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The world famous private detective, Burton Everhart III, has been summoned to the Straitford Estate in London to investigate the death of Colonel Straitford. The night has not come to a close before a blood-curdling scream shakes the estate. Burton discovers that the widow, Julia Straitford, has had an unfortunate run in with her bedroom window... or should we say run out? From the disgruntled staff to Mrs. Straitford’s own family, everyone appears to have a motive for helping Julia to her abrupt end. With a colorful cast including a bunny slipper wearing butler and a nephew with multiple personalities, the laughs never stop!
This dramatization is based on the true story of David and Sonja Saar's son, Benjamin, who was born with congenital hemophilia and died in 1987 at the age of 8 of AIDS-related complications. A uniquely gifted visual artist, Benjamin's buoyant imagination transformed his physical and emotional pain into a blaze of colors and shapes in his fanciful drawings and paintings. A Scandinavian folksong tells of three little boats: "One was blue, one was red and one was yellow as the sun. They sailed far out to sea. The blue one returned to the harbor. The red one sailed home, too. But the yellow boat sailed up to the sun." Benjamin always concluded his bedtime ritual by saying, "Mom, you can be the red boat or the blue boat, but I am the yellow boat." Benjamin's remarkable voyage continues to touch audiences around the world.
3rd Place Overall
DISTRICT
Best Technician
Emma Quach
All Star Cast
Kyan Miller
Honorable Mention
Sawyer Egan
Mali Santos
ZONE
Best Tech Crew
Best Technician
Kaitlyn Zapp
Best Performer
Kyan Miller
All Star Cast
Mali Santos
Sawyer Egan
Honorable Mention
Evan Larsen
Emily desperately wants to play the lead in her high school's production of Romeo and Juliet. Instead, she gets a one-line, four-word role. None the less, she tells her parents (who will be out of town during the performance) that she got the lead, and suddenly, things spin way out of control. Mom and Dad cancel their vacation plans and invite every relative they can round up to come visit and see their daughter play Juliet. This outlandishly funny and very touching play is about the roles we all play—in theatre and in life.
In rhyme, mime and mirth, this exciting comedy examines the familiar fairy tale from three points of view: the traditional, the Bears', then Goldilocks'. Guilty or innocent? Was the young girl a selfish, spoiled brat, intruding where she didn't belong? Or was she the victim of three conniving bears (and their animal "band of hoods" in the woods)? Complete with a hard-of-hearing judge, a harried clerk, two comic lawyers and a jury (of any size) which gets involved in the action as tables, chairs, beds and forest animals. From the opening moment to the surprising verdict from the jury—and a "happily ever after" conclusion—this play, performed completely in verse, is both unique and enchanting.
That master of imaginative enchantment, C.S. Lewis, has created a unique world and he invites children to walk into it and enjoy both surprise and adventure. An old house in rural England becomes the home base for four children who wander into an incredible country through an old wardrobe and help the country return to summer. In the incredible Narnia, they make friends with the frightened forest people who have almost given up hope for the return of good King Aslan, their true ruler. When Aslan was there, it was always summer. There is a great battle to see whether this magical country will remain under a wintry spell or will, once again, know freedom and summer under good King Aslan. A charming play about courage and the love of freedom.