Welcome to the area’s best theatre calendar.
Looking for what’s happening around town? — We’ve got you covered, with locally sourced plays, touring musicals, dance, comedy, and more, all around the Sound.
Use Categories to view only Theatre, Comedy, Dance, Outdoor Shows, Free Events, and more.
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We try hard to provide updated information, but these showtimes are not official. Please confirm dates/times with the individual theatres via their ticketing pages.
Listings are currently limited to those based in King, Pierce, Snohomish, and Thurston Counties; and slowly expanding west and north (Kitsap, Jefferson, Skagit, and Whatcom counties). The below show listings will be updated as new information is received. If you have a professional, community theatre, dance, or fringe show coming up in Western Washington that’s not listed, please tell us about it.
Myra’s typical, middle-class family is normal in its eccentricities, especially when it comes to dealing with her illness. The boiler keeps breaking, the cat’s gone missing, and the perfect funeral needs planning, but her husband would rather bury his head in a newspaper while her two daughters wrestle with their own problems. Myra might be busy researching flatpack coffins and creating a PowerPoint presentation of her dying wishes, but her last big project is to fix her family. Join As If Theatre Company for Laura Wade’s funny, moving journey through love, loss and laughter, that earned the playwright a Critics’ Circle Theatre Award and an Olivier Award nomination. Directed by Cindy Giese French.
Location: Kenmore Community Club (7304 NE 175th St., Kenmore)
Pay-what-you-choose tickets available for second week (3/21-24) performances.
Tickets ($27) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
Eliza Doolittle, a rough Cockney girl, meets Colonel Pickering and Henry Higgins in Covent Garden where she’s selling flowers. When Higgins remarks that he could help Eliza speak properly and raise her status in the community, Pickering challenges him to do so and Eliza takes him up on the offer. Though difficult and frustrating for both Eliza and Higgins at first, the lessons soon begin to work wonders, and produce results that neither predict.
This Lerner and Loewe 1957 Tony Award-winner for Best Musical is based on George Bernard Shaw’s 1913 play “Pygmalion” and is the basis for the 1964 Academy Award-winning film starring Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison.
Directed by Chris Nardine; music directed by Paul Linnes; choreographed by Kate Kingery.
Open captioned performances on 3/23 and 3/24
Location: Shoreline Community College Theatre (16101 Greenwood Ave N., 1600 building, Shoreline)
Tickets $23-$55 (sliding scale) here.
Myra’s typical, middle-class family is normal in its eccentricities, especially when it comes to dealing with her illness. The boiler keeps breaking, the cat’s gone missing, and the perfect funeral needs planning, but her husband would rather bury his head in a newspaper while her two daughters wrestle with their own problems. Myra might be busy researching flatpack coffins and creating a PowerPoint presentation of her dying wishes, but her last big project is to fix her family. Join As If Theatre Company for Laura Wade’s funny, moving journey through love, loss and laughter, that earned the playwright a Critics’ Circle Theatre Award and an Olivier Award nomination. Directed by Cindy Giese French.
Location: Kenmore Community Club (7304 NE 175th St., Kenmore)
Pay-what-you-choose tickets available for second week (3/21-24) performances.
Tickets ($27) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
Eliza Doolittle, a rough Cockney girl, meets Colonel Pickering and Henry Higgins in Covent Garden where she’s selling flowers. When Higgins remarks that he could help Eliza speak properly and raise her status in the community, Pickering challenges him to do so and Eliza takes him up on the offer. Though difficult and frustrating for both Eliza and Higgins at first, the lessons soon begin to work wonders, and produce results that neither predict.
This Lerner and Loewe 1957 Tony Award-winner for Best Musical is based on George Bernard Shaw’s 1913 play “Pygmalion” and is the basis for the 1964 Academy Award-winning film starring Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison.
Directed by Chris Nardine; music directed by Paul Linnes; choreographed by Kate Kingery.
Open captioned performances on 3/23 and 3/24
Location: Shoreline Community College Theatre (16101 Greenwood Ave N., 1600 building, Shoreline)
Tickets $23-$55 (sliding scale) here.
Through choreography, set design, and costume, Okareka Dance Company strives to tell bold, spiritual stories that are of and from New Zealand. The company performs Mana Wahine [Powerful Women], a multi-media exploration of the strength, spirit, and primal beauty of women, specifically Maori women.
