Archive for category: News

The Westport NY station platform (L) in the fall of 2022, and (R) in early October 2023.

 

The Sun Community News highlighted the ongoing construction projects at the Depot Theatre.

>>  READ ALL ABOUT IT HERE!

Mountain Lake PBS featured the Depot Theatre’s 45th season in its August 25 episode of Mountain Lake Journal.

WATCH THE EPISODE

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WESTPORT, NY — The Depot Theatre is pleased to announce the cast of the final production of its 45th season, THE FANTASTICKS—it’s the world’s longest-running Off-Broadway musical, and one from the Depot Theatre’s very first season in 1979.

THE FANTASTICKS is a celebration of love, its enduring mysteries, its sweet simplicities, and all the foolish ways we tend to mess it up. One young couple is pitched into an odyssey of tomfoolery, debauchery, and misfortune by ruses of their parents’ designs, a band of clowns, and the ways of the world. The show boasts a cherished score of classic tunes, including “Try to Remember” and “Soon it’s Gonna Rain.”

As the 45th season finale, the show represents both a nod to the theatre’s history and an approach to the classic story through a contemporary lens. In this retelling, a troupe of summer campers assume the iconic roles of the lovers, the parents, the bandit, the mute, and the old actors.

“The archetypal roles in this quintessential story about love will be played by a cast that features professional talent from New York City, Chicago, and Cleveland,” said Michael Glavan, Depot Theatre’s Artistic Production Manager. “We are excited to showcase the telling of this classic story with new voices.”

MEET THE CAST

Sam Balzac * returns to the Depot in the role of Hucklebee (The Boy’s Father). Previous Depot appearances include SPELLING BEE, PIPPIN, HOW TO SUCCEED, CAMELOT, SHOW BOAT, and ANNIE GET YOUR GUN! Originally from Jay, Sam is now an NYC-based performer and composer/lyricist for musical theatre. Off-Broadway: FIFTY MILLION FRENCHMAN (York Theatre). Favorite regional: SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN (The Barn MI), CABARET (Lost Nation Theater), Tom Stoppard’s ROUGH CROSSING (Cortland Rep), and recently ROCKY HORROR at Pendragon Theatre in Saranac Lake.

Amanda Giles makes her Depot debut in the role of The Mute. A Chicago based actor, credits include: KAYMARKET (Underscore Theatre), FAR FROM HEAVEN (Porchlight Theatre), THE SOUND OF MUSIC (HRT) & Elizabeth in IF/THEN, and Young Gertrude in LOVING REPEATING, both Jeff award nominated performances.

Isha Narayanan * is making her Depot Theatre debut in the role of Matt (The Boy). She is a performer and educator based in New York City and New Jersey. Select recent credits include SATI: GODDESS INCARNATE (Ensemble) at 54 Below, SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION (Detective) at NYU Tisch Drama: New Studio on Broadway, and OFFSTAGE (Performer/Myself) at Tisch New Theatre.

James Rose * will play the role of Luisa (The Girl) in their Depot debut. James made theatre history as the youngest openly non-binary performer to take on the title role in HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH in 2022. Other Regional Credits include CABARET (Frenchie, Barrington Stage), MARIE ANTOINETTE (Therese de Lamballe, opposite Lauren Ambrose), THE ADDAMS FAMILY (u/s Morticia), DAMN YANKEES (Joe Hardy). They led the indie short film “Barstool” winning Best Actor at the Berlin Indie Film Festival, and co-starred in the all-transgender cast of “Adelphe,” which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. James holds degrees in Music Theatre and Child Psychology from NYU, and in Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (DEI) from Cornell.

Madeline Saintsing * will play the role of Henry (The Old Actor) in her Depot Theatre debut. She is a North Carolina native currently living in New York City. She attended the  of North Carolina at Greensboro where she received her BFA in Acting, and she has since continued her training at the Atlantic Acting School and Stella Adler Studios. Her regional theater credits include THE LEARNED LADIES at The Classic Theatre of Maryland and A CHRISTMAS CAROL at Triad Stage.

