Theatre Works presents ‘The Sound of Music’ this weekend
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Theatre Works presents ‘My Sister Eileen’ this weekend
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Theatre Works opens season with ‘King O’ the Moon’
WOONSOCKET — Theatre Works announced the opening of its 31st season with "King O' the Moon," written by Tom Dudzik and directed by Lynn Nadrowski, opening Friday, Sept. 13 and running through Sunday, Sept. 22.
The hilarious and heartfelt sequel to Dudzik's "Over the Tavern" — which Theatre Works presented in the spring of 2009 — the Pazinski family has left the conservative 1950s for the rebellious 1960s. As Apollo 11 is about to land on the moon, the family gathers to honor their late father's memory, and they quickly become entangled in each other's problems: Rudy is re-thinking the priesthood; Eddie is preparing for fatherhood and Vietnam; and Annie is contemplating divorce as their mother Ellen considers a new romance.
The cast included: Eric Moberg of Putnam, Conn., as Rudy; Ryan DiOrio of Cumberland as Eddie; Michael Campbell of North Providence as Georgie; Karen Bessette DiOrio of Cumberland as Ellen; Bill Beatini of Providence as Walter; and Shaela Keogh-Walker of Providence as Maureen.
Showtimes were 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. for Sunday matinees. Theatre Works was located in the Masonic Temple, 142 Clinton St.
Theatre Works presents ‘A Christmas Carmella’
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Parody ‘A Christmas Carmella’ tells Rhode Island version of a classic
By Frank O'Donnell, Valley Breeze Entertainment Writer
Last December, when "Ant'ny Claus 2: A Dysfunctional Family Sequel" was wrapping up, everyone asked me what would be next. Honestly, I had no idea. It's the same thing I said after "Ant'ny Claus: A Dysfunctional Family Christmas" the year before. I had no idea what would come next, because each time, it felt like the story was complete. And until this spring, I still thought that.
But then one of the characters from the Ant'ny saga bumped squarely into another idea that's been bouncing around in my brain for a while: to produce a Rhode Island parody of the Charles Dickens classic, "A Christmas Carol." Wouldn't it be interesting if this story everyone knows was told a little differently by someone like Carmella Foccaccia, Ant'ny Claus' mother-in-law. And just like that, "A Christmas Carmella" was born. Not a sequel, really. More a spin-off.
Only three characters from the original plays are found here: Carmella, played by Connie Anderson; and Holly and Sonny, played by Hailey O'Connor and Padraig Mahoney. All the other characters are new — but recognizable, thanks to Mister Dickens. We have Scrugini (Mark Anderson), Cracciatore (John Morris), Fredo (Bobby Ricci), Fuzziwig (Bill Beatini) and Bella (Sarah Blodgett). Parodies of the characters found in the classic telling of the story.
The plot is simple. Carmella's grandkids, Sonny and Holly, want their grandmother to read them "A Christmas Carol," simply for the sake of nostalgia. Carmella would love to, except she gave the book to her senior center. But, she's willing to tell the story from memory as best as she can. So Scrooge becomes Scrugini, the action moves from London to North Providence, and we're off to the races. Carmella serves as narrator, and plays the four ghosts as well.
With Mark Anderson accepting a lead role in "A Christmas Carmella," directing duties fell on me. Mark was co-director on the first two, and thankfully, I learned a lot from him in those two years. Not that I'm alone in this new one. Part of the fun for me is encouraging the actors to have fun with the show, to feel free to improvise around the lines. If something better comes up, we'll throw it in. The running joke around rehearsals is that we put the "working" in the term "working script."
Theatre Works presented "A Christmas Carmella" December 6–15 inside the Masonic Temple on Clinton Street in Woonsocket.
Theatre Works now staging ‘Laughter on the 23rd Floor’
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Theatre Works presents ‘Nobody’s Perfect’
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Curtains close this year for Theatre Works
WOONSOCKET — They've spent 32 years bringing laughter, joy and more than a little drama to Woonsocket's theater fans. Their troupe has spawned romances, at least one marriage, and has helped to launch successful careers on the stage for many young talents. But it's time to call it quits.
