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Sept 25-Nov 6 | OneAmerica Stage
It’s been an award-winning book and a hit movie. Now see it onstage!
A lost treasure. A multi-generational curse. Racial injustice. And a bizarre correctional facility where kids serve time digging holes in the desert.
Found guilty of a crime he didn’t commit, Stanley discovers more than dirt as he digs – in this quirky comedy, he also finds new friends, the power of perseverance and the truth about his family’s past.
What will he find at the bottom of the next hole?
Before every wedding, there are dreams.
The night before her wedding, Mary wakes from a recurring dream about a childhood love – and takes the audience through a dreamscape of love, heartache, passion and heroism.
Set against the backdrop of World War I, Mary’s Wedding presents lives and hearts caught in a time of stunning change. Dreams and life collide in an intimate and powerful work that asks, do we see the truth in our sleep, or after we awake?
Magic happens on a snow-covered stage. The family’s favorite holiday tradition comes gift-wrapped with fresh IRT surprises! The classic story of greed and redemption comes to life with Scrooge, Cratchit and, of course, Tiny Tim. Come and be visited by the spirits of holiday joy.
Now it’s history; once, it was a young girl’s life. The Diary of Anne Frank is such a literary landmark that it’s easy to forget how it started out: as the personal journal of a young girl striving to become a woman. Written while she and her family hid from Nazis in Amsterdam, Anne Frank’s diary stands as a tribute to the human spirit. This lyrical new adaptation celebrates creativity’s power while, at the same time, remembering the young girl at the heart of the history.
Three actors. Three scripts. Three shows in repertory. Last year, our series of one-actor plays was such a hit we’re bringing the concept back with three new shows. In one, Millicent Wright performs in Neat, a sequel to last year’s Pretty Fire. In another, a father ponders the changes he undergoes during his wife’s pregnancy while gaining understanding about what it means to be a father for the first time. And in the third, a Shakespearean actor takes a humorous look at his life with the Bard. Three powerful plays. Three intimate performances. One special IRT event.
In this sequel to Woodard's Pretty Fire, teenaged Charlayne — played once again by Milicent Wright — encounters boys, high school, civil rights and her own vivid imagination, all while learning to live with her disabled aunt, Neat, who’s life profoundly affects Charlayne’s own.
In this warm and funny semi-autobiographical piece, a theatre artist experiences his wife’s first pregnancy and the birth of their child. Amid the changing philosophical and political beliefs this experience awakens in him, he discovers many unexpected feelings of first-time parenting and an unlikely hero from the Vietnam era.
In this humorous memoir, DeVita exposes the many challenges he experienced on the path from Long Island fisherman to celebrated classical actor and playwright. On the way he performs passages from 26 of Shakespeare’s plays with dexterity and wit.
They survived history. But whose history? In 1930, James Cameron and Mary Ball emerged as the sole survivors of racial crimes in Marion, Indiana. Teenagers when the crimes occurred, they look back on those events and their lives in this World Premiere work commissioned by the IRT. As their past and present lives intermingle, Cameron and Ball discover that their remembrances of that day differ even if their experiences were the same – challenging us all to wrestle with the tensions between memory, history and redemption.
In this take on a Hitchcock classic, the audience dies laughing. Find out why this Tony Award-winning play has been called “a Hitchcock masterpiece … with a dash of Monty Python.” A high-speed whodunit, The 39 Steps puts four actors through a hilarious workout, as they play multiple characters, contend with outrageous special effects and, along the way, pay homage to some of Alfred Hitchcock’s most iconic movie moments … all while delivering a somewhat faithful, totally tongue-in-cheek rendering of a classic Hitchcock movie.