Gates Open at 7:00 pm
Pre-Show at 8:00 pm
Curtain at 8:45 pm
General Admission Tickets:
Available at the Gate
Adults $10, Child (under 12) $5
Guest should bring their own blankets and chairs to place in designated
areas.
For Advanced Sale Tickets:
Phone: (859) 339-6315
All tickets subject to applicable fees.
Advanced Sale Tickets:
Season Tickets $25
Blanket Area for Four $48
Reserved Chair $12
General Admission Adult $10
General Admission Child $5
Thursdays are Bike, Buck & Bottle Nights!
Bike Riders Save a Buck + free bottle of water!

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Once each show has opened, production photos will be avaliable here on our web site.

July 9 - 13, 2008
Directed by: Joe Ferrell
Written by: William Shakespeare
Antony
and Cleopatra is one of Shakespeare's best known later tragedies.
In Antony, Cleopatra, and Augustus Caesar, Shakespeare depicts characters
that are larger than life, all three of the main figures commanding
"planetary" status as rulers of the world and instruments
of its destiny.
It stands as one of Shakespeare's most
poetic plays and is is noted for its evocative word paintings and
vivid hyperbole, and the ambiguity and ambivalence of life without
providing clear or comfortable answers. The two lovers presented in
the play are, after all, only human beings—flawed and aging ones at
that. We as human beings share their mortality; many of us recognize
their strong feelings of jealousy, love, shame, and insecurity.
Stage Manager Assistant Stage Manager |
Alberta Labrillazo Alex Lawson |
Queen of Egypt: Cleopatra |
Ellie Clark |
Triumvirs: Mark Antony Octavius Caesar Lepidus |
Eric Johnson Jack McIntyre Paul Thomas |
Followers of Antony: Domitius Enobarbus Ventidius Eros Canidius |
Walter Tunis Caleb Hardy Shayne Brakefield |
Sister of Octavius Caesar: Octavia |
Janet Scott |
Followers of Octavius Caesar: Maecenas Agrippa Dolabella Proculeius |
Terry Withers Adam Luckey Trent Fucci Paul Carelli |
Attendants on Cleopatra: |
Bianca Spriggs Kim Dixon Sidney Shaw Gene Arkle Paul Thomas Ryan Case |
July 16 - 20, 2008
Directed by: Sullivan Canaday White
Written by: William Golding
Stage Adaptation By: Nigel Williams
Lord
of the Flies is a thought provoking play adapted from the novel authored
by William Golding in 1954. It describes in detail the horrific exploits
of a band of young children who make a striking transition from civilized
to barbaric. Lord of the Flies commands a pessimistic outlook that
seems to show that man is inherently tied to society, and without
it, we would likely return to savagery.
Multiple themes and basic ideas are presented that give the viewer
something to think about. One of the most basic and obvious themes
is that society holds everyone together, and without these conditions,
our ideals, values, and the basics of right and wrong are lost. Without
society's rigid rules that keep us in line, anarchy and savagery can
come to light.
Lord of the Flies teaches us about the hard lesson that morals come directly from our surroundings, and if there is no civilization around us, we will lose these values.
Stage Manager |
Whitney Sampson Jacob Sexton Molly Dunn Avery Wigglesworth |
The Ensemble: |
|

July 23 - 27, 2008
Directed by Mike Thomas
Book & Lyrics By: Gerome Ragni & James Rado
Music by: Galt McDermot
Hair:
The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical, is a rock musical with lyrics
by James Rado and Gerome Ragni, and music by Galt MacDermot. The musical
was a product of the hippie counter-culture and sexual revolution
of the 1960s, and several of its songs became anthems of the anti-Vietnam
War peace movement. Protesting, laughing, fighting, loving, rebel
without causing, these young people spill across the stage with a
sprawling, grinning arrogance.
They seem to believe totally in what they are doing and their rather
uncivil disobedience is made sharp and to the point. The enthusiasm
of its actors, the zest of its music, and the very bustle of its somewhat
purposeless action, are the things that make it attractive.
In 1968, “Hair”
made Broadway history as the first rock musical, initially running over 4 years with a slew of chart-topping hit songs including “The Age of Aquarius,” “Let the Sun Shine In,” “Good Morning, Starshine,” “Easy To Be Hard,” and “Hair.”
| Music Director Choreographer Stage Manager Assistant Stage Manager |
Mark Funk Peggy Stamps Natalie Cummins Aubin Munn |
The Ensemble: |
James Grino Cameron Perry Whit Whitaker Adam Fister Lauren Collins Djuan Trent Ellie Todd Brittny Congleton Justin Norris |
| Male Tribe: Will Bradley Clayton Burchell Amadeus Durbin Scott Heierman |
Sebastian Midence Justin Norris Robert Shyrock Brandon Smith |
| Female Tribe: Meredith Bell Katherine Berger Rachel Berger |
Hope Kodman Lauren Sevigny Anne Dean Watkins Sarah Zehnder |