Tickets ($48-$78) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
Formed in 1995 by brothers Phillip and Stephen Blanchett, Pamyua honors and shares Indigenous traditions through ceremony, songs, and dance. The group blends Inuit drum/dance melodies with R&B vocal styling and arrangements.
Tickets ($33-$63) here.
What if John Lennon survived the gunshots inflicted upon him by Mark Chapman on that cold December night in Manhattan in 1980?
Dream #9 is a musical play, with a cross-cultural fantasy theme, that explores this question with some twists and turns. It is the story of the first few months following that night; of Lennon’s recovery with the help of the loving and strong woman by his side, of where he finds himself at the end of his recovery (and where the world wants him to be), and of the power of dreams.
The play itself was inspired by a dream, but really came about as the convergence of a real-life story of survival, a mythological tale of perseverance and intelligence borne of love, from India, and the fierce fantasy that many of us share of having John Lennon still amongst us.
Dream #9 is produced by Ayesha and Vik Patnaik, and written and directed by Vik. Ayesha is an adjunct faculty member in the Communication Arts Dept. at Shoreline Community College, while Vik is an independent consultant in clean energy technologies and international management. Ayesha and Vik are grateful to have been able to revive this project post-COVID in the Greater Seattle area, and assemble an excellent cast of experienced actors from the local community.
Location: Shoreline Community College Theatre (16101 Greenwood Ave N., 1600 building, Shoreline)
Tickets ($17) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
What if John Lennon survived the gunshots inflicted upon him by Mark Chapman on that cold December night in Manhattan in 1980?
Dream #9 is a musical play, with a cross-cultural fantasy theme, that explores this question with some twists and turns. It is the story of the first few months following that night; of Lennon’s recovery with the help of the loving and strong woman by his side, of where he finds himself at the end of his recovery (and where the world wants him to be), and of the power of dreams.
The play itself was inspired by a dream, but really came about as the convergence of a real-life story of survival, a mythological tale of perseverance and intelligence borne of love, from India, and the fierce fantasy that many of us share of having John Lennon still amongst us.
Dream #9 is produced by Ayesha and Vik Patnaik, and written and directed by Vik. Ayesha is an adjunct faculty member in the Communication Arts Dept. at Shoreline Community College, while Vik is an independent consultant in clean energy technologies and international management. Ayesha and Vik are grateful to have been able to revive this project post-COVID in the Greater Seattle area, and assemble an excellent cast of experienced actors from the local community.
Location: Shoreline Community College Theatre (16101 Greenwood Ave N., 1600 building, Shoreline)
Tickets ($17) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
What if John Lennon survived the gunshots inflicted upon him by Mark Chapman on that cold December night in Manhattan in 1980?
Dream #9 is a musical play, with a cross-cultural fantasy theme, that explores this question with some twists and turns. It is the story of the first few months following that night; of Lennon’s recovery with the help of the loving and strong woman by his side, of where he finds himself at the end of his recovery (and where the world wants him to be), and of the power of dreams.
The play itself was inspired by a dream, but really came about as the convergence of a real-life story of survival, a mythological tale of perseverance and intelligence borne of love, from India, and the fierce fantasy that many of us share of having John Lennon still amongst us.
Dream #9 is produced by Ayesha and Vik Patnaik, and written and directed by Vik. Ayesha is an adjunct faculty member in the Communication Arts Dept. at Shoreline Community College, while Vik is an independent consultant in clean energy technologies and international management. Ayesha and Vik are grateful to have been able to revive this project post-COVID in the Greater Seattle area, and assemble an excellent cast of experienced actors from the local community.
Location: Shoreline Community College Theatre (16101 Greenwood Ave N., 1600 building, Shoreline)
Tickets ($17) here.
With a few rehearsals and minimal staging elements, First Draft readings give audiences an opportunity to experience the sorts of plays not usually included in the Mainstage Season, and to be a part of the development process by participating in post-reading feedback sessions to help playwrights further polish their work. Curated by the members of Driftwood After Dark, the First Draft series presents six to eight staged and directed readings of nearly production-ready scripts for an audience each year.
