either? Well, then, how about a harried but hard-working woman doing her best to handle three hungry, sleep-deprived, slightly crazed men? Yeah, probably!

All these scenes and many more are yours for the viewing when you attend the Gaslight-Baker Theatre's production of Moonlight and Magnolias directed by Todd Martin, one of our best local directors. The plot was conjured by writer Ron Hutchinson from a real Hollywood incident.

In February 1939, Producer David O. Selznick shut down production of Gone with the Wind and fired screenwriter Sidney Howard and director George Cukor. Selznick then pulled Director Victor Fleming off of the Wizard of Oz and summoned famous screenwriter Ben Hecht.

The plot of Moonlight and Magnolias springboards off these actual facts to take a hilarious behind-the-scenes look at how Selznick, Fleming, and Hecht managed in a few days to rewrite the screenplay and establish a whole new direction for the action and plot. Especially if, as the play claims, Hecht had never actually read the famous novel!

Hecht and Fleming are convinced they'll fail, until Selznick states, "Movies are a series of moments frozen in time by the only time machine ever invented." Inspired by Selznick's words, and surviving solely on a diet of bananas and peanuts, the men get to work. Selznick and Fleming re-enact every major "moment" in the book while Hecht turns their comical acting skills into actual screenplay scenes.

David Schneider creates the perfect persona for the harried, financially committed Selznick, who knows that this picture can make or break him. Steve Lawson plays the talented and pompous but secretly vulnerable Fleming for all he's worth. Randy Wachtel brings to vivid life the idealistic Hecht, perfectly depicting the writer's frustration at not only being expected to write a screenplay for a story he's never read, but for even being asked to write about such an unpopular theme as slavery and supremacy in the Old South. And Esther Williams memorably plays the ever-patient and ever-unappreciated Miss Poppenghul, Selznick's personal secretary.

If you love Gone with the Wind this play is a must see. Even if you've never read the book or seen the movie, you'll still enjoy this peek at how the Big and Powerful in Old Hollywood might have made things happen!

Moonlight and Magnolias opens Friday, January 29 and runs through Sunday, February 14, with performances each Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and two matinees at 2 p.m. -- one on Saturday, February 6 and the other on Sunday, February 14. Rated PG for mild language.

The Baker Theatre is located at 216 S. Main, one block south of the Lockhart town square For more information, contact the theatre at 512-376-5653 or visit their web site: www.GaslightBakerTheatre.org

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Upcoming: Moonlight and Magnolias, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, January 29 - February 14


Found on-line:

The Gaslight Baker Theatre
begins its 2010 Season with the hilarious Hollywood romp


Moonlight and Magnolias

by Ron Hutchinson,
January 29 through February 14, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
with matinees on Saturday, February 6 and on Valentines Day, Sunday, February 14 Purchase Tickets Here

It is 1939 and Hollywood is buzzing. Legendary producer David O. Selznick has shut down production of his new epic, Gone with the Wind, a film adaptation of Margaret Mitchell’s novel. The script, you see, just doesn’t work.

So what’s an all-powerful movie mogul to do? Selznick sends a car for famed screenwriter Ben Hecht and pulls formidable director Victor Fleming from the set of The Wizard of Oz. Summoning both to his office, he locks the doors, closes the shades, and on a diet of bananas and peanuts, the three men labor over five days to fashion a screenplay that will become the blueprint for one of the most successful and beloved films of all time.

Moonlight and Magnolias features some of The Gaslight Baker Theatre’s most accomplished and recognizable actors. David Schneider leads the cast as David O. Selznick, along with Steve Lawson as Victor Fleming, Randy Wachtel as Ben Hecht, and Esther Williams as Miss Poppenghul. The production is directed by Todd Martin with the assistance of David Young.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Upcoming: Wait Until Dark, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, October 30 -November 14


UPDATE: Click for ALT review, November 11



Found on-line:



presents

Wait Until Dark

by Frederick Knott
Directed by Todd Martin

October 30-31, November 6-7, and November 13-14 at 8 p.m.
November 7 will also feature a matinee beginning at 2 p.m.


Are You Afraid of The Dark?

A sinister con-man, Roat, and two ex-convicts, Mike and Carlino, have traced the location of a mysterious and valuable doll to the apartment of photographer Sam Hendrix and his recently blinded wife, Susy. After Sam is unexpectedly called away to a photo shoot, the three criminals engage in an elaborately designed charade to take advantage of Susy’s blindness and trick her into revealing the location of the doll. With the help of the young neighbor girl Gloria, Susy matches wits with the cons. But is she clever and skillful enough to save her own life? The result is a thrilling and horrifying final confrontation that audiences will never forget.

Featuring: Polaris Banks, Tysha Calhoun, Steve Lawson, Mark McDade, Cruz Thomas, Drew Vero, Bevra Williams and David Young

No one will be allowed to enter the theatre during the last 10 minutes of the show!

Purchase Tickets Here.