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2004
Spring Review
February
29
Black Broadway
March
28
The
Acting Company
Richard
III
April 2-4, 9, 10
Brighton
Beach Memoirs
by Neil Simon
ECC
Theater Group
May
28 & 29
June 4, 5, & 6
Antigone
by Sophocles
ECC
Theater Group

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As
a courtesy to the performers and our audience, children under 5 years
of age will not be admitted to theatre series performances. Children 5
and older however, must have a ticket and be able to sit quietly throughout
the performance. Thank you for your support and understanding.
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| 2004
Spring Review |
 
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Sunday,
February 29, 2004 at 7 pm
BLACK BROADAY

Songs
and scenes from nine great musicals blend together for an electrifying
and simply unforgettable show. Headliner Michael Leon Wooley
adds his own twist to heart-stopping renditions from Dreamgirls,
Ain't Misbehavin', Porgy and Bess and Duke Ellington's Sophisticated
Ladies. From the soaring lilt of Gershwin's "I Loves You,
Porgy" to the sly send-up of "Honeysuckle Rose,"
Black Broadway slices deep into stunning popular music.
Marsee
Auditorium $28 / $28

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ECC
THEATER
presents


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Friday/Saturday
April 2, 3 / 9, 10, 2004 at 8 pm
Sunday, April 4, 2004 at 3 pm
"BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS"
By NEIL SIMON
Ron Scarlata, director
In Neil
Simon's darkly funny memoir of his family in 1930's Brooklyn, fifteen-year-old
Eugene is preoccupied by his passion for the Yankees and his lust
for his beautiful cousin Nora. Eugene lives in crowded, lower middle-class
surroundings with his father, mother, and older brother but also the
mother's widowed sister and two daughters - circumstances realistically
described by the father as
"if you don't have a problem,
you wouldn't live in this house!" Eugene's comic growing pains
contrast with the darker issues troubling his family: poverty, illness,
and the growing Nazi threat to relatives in Europe. Simon looks back
not with anger but with affection creating a Brooklyn universe full
of memorable characters, humor and truth. Winner of the New York Drama
Critics' Circle Award for Best Play.

Campus Theatre $10
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ECC
THEATER
presents
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Friday/Saturday
May 28, 29 / June 4, 5, 2004 at 8 pm
Sunday, June 6, 2004 at 3 pm
"ANTIGONE"
By Sophocles
Translated by Michael
Townsend
caryn desai, director
One of
the most powerful Greek plays continues the tragic story of the house
of OEDIPUS. After his death, his two sons were to share the throne
reigning over Thebes in alternate years. But the first to reign refuses
to relinquish the throne. When the other attacks with the help of
foreigners, the brothers kill one another in combat. Creon, the uncle,
becomes King. He forbids the burial of the one who attacked the throne
as an attack against Thebes. Sophocles, considered one of the world's
great poets and dramatists, speaks as clearly to us today as he did
to the Greeks of the fifth century BC.

Campus Theatre $10
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