Rebecca Lee Whitcomb will play the role of Bellomy (The Girl’s Father) in her Depot Theatre debut. Past favorite roles include: Belle in BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, Rizzo in GREASE, Peter in PETER PAN. Upcoming: Guinevere in CAMELOT.

Zach Monczewski will make his Depot debut in the role of El Gallo (The Narrator). A graduate of Kent State with a BFA in Musical Theatre, past credits of Zach’s include Basilius in HEAD OVER HEELS (Kent State University), Officer Lockstock in URINETOWN (Kent State University), Ensemble/Nostradamus U/S in SOMETHING ROTTEN! (Beck Center for the Arts), and The Beast in BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (BHS).

Cassidy Sledge makes her Depot Theatre debut in the role of Mortimer (The Man Who Dies). International credits include THE SOUND OF MUSIC (Margaretta / Maria U.S). Off-Broadway: HERE THERE BE DRAGONS (Sasha/Boblin). Originally from California, she earned her BM from Northwestern University, and is now based in NYC.

THE FANTASTICKS will run from August 10-27. Tickets can be purchased online at depot.polaredgedesigns.com/ or by calling 518.962.4449.

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, NY, and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association.

For more information about the Depot Theatre’s main stage and Academy youth programs and for news updates visit depot.polaredgedesigns.com/.

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*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.

THE FANTASTICKS
August 11 – August 27, with a $25 Preview on August 10
Book and Lyrics by Tom Jones 
Music by Harvey Schmidt

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About the Depot Theatre

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, N.Y., and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. In addition to its volunteer board of trustees, the theatre depends on the support and generosity of its loyal donors, volunteers, and community members. Committed to promoting and providing exposure to the performing arts in the Adirondacks, the Depot Theatre invites all to “Take a journey without leaving the station.” The Depot Theatre’s 2023 programming is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. Additional support is provided by the Adirondack Foundation – Generous Acts Fund and the Essex County Arts Council. The Depot Theatre 2023 Season is sponsored by the Rogers-Carroll Family Foundation.

The Depot Theatre Academy is a robust educational experience for area youth and a pathway for those interested in pursuing a profession in theatre—whether that’s backstage or on stage.

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WESTPORT, N.Y. — The Depot Theatre in Westport, New York, is pleased to announce the cast of CHESAPEAKE, the second production in the theatre’s 45th season main stage lineup.

CHESAPEAKE features ONE wildly versatile actor, who brings alive a string of disparate characters who argue completely polar perspectives on the value of art, politics, and the mysterious connections between dogs and their humans. Hilarious and delightfully otherworldly, this show draws its title from the Chesapeake retriever targeted in a heist gone wrong.

In his Depot Theatre debut, Luke Wehner will be playing all of the characters. Luke recently returned from a West Coast run of HAND TO GOD at CVRep. Previously, for his performance in HAND TO GOD at Dobama Theatre, Luke received a Cleveland Critics Circle nomination and was included in Scene Magazine’s Best of Cleveland Theatre 2017. Together with Allison Wick, Luke co-founded Hunger Theatre Company. His theatre credits include THE CRUCIBLE and EVERYTHING WILL BE DIFFERENT at Hunger Theatre; JOHN, PETER AND THE STAR CATCHER at Dobama; A CLOCKWORK ORANGE at Hubris Theatre Company; and DOG SEES GOD at Inner Circle Creative.

“This is a role that demands a lot from an actor: someone who can create different characters (at one point four of them are in conversation at the same time), someone capable of dynamic storytelling, someone who can deliver the wild hilarity of the comedy in this piece, and someone who wins over our hearts with gentility and sincerity and heart,” said Michael Glavan, Depot Theatre’s Artistic Production Manager. “We are so lucky to have found Luke Wehner, who delivers all of that and more. His bold and imaginative creativity in collaboration with CHESAPEAKE veteran and our production’s director Craig Joseph make this piece a wild, exciting, fun, and touching piece of theatre!”

