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Dirty Dancing in Concert!💃🕺

October 24, 2022 @ 7:30 pm 9:00 pm

 Join us for DIRTY DANCING IN CONCERT, the classic film’s first live film-to-concert experience. Enjoy the digitally remastered hit film like never before on a full-size cinema screen, with a live band and singers performing the film’s iconic songs. With a soundtrack that marked a generation, DIRTY DANCING IN CONCERT promises to bring a thrilling new and unique experience to the 80s classic. Immerse yourself in the timeless romance and experience one of the most memorable movies of the past 35 years – now live!

Tickets: A Seating $110 / B Seating $90 / C Seating $80 / D Seating $70

For bonus information and ticket purchases view: Imperial Theatre Inc. | Description – Dirty Dancing in Concert (imperialonline.ca)

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$70 – $110 Depending on seating section choice
Fundy Fringe logo

Fundy Fringe Fest 🛼

August 21, 2022 @ 12:00 pm August 27, 2022 @ 11:59 pm

Check it out, we’ve got a new look! For our tenth anniversary, we are excited to unveil our brand new logo. Stay tuned for a new website and merch coming soon! We can’t wait to see you all showing off your Fundy Fringe swag. Get ready to #BingeTheFringe, August 21st-27th in Saint John, NB.

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Promo poster. Image of a graffiti hart on a wall. Text reads: The Normal Heart by Larry Kramer. Directed by Matt Hamilton Snow. I'm trying to understand why no one wants to hear that we are dying. Saint John Theatre Company. June 22-25, 2022. BMO Studio Theatre. $20 or $15 student. Tickets saintjohntheatrecompany.com 506-652-7582 ext 236

The Normal Heart ❤️

June 22, 2022 @ 7:30 pm 9:30 pm

The Normal Heart provides a glimpse into the early days of the AIDS crisis. The brilliant play follows writer and gay activist Ned Weeks as he attempts to understand love as he fights for the rights of the gay community in New York City.

Promo poster. Image of a graffiti hart on a wall. Text reads: The Normal Heart by Larry Kramer. Directed by Matt Hamilton Snow. I'm trying to understand why no one wants to hear that we are dying. Saint John Theatre Company. June 22-25, 2022. BMO Studio Theatre. $20 or $15 student. Tickets saintjohntheatrecompany.com 506-652-7582 ext 236

The Normal Heart, By Larry Kramer, Directed by Matt Hamilton-Snow

Dates: Wednesday through Saturday, June 22 thru 25, 2022 @7:30

Tickets: Adult – $17.39 +HST ($20.00) Student – $13.04 +HST ($15.00)

Poster for Annie the Musical

Annie

May 25, 2022 @ 7:30 pm 9:30 pm

“An uplifting classic that never goes out of style! Tag along, and sing along, as little orphan Annie goes on the journey of a lifetime, and remember: the sun will come out tomorrow…”

May 25-28, 2022 | Imperial Theatre | Directed by Scott Thomas

Poster for Annie the Musical

Single tickets: $55.00 adult / $45.50 matinee or senior / $15 student / preview night $44.00

To order call Imperial Theatre box office at 1-800-323-SHOW (7469) or visit www.imperialonline.ca.

$15 – $55

506.674.4100

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24 King Square South
Saint John, New Brunswick Canada
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EINE ART LIEBESERKLÄRUNG

All The Ways To Say I Love You
Monologue by Neil LaBute
Direction by Oliver Vorwerk. With Anne Simmering
Thursday, March 12 at the BMO Studio Theatre

A one-person drama about a female high school teacher harboring a terrible secret. A fully German production with English sur-titles.

Cottagers and Indians

Wild rice sparks a battle royal between a native farmer and a white cottager, whose increasingly bitter dispute becomes a microcosm for reconciliation. Told with warmth and humour, and encompassing issues of community, respect and ownership, Cottagers & Indians is a tale for our times – and a food fight for the ages. ProducedbyTarragon Theatre.

IATA International Theatre Festival – Aug 28-31

IATA International Theatre Festival coming to Saint John | August 28-31 | Tickets & Schedule 

Imperial Theatre and Saint John Theatre Company are bringing the world to Saint John as they co-host the International Amateur Theatre Association (IATA) Festival August 28-31. The four day festival will offer audiences a unique taste of theatre with six out of this world performances from Belgium, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary and Portugal. IATA delegates will also meet in the Port City to share best practices.

Tickets are $10. To purchase please visit: www.imperialtheatre.ca/event/aita-iata-festival or call 506-674-4100.

