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Lost
in Yonkers 9/13/02 - 10/5/02
Lost in Yonkers By Neil Simon
- September 13 - October 5, 2002,
2:00 p.m. matinee Sunday, September
29, 2002. Set in 1942, this play
takes a humorous and heart-warming
look at family relationships.
Eddie, about to begin an extended
business trip, leaves his two
sons with their grandmother in
Yonkers. The boys must contend
with stern old Grandma Kurnitz,
her daughter Ella and her secret
romance, and her son Louie who
may have mob connections. Winner
of the 1991 Pulitzer Prize for
Drama and the Tony Award for Best
Play. "The best play Simon
ever wrote." - N.Y. Post
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Something's
Afoot 11/15/12 to 12/7/02
Something's
Afoot By James McDonald, David
Vos and Robert Gerlach - November
15 - December 7, 2002, 2:00 p.m.
matinee Sunday, December 1. An
hilarious musical spoof of the
whodunit genre! Stocked with classic
British stereotypes including
the maid, butler, ingenue, dissolute
nephew, and amateur detective.
Join this lively bunch as they
try to figure out who killed Lord
Rancour. Filled with surprises!
Perfect for families.
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Much Ado
About Nothing 1/17/03 to 2/8/03
Much
Ado About Nothing By William Shakespeare
- January 17 - February 8, 2003,
2 pm Matinee Sunday, February
2. One of Shakespeare's more popular
comedies follows two stories of
romantic love, each with their
own quite different journey to
a happy ending. Lovers Hero and
Claudio are kept apart by the
treachery of others, while Beatrice
and Benedick are kept apart by
their own pride. Thanks to their
friends and enemies, the lovers
eventually find each other. For
audience members of all ages.
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The Owl
and the Pussycat 3/21/03 to 4/12/03
The
Owl and the Pussycat By Bill Manhoff
- March 21 - April 12, 2003, 2
pm Matinee Sunday, April 6. This
wondrful comedy tells the story
of Doris, evicted from her San
Francisco apartment, and Felix,
the stuffy neighbor whose complaint
caused the eviction. Doris, with
nowhere to go, shows up at Felix's
door, figuring he owes her a place
to stay for the night. This arrangement
leads directly to hilarity. Come
ready to laugh. "Animated...startling
intensity and truth...vivid and
comic." - N.Y. Times
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Agnes of
God 4/16/03 to 6/7/03
Agnes
of God By John Pielmeir - May
16-June 7, 2 pm Matinee Sunday,
June 1. This fascinating drama
introduces us to Dr. Martha Livingstone,
a court-appointed psychiatrist
who is asked to determine the
sanity of a young nun accused
of murdering her own baby. Miriam
Ruth, the Mother Superior, seems
bent on protecting Sister Agnes
from the doctor, and Livingstone's
suspicions are immediately aroused.
"Riveting, powerful, electrifying
drama...the dialogue crackles."
- N.Y. Daily News
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A Thousand Clowns 7/18/03
to 8/9/03
A Thousand Clowns By
Herb Gardner - July 18-August
9, 2003 2 pm Matinee Sunday, August
3. This play, described as a benchmark
of Broadway comedy, features Murray
Burns, a bachelor uncle left to
rear his precocious nephew. Non-conformist
Murray has tired of writing cheap
comedy for a children's television
program and finds himself unemployed
with free time to do the things
he has always wanted to do - like
stand on Park Avenue at dawn and
holler, '"All right, all
you rich people; everyone out
in the street for volleyball."
Life gets complicated when a social
worker shows up to make sure Murray's
nephew is receiving a proper upbringing.
"Filled with laughter, warmth,
sweetness and inspired daffiness."
- N.Y. Daily News
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