CHESAPEAKE will run from July 20 through August 6. Tickets can be purchased online at depot.polaredgedesigns.com/ or by calling 518.962.4449.

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, NY, and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association.

For more information about the Depot Theatre's main stage and Academy youth programs and for news updates visit depot.polaredgedesigns.com/.

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Chesapeake
July 21 – August 6, with a $25 Preview on July 20
By Lee Blessing

RATED: PG-13
PRODUCTION SPONSOR: Mountain Dog Restaurant & Pub

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About the Depot Theatre

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, N.Y., and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. In addition to its volunteer board of trustees, the theatre depends on the support and generosity of its loyal donors, volunteers, and community members. Committed to promoting and providing exposure to the performing arts in the Adirondacks, the Depot Theatre invites all to “Take a journey without leaving the station.” The Depot Theatre’s 2023 programming is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.

This season is made possible, in part, by the Essex County Arts Council’s Cultural Assistance Program Grant supported by the Essex County Board of Supervisors.

The Depot Theatre 2023 Season is sponsored by the Rogers-Carroll Family Foundation.

The Depot Theatre Academy is a robust educational experience for area youth and a pathway for those interested in pursuing a profession in theatre—whether that’s backstage or on stage.

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Kayla Ryan Walsh and Michael J. Connolly in WHAT THE CONSTITUTION MEANS TO ME at the Depot Theatre.

 

Looking back, 2019 was a simpler time, when all that human-rights advocates had to worry about were sexists, racists, homophobes, and domestic abusers. So much historical water has flowed beneath our constitutional bridges since then that the list of socio-political threats we need to concern ourselves with has grown almost as lengthy as the Constitution itself.

If anything, that adds a wallop to Heidi Schreck’s What the Constitution Means to Me, which opened this weekend at Depot Theatre, featuring Kayla Ryan Walsh as Heidi — the real-world actor who starred in her own production, which opened on Broadway just four short years ago.

Heidi takes the stage as her 15-year-old self, who is fattening her college fund as something of a ringer on the American Legion high-school competitive speaking circuit.

The teenage girl speaks of the Constitution not as a dusty relic, but as a panting, pulsating “hot and steamy” cauldron of ideas that has brewed our unique form of government. We assume she means this in a good way — certainly the affirming Legionnaire judges must have thought so.

Walsh delivers an emphatic, spring-loaded performance of this stage in the girl’s life, bursting at the seams with youthful exuberance in her canary yellow blazer, symbolic of a dutiful legislative pageboy, er, person.

Yet even in this patriotic celebration of constitutional rights, there is Legionnaire Mike, crisply played by Michael J. Connolly, telling her precisely when to start, cutting her off mid-thought when it’s time to stop and engaging in plenty of male throat clearing to remind the little lady who’s in charge.

At least this is progress of a sort, as the Framers of old, who assigned power to White male property owners, never would have countenanced a female opinion of any sort back in the day. Heidi quickly comes to realize this, and her view of the parchment takes a darker turn even as she does so with plenty of self-effacing humor to the point of making fun of her own sobbing — sometimes you just have to laugh.

Yet there’s nothing funny about the female experience of her familial past: Heidi’s great-grandmother was a mail-order bride from Germany (a “good” sort of immigrant) who died at 36 after being admitted to a mental hospital for treatment of melancholia; her grandmother Bette was a battered wife; and Heidi herself experienced an abortion and borderline sexual assault.

What was the Constitution doing all this time? Not much, from a protective standpoint. The genius of the play is taking dry constitutional law and drier terms like “penumbra” and “due process” and relating them to real-life tragedies. It is also a good, condensed historical reminder of how far we’ve come and how much further we have to go. Not to mention that this progress appears to be in free-fall at the moment.