“Possessed by Esther Cox” dinner theatre

“Possessed By Esther Cox”

 

Reviewed by Lorne DeGroot

 

Live Bait Theatre’s latest production, “Possessed By Esther Cox,” written by Charlie Rhindress and Karen Valanne, opened in Springhill on Monday, July 22. The show, which originally premiered at Live Bait in 1996, was a wonderfully funny, historical romp, presented skillfully by a multi-talented cast.

 

The house was full as the lights dimmed, and from the outset, the outlandish antics of Grandma, aka Heather MacIntyre, along with the zany shenanigans of the entire cast, kept the audience in stitches.

 

Grandma’s son, Earl, played by Paul Allen Jr Brisk, was the fusion of Elvis Presley and Meatloaf. Earl sang with operatic quality even while suffering a wardrobe malfunction while strutting the stage. Grandma’s other son Rudy, played by Morgan Grant, was a lovable but uncontrollable souse. Gertrude played by Hannah Tuck, headed the Welcome Wagon committee, welcoming Grandma to her newly purchased, haunted Amherst retirement property.

 

One by one, the characters in this play were possessed and dispossessed repeatedly by the ghost of late Amherst legend, Esther Cox. The villain, Heloise Hardball played by Carley Varner, was hell bent on buying the whole town of Amherst, and turning it into an amusement park, despite strong local resistance to her vengeful plan. Momma’s boy, Woody Gump, played by James Hand, was the only one of the farcical characters not touched by the ghost of Esther Cox.

 

Audience participation delivered an elevated level of hilarity. The music and vocals were tight and professional, inspiring the entire assembly to engage their voices in harmony.

Two thumbs up for a fantastic night of rib tickling laughter, lively music, and fine acting which all together made for an exceedingly entertaining opening night for director Charlie Rhindress and the entire cast.

 

The show runs until July 27 in Amherst and then August 7-10 at the Sackville Legion. Tickets are available by calling (506) 536-2248, visiting Live Bait online at www.livebaittheatre.com or in person at Bargain Bennies in Amherst or Robert Lyon Graphics in Sackville.

 

Albertine in Five Times by Michael Tremblay

New Moon Theatre goes on tour for the first time with Tremblay play

 

Saint Andrews, New Brunswick — New Moon Theatre, under the auspices of the St. Andrews Arts Council, will present three performances of Michel Tremblay’s brilliant play — Albertine in Five Times this fall. The six-woman show will play to audiences in St. Andrews at the W. C. O’Neill Theatre Arena at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, October 25, 26 and 27 followed by a performance in Fredericton at Theatre New Brunswick’s Open Space Theatre on Saturday, November 3 at 7 p.m. Two performances at the Eastport Arts Center, Maine on Thursday, November 8 and Friday, November and 9 at 7 p.m. (Eastern)/8 PM (Atlantic) will take the production across the border and the Bay.

Suzanne Tisdale, director of the play, is thrilled about this new production and its exciting outreach. She says, “We have loved playing to audiences in St. Andrews for the past few years and look forward to a collaboration with TNB and with our neighbours in Maine. We have been working hard to build important links with Eastport and this initiative will be a great way to strengthen those bonds. The play is one that will resonate with audiences everywhere and we know that audience members in all three communities will relate to the issues raised.”

Men and women everywhere are affected by aging, especially now with Baby Boomers being in the majority. Albertine in Five Times hits on this theme as Albertine advances through five decades of her life. It also reaffirms the sexual harassment issues that some women experience and have been highlighted in the Me Too Movement in recent years.

 

In Albertine in Five Times, a woman at 70 faces her past. Master Canadian playwright, Michel Tremblay, hits on a painful reality that an older woman has more years behind than in front of her. Memory has a way of disguising the truth, but Albertine comes to terms with the drama of her history through her younger selves. We meet not one Albertine, but five Albertines, each one representing a successive decade along the path that is her life. The play opens with Albertine at 70 entering a home for the elderly. Albertine at 30, 40, 50, and 60 appear, each with a story to tell.

 

Director Suzanne Tisdale and Co-director Peggy Fothergill were inspired to bring the play to audiences across the province because of Tremblay’s beautiful language and because of this play’s enduring themes. Fothergill says, “The social history of Quebec women from the 1940s to the 1980s may seem like a long time ago, but the topics are current. The impact of oppression and poverty on women’s lives is still being felt in our own country now and around the world. It is in our daily headlines, as is the theme of aging. That is the brilliance of Tremblay. His themes are enduring.”