Theatre Conspiracy announces the three finalists for the 2016-2017 New Play Contest: NOLI TIMERE (Don’t Be Afraid) by Jared Michael Delaney, Caesar’s Blood by Rich Rubin, and Highness by Carolyn Kras. Finalists were selected from over 600 entries across the United States, Canada, Israel, Thailand and England. The winner will be voted on by the audience and announced at Theatre Conspiracy’s Annual Fundraiser on Nov. 19.

The evening begins with at 7 p.m. with a reception including food and drink. Then at 8PM selections from each finalist will be read by a cast of Theatre Conspiracy favorites. After the conclusion of the final reading the audience will vote for which show they think should be the winner. The winning script will be given a full production in May of 2017.

The New Play Contest, now in its 18th year, provides opportunity for audiences to get involved with the contest process itself, rather than the end result.

“The theatre is a difficult business for everyone involved, but even more so for playwrights,” says Theatre Conspiracy Founder and Artistic Director Bill Taylor. “What happens after a world premiere? By producing new works, Theatre Conspiracy creates a more promising landscape for the future of theatre by providing a nurturing environment for the greatest asset theatre can have: great playwrights.”

NOLI TIMERE (Don’t Be Afraid) by Jared Michael Delaney tells the story of a newly-ordained priest and his sister are made to confront something from their past that neither is expecting when a strange man knocks on the door of the rectory late one night. A confrontation occurs that leads them both into a frightening world that may, in fact, just be our own.

Caesar’s Blood by Rich Rubin takes place in late November 1864. The Civil War is still raging, and President Abraham Lincoln has just been re-elected. At New York’s Winter Garden Theatre, the elite of Manhatten have gathered to watch a one-evening-only benefit performance of Julius Caesar  starring the three most celebrated actors in America, the iconic Booth brothers – Edwin, Junius Brutus and John Wilkes. John, heralded in the tabloids as “the handsomest man in America,” is a fervent believer in the Confederate cause, and had already been arrested for his seditious comments about the President and the North. His older brothers Edwin and Junius Brutus, meanwhile, are ardent supporters of Lincoln and the Union. Both before and after the performance of Shakespeare’s bloody tragedy, the three brothers spar about politics, theater and the roots of their heated sibling rivalry. A play based, as the saying goes, on true events.

Highness by Carolyn Kras dramatizes Princess Elizabeth I and Queen Katherine Parr’s journey of friendship and betrayal while exploring challenges faced by women in politics. Before Elizabeth I became an iconic Queen, she was a troubled teenager meeting her fourth stepmother, Katherine Parr. Katherine becomes Elizabeth’s greatest mentor, but politics and personal betrayal threaten to tear them apart.

Tickets to Theatre Conspiracy’s Fundraiser are $50 and include the reception, readings and a voucher good for a ticket to any Theatre Conspiracy production.

 

Alliance for the Arts GreenMarket will host a free rainwater harvesting workshop on Saturday, Oct. 29 at 10:30 a.m. This seminar, presented by Jack Burden, will cover the basics of rainwater capture and reuse.

Jack Burden, of Raindrops Cisterns Inc., is an accredited professional of the American Rainwater Catchment Systems Association with 25 years of experience. He grew up as a “waterman” in south Florida and his connection with the resource goes back to his early days sailing and diving in south Florida. While working in Bangladesh, Burden witnessed water riots at the India/Bangladesh border. This experience led him into rainwater harvesting, waste water and storm water reuse.

Burden has developed Florida-state approved continuing education courses on rainwater harvesting for the state plumbers association. He has also served as a national trainer for the American Rain Catchment Systems Association.

The workshop will cover areas such as water capture, treatment, and reuse strategies; sewage treatment solutions for any size water systems; and water treatment and reuse. The presentation will be followed by a Question and Answer session.

The GreenMarket regularly offers the community free workshops and seminars covering topics such as urban farming, sustainability and organic practices in homes and gardens. Now in its 7th year, the GreenMarket provides a space where local growers, bakers and artisans can meet with residents and visitors.

Members of the SWFL Fine Craft Guild will demonstrate their various techniques on Saturday, Nov. 5 during Artists@Work at the Alliance for the Arts. This free, family friendly demo day runs from 10AM to 1PM during the Alliance GreenMarket. Come see a variety of work from local artists including:

  • Nancy Griffin (Fused glass)
  • Sue Archer (Vitreous painting)
  • Dale Eulitz (Wire wrapped jewelry)
  • Sandra Johnston (Knitting)
  • Lynn Ondercin (Stone sculture)
  • Jeanette Igoe (Clay ceramics)
  • Ana Santiago (Ceramic tiles)
  • Petra Kaiser (Fused Glassi)

Members of the SWFL Fine Craft Guild combine old craftsmanship with contemporary techniques to produce unique works of art.

Hundreds of pieces of artwork created by Alliance for the Arts members will fill the gallery walls during November and December during Off the Wall: 200 Under $200. Coinciding with the onset of the holiday shopping season, this non-traditional art show features works of all mediums priced at $200 or less. All sales are “cash and carry,” meaning purchasers will get to take the piece with them when they buy it, instead of waiting until the end of the exhibit. This exhibit  is kindly sponsored by Clif & Tina Parker.

The two month long exhibit will evolve as pieces disappear and the remaining pieces are repositioned. The opening reception is Friday, November 18. Caren Pearson will be exhibiting in the member gallery. The Theatre Gallery will house Private Collection: Alliance Treasures. The exhibit runs through December 30.

“We hope that this exhibit will encourage others to consider buying local art when shopping for gifts,” said Krista Johnson, Exhibitions Coordinator. “By doing so, we can help stimulate the city’s creative economy.”

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The show explores themes about modern American political extremism, feminism, beauty queens, James Madison, the Democratic Republic of America, the GOP, Liberal angst and Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew. The Taming opens on October 14 at Alliance.

A crackling modern political farce, The Taming hilariously takes on America’s overheated political rhetoric and upends historical truths about our founding fathers. When a conservative senatorial aid, a liberal political activist, and a very sparkly beauty queen find themselves locked in a hotel room, the political passions of these slightly insane women prove they might just be revolutionary geniuses.

Initially inspired by The Taming of The Shrew, Gunderson’s farce The Taming grew out of her desire to wrestle with potent elements inside the Bard’s playful and problematic battle of the sexes. Inside the heightened, cheerfully absurd world of The Taming, Gunderson spanks America’s sound bite politics with the switch of actual history and proves Shakespeare’s point that true debate is hot.

Performances are October 14 – 30 on Thursday, Friday, and Saturdays at 8 PM with one Sunday matinee on October 30 at 2 PM. Tickets are $24 or $11 for students with proper ID. Thursday nights are “buy one get one half off.” Alliance for the Arts Member Theatre Night is Friday, October 14 and tickets are $15. Season subscription packages are also available. Buy 7 shows for $133 ($19 per ticket), 6 shows for $120 ($20 a ticket), or 5 shows for $110 ($22 per ticket).

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