What the Constitution Means to Me reminds us that birth control was largely illegal until 1965, abortion until 1973, spousal abuse until — well, rest assured we’re working on it. In the birth control case Griswold v. Connecticut, a ray of light pierced the clouds when Justice William O. Douglas inferred a right of privacy from four of the Constitution’s amendments, which created a “penumbra” of rights not specifically mentioned in the document.

Or so we thought. But as Heidi scraps her happy blazer and morphs into her older wiser self, it doesn’t seem that way. The Depot Theatre doesn’t control current events (probably) so it was pure coincidence that on the day of the show’s opening, the Supreme Court struck down affirmative action in higher education, somehow reckoning that the equal protection under the law in the 14th Amendment had been written to protect white guys. Who knew?

This is the elephant in the room as What the Constitution Means to Me, almost imperceptibly, grows less funny and more gloomy, particularly as it considers the case of a Colorado woman who couldn’t get the time of day from the police as her abusive husband was busy murdering her children. The court, in 2005, saw no problem with that.

What the Constitution Means to Me premiered on Broadway as the Brett Kavanaugh hearings were playing out, picking at the scar of Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas and leading to more male throat-clearing over boys-will-be-boys behavior that, we thought, had ceased to stand as an excuse.

For many women, this might have been seen as the bottom, but history of course said “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet” as looming in the future were the events of January 6th and the nonsensical legal gibberish of Dobbs.

As such, What the Constitution Means to Me has become provocative theater at its best. It’s hard to know what to think. Events have both diminished and elevated the play in a weird sort of way. In 2019, the Constitution, at worst, was passive, often failing to protect the rights of people who more or less weren’t specifically mentioned in the document by name. In 2023, the Constitution is aggressive, an instrument of overt harm done to women and minorities over issues we thought had long been settled.

Director Julie Lucido wisely lets the play speak for itself without adding any hints of the oncoming freight train. Walsh’s performance implies it, her face becoming more pained, the pauses between her thoughts longer as it becomes harder to make light of a situation that is bad and likely to get worse.

Actual tapes of Supreme Court debate — Lucido delightfully lets them roll through the intermission — are almost embarrassing, as justices discuss female hearts, minds, and parts (much, much more male throat clearing). Just when it all seems too depressing to go on, our mood is rescued by delightful Lydya Felix, who brightly arrives as a student debater to help lead a real-time discussion of whether it’s time for a new Constitution.

What the Constitution Means to Me isn’t always fair. It tends to blame the Constitution for poorly written law and lame jurists. Is Sam Alito really James Madison’s fault? It also wrongly implies that William Douglas only legalized birth control because he had a young girlfriend at the time, a slap at the greatest champion of human rights in the history of the court not named Marshall or Ginsburg.

But then maybe it’s time white males know how it feels.

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Tim Rowland contributed this review by the request of, and in collaboration with the Depot Theatre. Rowland is a journalist and New York Times bestselling author, whose humorous commentaries explore an eclectic variety of subject matter, from politics to history to the great outdoors. He and his wife Beth live on the Ausable River in Jay, N.Y.

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WESTPORT, NY — The Depot Theatre in Westport, New York, is pleased to announce the cast for the first show of the theatre’s 45th season main stage lineup: WHAT THE CONSTITUTION MEANS TO ME by Heidi Schreck.

The production is an upbeat and quick-witted play in which a middle-aged woman (Schreck) recounts her upbringing as a speech and debate champion, traveling the country as a precocious fifteen-year-old. Reliving these competitions in a community American Legionnaire’s hall, Schreck takes the audience on a fascinating and gut-wrenching journey, ending each performance with a unique, live debate against a student on the subject of the U.S. Constitution.

The leading role will be played by Kayla Ryan Walsh. This will be Walsh’s Depot Theatre debut. She was last seen in THE ROSE TATTOO at The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, and starred as Alana in the regional premiere of Jeremy O. Harris’ SLAVE PLAY. Kayla has worked regionally at The Arts Center of Coastal Carolina, Theatre Aspen, Shakespeare Theatre of NJ, Southern Colorado Repertory Theatre, Short North Stage, and Weathervane Playhouse to name a few. She also received a Fulbright Scholarship to study at The Globe in London under Philip Bird’s mentorship.