Reading dates: January 21 (In The Garden by Kirsten McCory); April 7 (Gold by Marcus Gorman); June 9 (TBD); July 14 (TBD)
Series info, show titles (when announced), and tickets (free) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
Informal dinner party in Connecticut. Fabulous food. Two married, middle-aged couples: Karen and Gabe are steadfast and ready to “grow old and fat” with their longtime best friends Beth and Tom. Beth and Tom, however, drop an unexpected bombshell — they are over, divorcing. Karen and Gabe are blindsided, left almost as vulnerable as Tom and Beth and must now re-examine life with their best friends, as well as look at the cracks in their own marriage. Then we are taken back 12 years to the fresh beginnings of the relationships in Martha’s Vineyard and then back up to the present day where Tom and Beth each talk of their new partners and Gabe and Karen to examine “what went wrong?” while clinging to each other, navigating the frailty of marriage. Written by Donald Margulies; directed by Ann Smith.
Tickets ($18) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
Supreme Court Justice “RBG” welcomes a friend of the family to her cozy chambers to convey, over the course of 90 fascinating and often funny minutes, a sense of her life and its many trials. An evening with a great and compassionate icon of straight-thinking American justice emerges — an RBG who is not only “notorious” but victorious, as she takes a stand for ordinary people facing the many challenges of a changing world. Bring your scrunchies, your hankies, your humor and your heart to this entertaining and uplifting event.
Written by Tony Award winning playwright Rupert Holmes; starring Michelle Azar as Ruth Bader Ginsburg; directed by Laley Lippard.
Tickets ($40-$70) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
Set during a weekend in an English country manor in 1932, Death by Design is a hilarious, delightful and mysterious mash-up of two of the greatest English writers of all time. Edward Bennett, a playwright, and his wife, Sorel Bennett, an actress, flee London and head to Cookham after a disastrous opening night. Written by Rob Urbinati.
Tickets ($28) here.
It’s 1942, and the leading men of the Oberon Play House are fighting overseas. With “The Show Must Go On!” as their battle cry, a band of passionate, yet inexperienced, performers rally together to produce the Oberon’s season opener, an all-female version of Shakespeare’s ambitious Henry IV and Henry V. Will their production be a victory on the home front or a target for rotten tomatoes? A hilarious and moving story about what happens when we’re all in it together. Written by George Brant.
Tickets ($26) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
Follow the adventures of Don Quixote and his mischievous companion Sancho Panza on a heart-warming quest for love, honor, and justice in this fun bravura ballet. Staged after the production by Marius Petipa and Alexander Gorsky, this classical three-act production of Don Quixote features sets by award-winning set designer John Iacovelli.
Location: Edmonds Center for the Arts (410 4th Ave N, Edmonds)
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
Want more Deaf-friendly theatre? See NWTheatre’s complete calendar of ASL interpreted and open captioned performances here.
Follow the adventures of Don Quixote and his mischievous companion Sancho Panza on a heart-warming quest for love, honor, and justice in this fun bravura ballet. Staged after the production by Marius Petipa and Alexander Gorsky, this classical three-act production of Don Quixote features sets by award-winning set designer John Iacovelli.
Location: Edmonds Center for the Arts (410 4th Ave N, Edmonds)
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
Follow the adventures of Don Quixote and his mischievous companion Sancho Panza on a heart-warming quest for love, honor, and justice in this fun bravura ballet. Staged after the production by Marius Petipa and Alexander Gorsky, this classical three-act production of Don Quixote features sets by award-winning set designer John Iacovelli.
Location: Edmonds Center for the Arts (410 4th Ave N, Edmonds)
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
Want more Deaf-friendly theatre? See NWTheatre’s complete calendar of ASL interpreted and open captioned performances here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.
In this delightful, laugh-a-minute comedy, four unique Southern women, all needing to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines, are drawn together by Fate — and an impromptu happy hour — and decide it’s high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months, filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jump-start their new lives. Together, they discover lasting friendships and a renewed determination to live in the moment — and most importantly, realize it’s never too late to make new old friends.
Written by Jones, Hope, and Wooten. Directed by Joe Goins.
Tickets ($30) here.
It’s no wonder this musical charmer was the longest-running musical in the world, with its breathtaking poetry, theatrical sophistication, and timeless songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.” Full of buoyant humor and charming tunes, The Fantasticks tells the story of a boy and a girl who fall madly in love, and the two meddlesome fathers who try to keep them apart. This production features a newly revised and updated script and a lush new approach to this beloved classic. Don’t miss this magical, wild and witty tale about young love, wild fantasy, and growing up.
ASL interpreted performance 5/4, and open captioned performance 5/18 (matinees).
$20 Section B same-day, in-person rush tickets offered for all dates (subject to availability). Pay-what-you-choose tickets available same-day for select performances. See discount ticket info here and PWYC info here.
Tickets here.