Theatre Works is about to enter its final season at the Masonic Lodge on Clinton Street and the small, but dedicated cast and crew will end their reign in style with a musical comedy, an alternative holiday play and an X-rated puppet show.
The company's humble beginnings date back to 1983, when a group of parishioners performing minstrels in Our Lady of Victories church basement got the notion to take their skills a step further. "A lot of the parishioners were always doing shows together, so she gleaned from that group people who really wanted to get involved in acting," Theater Works Executive Producer Connie Anderson said of the company's founder, Evelyn Zifcak.
Zifcak, then 86, grew up above the Western Hotel in Nasonville and had started acting as a child. Her grandfather ran the hotel and saloon, and nearly every member of the family brought some talent to the job, from piano-players to singers. "We had a hall and a little stage, and I used to perform there," Zifcak said. "When you're brought up in that kind of atmosphere, you get a bend toward it."
Zifcak became one of the founding members of the Assembly Players in Harrisville before moving to Woonsocket, where she was shocked to learn there were no community theater groups. She began the minstrel shows as a church fundraiser, and the rest was history. Theatre Works' first production was "A Night of Carol Burnett's Skits."
The roughly two dozen cast members would stay in the church's basement, building a base of faithful patrons and recruiting actors from Woonsocket and the surrounding area, for the next six years. In 1991, Howard Holt, a friend of Zifcak's who was an active board member at the First Universalist Church on Earle Street, offered the theater company rental space on the top floor of its building. "It was a huge space with high ceilings and a balcony for our lighting and sound," said Anderson.
Theatre Works would produce 56 shows in that space from 1991 to 2006, including large-scale musicals like their most successful production: "Nunsense." "We were the first community theater in Rhode Island to get the rights to the show," said Mark Anderson, Connie's husband and the president of the Theatre Works board of directors. "People came from all over Rhode Island and parts of Massachusetts and Connecticut to see the show," Connie added. The production was so successful that they increased its run from four to six weeks, and sold out nearly every performance.
The company attracted young talent, including Woonsocket's own Emily Luther, who auditioned for "Annie" at the age of nine and landed a role as one of the orphans. Kaleidoscope Children's Theatre soon called the company looking for young talent, and they sent Luther over. Luther was signed to Ellen DeGeneres's record label, eleveneleven, in 2011.
Mark joined the company in 1992, some ten years after Connie, and it wasn't exactly love at first sight. "I made a lot of great friends," Mark said. "She wasn't one of them." "I didn't like him," Connie admitted with a laugh. "He was being very quiet and I mistook it for being cocky." The pair eventually became friends, and friendship turned to affection. They were married nearly a decade later.
New state fire codes, updated after the Station Nightclub fire of 2003, meant the church would no longer make a suitable venue. Zifcak, then president of Theatre Works, was looking for someone else to take over the leadership role. The Andersons accepted the challenge, and, along with Sharon Charette, Paul Adam, Deb Fahrenholtz, and several other volunteers, spent the entire summer dismantling and relocating the theater. In the fall of 2006, Theatre Works opened the smaller space, owned by the Woonsocket Masonic Temple Corporation, with a capacity of 125 — down from the 225 they'd entertained in the church.
‘Ant’ny Claus’ returns to Theatre Works this season
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RISE presents ‘Lost in Yonkers’ with transition to Theatre Works stage
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Theatre Works founder grateful to all who kept company alive
Letter to the Editor by Evelyn Zifcak, founder of Theatre Works
Theatre Works, a Woonsocket community theatre company with a history of productions dating from 1983, has closed its doors. Today, judging from news articles and enthusiasm of the general public there seems to be a greater interest in theatre arts than there was 32 years ago. But back then when I came to Woonsocket toting a long history of involvement in community theater I felt the urge to test the waters and hopefully find audiences in this city. So after producing and directing three minstrel style variety shows at Our Lady of Victories church I gathered a group together with the help of a newspaper article by supporter/writer Pat Gratton. A name was selected, bylaws drawn, a non-profit established and we were on our way. From the beginning we staged four plays and musicals a year and we drew in a fine following of loyal subscribers.