The role of the Legionnaire will be played by Michael J. Connolly. His favorite regional credits include Malvolio in TWELFTH NIGHT at Meow Wolf in collaboration with ISC Santa Fe, THE CHERRY ORCHARD and A CHRISTMAS CAROL at Princeton’s McCarter Theatre, THE LONG WEEKEND at Lake George’s Lake Theatre, and a world premiere with Centenary Stage Company in Hackettstown, NJ. New York City credits include new adaptations of Victoria Benedictsson’s THE ENCHANTMENT at HERE, CHEKHOV’S PLATONOV at Columbia Stages, Alan Ayckbourn’s JOKING APART, THE TAMING OF THE SHREW, SHE LOVES ME, BYE BYE BIRDIE, and SWEENY TODD. Michael has trained with Terry Schreiber in NYC, at LAMDA in London (M.A.), studied engineering at Princeton, and has also been caught behind the scenes playing the trombone. Additionally, Michael is the principal of Breukelen Stage & Film LLC.

The Debater will be played by Lydya Felix. Felix is a student at SUNY Plattsburgh, and she has been in many theatrical productions such as THE WIZARD OF OZ, BYE BYE BIRDIE, THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE, THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD, ANNIE, HAIRSPRAY, and most recently 9 TO 5. She is planning to graduate with a BA in Theatre and continues to pursue her career in acting.

“This production bursts with intellectual intrigue, personal and heartfelt stories, and a powerful sense of community,” said Michael Glavan, Depot Theatre Artistic Production Manager. “This talented cast will certainly deliver an exciting performance, complete with an entirely unique ending every night!”

WHAT THE CONSTITUTION MEANS TO ME will run from June 29 through July 16. Season Passes and individual tickets can be purchased online at depot.polaredgedesigns.com/ or by calling 518.962.4449.

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, NY, and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association.

For more information about the Depot Theatre main stage and Academy youth programs and for news updates visit depot.polaredgedesigns.com/

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What the Constitution Means to Me
June 30 – July 16, with a $25 Preview on June 29
By Heidi Schreck

Directed by Julie Lucido
RATED: PG-13 (discussion of domestic abuse and sexual assault)
PRODUCTION SPONSOR: Mountain Lake PBS
SEASON SPONSOR: The Rogers-Carroll Family Foundation
“What the Constitution Means to Me” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc.
www.concordtheatricals.com

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The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, N.Y., and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. In addition to its volunteer board of trustees, the theatre depends on the support and generosity of its loyal donors, volunteers, and community members. Committed to promoting and providing exposure to the performing arts in the Adirondacks, the Depot Theatre invites all to “Take a journey without leaving the station.” The Depot Theatre’s 2023 programming is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. Additional support is provided by the Adirondack Foundation – Generous Acts Fund and the Essex County Arts Council. The Depot Theatre 2023 Season is sponsored by the Rogers-Carroll Family Foundation.

The Depot Theatre Academy is a robust educational experience for area youth and a pathway for those interested in pursuing a profession in theatre—whether that’s backstage or on stage.
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Depot Theatre’s stage- located in the freight room of the historic Westport Train Station.

WESTPORT, NY — The Depot Theatre in Westport, NY has been awarded a $25,000 New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA) capital improvement grant for a sound system replacement.

The grant is part of a record capital investment of more than $42 million to 144 capital projects for arts and cultural organizations across the state to support crucial building renovations, accessibility improvements, and new spaces for creative work.

The capital improvement grant brings total NYSCA support for the Depot Theatre this year to $55,000, including a $30,000 Support for Organizations grant.

“We’re extremely grateful to NYSCA for their ongoing support and investment in the Depot Theatre and the entire arts and cultural sector,” said Kim Rielly, Depot Theatre Executive Director.