In the way of a history, my husband Tony and I purchased a church building on Blackstone Street with the intention of gifting it to Theatre Works. However, a Reverend Lewis came to town with a tale of being referred to Woonsocket by the Lord who told him there was a church waiting for him there. Tony, of course, chose not to compete with such reference so sold the building to him and the reverend soon established a congregation there. Later on, we purchased another church building on Greene Street and donated it to Theatre Works. Alas, there was much work to be done to make it usable as a theater, so our dedicated members launched a fund raiser. Alas — again — our endeavor failed. However, Rev. Michael Kropman came to town. (Yes, we were still in competition with the Higher Up!) A mortgage was arranged and I have to say the reverend paid Theatre Works religiously. The monies we did receive from our short-lived fund raiser purchased lighting and other production equipment and helped to sustain our group for many years.
We found a home in The First Universalist, a church on Earle Street, and we produced there for many years before a rigid fire code forced us to relocate to the Masonic Temple on Clinton Street where we remained until the end of our long 32-year journey.
I would like to acknowledge those who, beside me, were the Charter members and launched this organization into legitimacy: the late Edward O. Boucher, late Dr. Ernest E. Dupre and late Brad Dorval; also Elaine DelSesto, Janet Cournoyer, Gloria Saillant and Judith Pouliot.
Other members whose talents and hard work in our very early years kept our group a reality include the late Auria Bacon, late John Kelly, and the late Lou and Eleanor Lavallee. Also, Connie Smith (Anderson), Maurice Cournoyer, Raymond DelSesto, John Beattie, Robert St. George, Raymond Lanowy, Richard Corriveau, Louise Tetreault, and Louis Lamoureux.
Over the years many others, too many to name, joined this core group and with their hard work and dedication kept Theatre Works alive and well during its long tenure. My heartfelt thanks to all of them. They gave the gift of time and talent, enriching my life and hopefully their own also. If so, that is my reward. My memory is short but my memories are long. So I will long remember them all and be forever grateful for their devotion to a great community theatre company.
Farewell, Theatre Works.
— Evelyn Zifcak, Woonsocket
Founder of Theatre Works
Woonsocket’s Luther on ‘The Voice’ this week
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Anderson makes a habit out of playing a nun
By The Valley Breeze Staff
WOONSOCKET — Connie Anderson wasn't planning to audition for "Sister Act," playing Feb. 15–17 at the Stadium Theatre in Woonsocket.
"I was at the French Heritage Festival in September," Anderson said. "A friend who volunteers at the Stadium asked if I was auditioning for 'Sister Act.' She said, 'You'd be so good in that.' I just looked at her. I said I wasn't sure." But that put the bug in Anderson's ear.
For better than 30 years, the Andersons ran Theatre Works in the shadow of the Stadium, and that kept them from doing other shows. Anderson decided to give it a shot. "I did my go-to audition song, 'I Just Want to Be a Star' from 'Nunsense.'" Anderson plays Sister Mary Lazarus, the nun in charge of the choir.
"I love the character, and I love playing her," Anderson says, laughing about being cast as a nun again. When Theatre Works did "Nunsense," Anderson played Sister Robert Anne. "It just kind of happened, playing a nun again," she said. "I'm Catholic, what can I tell you?"
"I've never been a trained singer, I was always a comedic singer. I do love to dance, and the rhythm came naturally to me. But learning the numbers and incorporating the singing and the music and the lyrics has been an unbelievable challenge." She says she's never studied so hard for a show. "I have headphones on at work, at night. I study the videos. Study, study, study."
"I feel [badly] we're only doing three shows," says Anderson. "People say it all the time: 'You're doing all this for three shows?' When you love what you're doing, you just do it."