“Strengthening our creative sector increases tourism, boosts our economy, and enhances the rich heritage and cultural life of New York State,” Governor Hochul said. “These record grants will support a wide range of diverse and innovative projects at our arts and cultural organizations across the state, helping ensure all who visit will continue to have wonderful experiences for years to come.”

“Technological systems for professional productions in the freight room of a train station are certainly a challenge, and our current sound system is comprised of a combination of obsolete borrowed and donated equipment,” Rielly continued. “The new comprehensive system will be a crucial upgrade for our small space, with low-profile but powerful output for the actors and musicians that might even be a match for the noise of the passing trains!”

Installation of the new sound system is expected to be complete by the end of the 2023 main stage season.

The Depot Theatre, celebrating its 45th season in 2023, is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, NY. For more information about the Depot Theatre and its main stage and Academy youth programs, visit depot.polaredgedesigns.com/.

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About the Depot Theatre

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, N.Y., and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. In addition to its volunteer board of trustees, the theatre depends on the support and generosity of its loyal donors, volunteers and community members. Committed to promoting and providing exposure to the performing arts in the Adirondacks, the Depot Theatre invites all to “Take a journey without leaving the station.” The Depot Theatre’s 2023 programming is made possible in part by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. Additional support is provided by the Adirondack Foundation – Generous Acts Fund and the Essex County Arts Council.

About the New York State Council on the Arts

The Council on the Arts preserves and advances the arts and culture that make New York State an exceptional place to live, work and visit. The Council upholds the right of all New Yorkers to experience the vital contributions the arts make to our communities, education, economic development, and quality of life. To support the ongoing recovery of the arts across New York State, the Council on the Arts will award record funding in FY 2023, providing support across the full breadth of the arts, including dedicated support for arts education and underrepresented communities.

The Council on the Arts further advances New York’s creative culture by convening leaders in the field and providing organizational and professional development opportunities and informational resources. Created by Governor Nelson Rockefeller in 1960 and continued with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature, the Council is an agency that is part of the Executive Branch. For more information on NYSCA, please visit www.arts.ny.gov, and follow NYSCA’s Facebook page, Twitter @NYSCArts and Instagram @NYSCouncilontheArts.

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The Depot Theatre, and the Westport Chamber of Commerce are pleased to present a staged play reading of  SHADES OF VALOR by Karen Lewis on May 7, 2023 at 2pm at the Westport Heritage House. The reading is produced by Saranac Lake-based Adirondack Stage Rats.

 

ABOUT THE EVENT

SHADES OF VALOR by Karen L. Lewis
Directed by Laura Menzie
Featuring:  Nate Adams, Sam Balzac, Beth Glover, and Rachel Ann Jerome.

“Blending elements of mystery, comedy and tragedy, Shades of Valor tells the compelling personal story of two young soldiers, Rick Marshall and Danny Preston, in Vietnam 1971 and their mothers, Barb and Kitty, 10 years later, as the women attempt to come to terms with the incident that blew their lives apart.”

Sunday, May 7th at 2pm The Westport Heritage House, 6459 Main Street, Westport, NY  12993

This reading follows another performance on Saturday, May 6th at 3pm at the PENDRAGON THEATRE, 15 Brandy Brook, Saranac Lake 12983.

Admission is by donation.  Join us for theatre, refreshments, and conversation!

This project made possible in part by a Creative Opportunity Fund grant from A.R.T./NY!

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WESTPORT, N.Y. — The Depot Theatre in Westport, NY, is pleased to announce its 45th season lineup, which includes two hilarious and thought-provoking plays and a nod to the Depot’s anniversary with a classic musical from its very first season.

Lights go up on the main stage on June 29th with WHAT THE CONSTITUTION MEANS TO ME. Upbeat and quick-witted, a middle-aged woman recounts traveling the country as a fifteen-year-old speech and debate champion. She takes the audience on a fascinating and gut-wrenching journey, ending each performance with a unique, live debate against a student on the subject of the U.S. Constitution. The show will run from June 29 through July 16.

The season continues with CHESAPEAKE by Lee Blessing, in which ONE wildly versatile actor brings alive a string of disparate characters who argue completely polar perspectives on the value of art, politics, and the mysterious connections between dogs and their humans. Hilarious and delightfully otherworldly, this one-man show draws its title from the Chesapeake retriever that plays an integral role in a heist gone wrong. Performances run from July 20 – August 6.

The season ends with the world’s longest-running Off-Broadway musical and one from the Depot Theatre’s very first season, THE FANTASTICKS! This show is a quintessential celebration of love, its enduring mysteries, its sweet simplicities, and all the foolish ways we tend to mess it up. Boasting a cherished score of classic tunes, including “Try to Remember” and “Soon it’s Gonna Rain,” the season’s finale runs from August 10-27.

“This season conveys a message collectively about meeting one another on a shared level and moving forward together,” said Michael Glavan, Depot Theatre Artistic Production Manager. “And as a bonus, each production tells a story with a solid dose of comedy!” 

The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, NY, and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association.

2023 Season Passes will go on sale on April 15, 2023, and can be purchased online or by calling the box office at 518.962.4449. Individual tickets will be available beginning June 1. More details, information about the Depot Theatre Academy summer youth program, additional events, and news updates can be found online at depot.polaredgedesigns.com/.

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ABOUT THE DEPOT THEATRE
The Depot Theatre is a non-profit, professional theatre located in a historic, functioning 1876 train station in Westport, N.Y., and it is the only theatre in the Adirondacks that operates under an agreement with Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. In addition to its volunteer board of trustees, the theatre depends on the support and generosity of its loyal donors, volunteers, and community members. Committed to promoting and providing exposure to the performing arts in the Adirondacks, the Depot Theatre invites all to “Take a journey without leaving the station.” The Depot Theatre’s 2023 programming is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. Additional support is provided by the Adirondack Foundation – Generous Acts Fund and the Essex County Arts Council. The Depot Theatre 2023 Season is sponsored by the Rogers-Carroll Family Foundation.

The Depot Theatre Academy is a robust educational experience for area youth and a pathway for those interested in pursuing a profession in theatre—whether that’s backstage or on stage.

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What the Constitution Means to Me
June 30 – July 16, with a $25 Preview on June 29
By Heidi Schreck
RATED: PG-13 (discussion of domestic abuse and sexual assault)
PRODUCTION SPONSOR: Mountain Lake PBS 
“What the Constitution Means to Me” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc.
www.concordtheatricals.com

Chesapeake
July 21 – August 6, with a $25 Preview on July 20
By Lee Blessing
RATED: PG-13 
PRODUCTION SPONSOR: Mountain Dog Restaurant & Pub

The Fantasticks
August 11 – August 27, with a $25 Preview on August 10
Book and Lyrics by Tom Jones 
Music by Harvey Schmidt
RATED: PG
PRODUCTION SPONSOR: Chazy Westport Communications
The Fantasticks is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI).
All authorized performance materials are supplied by MTI.
www.mtishows.com

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* NOTICE: EVENT DATE CHANGE! *

The Depot Theatre, the Westport Chamber of Commerce and the Westport Library Association are pleased to present a staged play reading of RADIANT VERMIN by Philip Ridley at the Westport Library on March 19, 2023 at 2:30pm. The reading is produced by Saranac Lake-based Adirondack Stage Rats.

The reading will be directed by Beth Glover, and the cast includes Laura Menzie, Tyler Nye, and Donna Fortune.

ABOUT RADIANT VERMIN
“THE STORY: When a young couple is offered an ideal house by a mysterious stranger, it prompts the question: How far would any of us go to get our dream home? A fast-paced, pitch-black comedy, RADIANT VERMIN is a provocative satire about the housing market, homelessness, and inequality.” – Dramatists Play Service

Rated PG-13 – includes adult content.

 

Location: Westport Library Association 
                 6 Harris Lane, Westport, NY 12993
Date:
       March 19, 2023
Time:       2:30pm

Free and open to the public!