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Towngate Theatre Closes 50th Season with “Our Town”

Oglebay Institute’s Towngate Theatre continues its 50th season of community theater with Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece “Our Town,” considered by many to be the greatest American play ever written.

You can see the show two weekends –May 3, 4 and 5 and May 10 and 11.

With its poetic beauty and simplicity, “Our Town” illuminates the powerful bonds that hold communities together through everyday life and moments of crisis.

With humor, wit and powerful storytelling, the play follows two ordinary families–the Gibbs and the Webbs–through life, love and loss in the fictional small village of Grover’s Corners.

Told as a “play within a play,” the stage manager narrates as we follow the residents of Grover’s Corners through 12 years of life changes–from the mundane in Act I, “Daily Life,” to the romantic in Act II, “Love and Marriage,” to the devastating in Act III, “Death and Eternity.”

“Our Town” Remains Relevant Today

Although written in 1938, “Our Town” remains relevant today, director Tim Thompson said, because it delivers “universal truths about what it means to be human.”

Thornton Wilder said, “I regard the theatre as the greatest of all art forms, the most immediate way in which a human being can share with another the sense of what it is to be a human being.”

Thompson said “Our Town” embodies this quote. “Human beings perform the show for human beings about human beings– about who we are and what makes our lives significant. It is about our daily lives–our ups and downs, ebbs and flows, good times and bad. Audiences will closely identify with this story, its characters and its message.”

John Reilly, back, as Stage Manager, and Aimee Kefauver as Emily.

The play is performed without a set on a mostly bare stage. With a few exceptions, the actors mime actions without the use of props. Thompson said the minimalist surroundings inspire the imagination.

“The narration by the stage manager describes what things look like and the audience is engaged by trying to picture the places in their minds-eye. These can be different for each individual and possibly even remind them of their own homes. Also, it’s part of the theme that the most important aspects of life aren’t house or things.”

A Stellar Cast

John Reilly plays the part of the Stage Manager, who guides the audience through the town and introduces its inhabitants. Aimee Kefauver and Noah Hilton play Emily and George, the two young people who grow up together over the course of the play. Vincent Marshall and Rachel Thompson play Emily’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Webb. Justin Swoyer and Dee Gregg have the roles of George’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. Gibbs.

Eric Dutton plays the town choirmaster. Joe Heatherington plays the part of the town’s milkman, Howie Newsome. Playing the part of the town’s constable is Jim Weekly. Kristin Seibert appears as the town gossip Mrs. Soames and Robert Gaudio is Professor Willard. Grace Thompson plays the part of Rebecca Gibbs, George’s younger, starry-eyed sister. Alex Fabrizio plays Emily’s younger brother.

Rounding out the ensemble are: Isaac Swoyer, Rob DeSantis, Karissa Martin, Pete Fernbaugh, Marie McKelvey, Aidan Kosol and Colin Roose.

Noah Hilton, right, plays George Gibbs and Grace Thompson plays his younger, starry-eyed sister Rebecca.

“We have a stellar cast and crew,” Thompson said. “The Ohio Valley is chock-full of talented actors and this show has some of the best. Also, they are all doing many backstage facets of production, along with our seasoned technical crew. It is a true community effort. I am very fortunate as a director to be able to work with this elite cast and crew.”

This is the final play in Towngate’s 50th season, which is sponsored by Unified Bank.

About Towngate

Towngate is the premiere venue for community theater in Wheeling, providing an intimate theater experience with talented local actors performing in a variety of though-provoking, heartwarming, comedic and historically significant works from renowned playwrights and talented newcomers.

A church-turned-theater, Towngate is located in Wheeling’s historic Centre Market District and serves as an entertainment destination for residents of Wheeling, the Upper Ohio Valley and beyond. In addition to community theater, Towngate also offers poetry and spoken word performances, children’s theater, ballet, improvisational comedy and live music. Towngate is also home to the Wheeling Film Society and features changing art exhibitions in The Gallery at Towngate. Theater classes for children and adults are also offered year-round.

Get Tickets

Evening performances of “Our Town” take place at 8 p.m. May 3, 4, 10 and 11. A matinee performance takes place at 3 p.m. Sunday, May 5.

Purchase tickets online in advance or by calling 304-242-7700. You can purchase tickets at the door, if available. Box office opens one hour prior to curtain.

The Rustic Mechanicals Stage Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” at Towngate

The Rustic Mechanicals, West Virginia’s only professional Shakespeare troupe, bring their Truth is Truth tour of William Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” to Oglebay Institute’s Towngate Theatre for a single performance at 3pm Sunday, April 14.

Existing somewhere between comedy and tragedy, the story takes place in Virginia, which has become a hovel for brothels and promiscuous behavior. The Duke–reluctant to wield his power to clean up the city–leaves, transferring the responsibility to his deputy, Angelo. Angelo soon starts implementing harsh and radical changes. Young Claudio finds himself afoul of an ancient law when he gets his love Juliet pregnant. Angelo sentences him to death for his crime of fornicating out of wedlock. Claudio’s friend Lucio meets with Claudio’s sister Isabella and pleads with her to change Angelo’s mind. Thus begins a plot of intrigue and mistaken identity.

“At its core ‘Measure for Measure’ is a play about when women speak up, men in power don’t believe them,” said Jason A. Young, Vintage Theatre Company’s artistic director. “I feel like the time has come for us to tell this story.”

About The Rustic Mechanicals

Founded by Celi Oliveto in the summer of 2014, Vintage Theatre Company’s The Rustic Mechanicals are the only troupe of actors in the state dedicated to touring the works of William Shakespeare and other classical playwrights. The Mechanicals tour three shows annually focusing on making Shakespeare’s plays accessible to modern audiences by utilizing interesting production concepts, dynamic staging and extreme casting. Now in their sixth season, they have grown from a troupe of seven actors to this year boasting a roster of more than 40 West Virginia artists.

The Cast

Sarah Smith headlines the production in the role of Isabella.

“I’m thrilled to have the opportunity to play Isabella. It’s challenging to portray a character with such unwavering moral convictions,” said Smith. “I’m most excited to show Isabella’s wit, courage and fierce determination in the face of a world that finds her fragile.”

Audiences will also see James Matthews as the Duke, Daniel Crowley as Angelo, Sean Marko as Claudio and Sarah Young as his fiancé Juliet. Justin Grow takes on the role of the foppish Lucio, while troupe newcomers Casey Johnson and Brandon Rose will be seen as the Provost and Escalus. Cassandra Noel Hackbart will play the clever bawd Mistress Overdone as well as Sister Francisca, while Jason A. Young portrays the bawd’s tapster Pompey. Kaici Lore will be seen as Mariana and a servant with Isaac Covey appearing as a Gentleman, Elbow, and Barnardine, and Joshua Brooks covering five roles: the Friar, Froth, an Officer, a Messenger and Abhorson.

“Measure of Measure” is directed by kb saine alongside associate director Celi Oliveto.

“I’ve been really impressed with Vintage’s growth in the past few years and have been looking forward to the time when I would be asked to direct for them,” said saine. “When Jason approached me about ‘Measure for Measure,’ I jumped at the chance to bring such a relevant story to stages all across West Virginia.”

For more information about The Truth is Truth tour of William Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure,’ email the Vintage Theatre Co. or call 1-855-VTC-8588.

“Touring Shakespeare is a 400-year-old-tradition,” said Young. “These troupe members understand the nobility of the work and the heritage that they are a part of. I fully expect this tour to be a labor of love for us all.”

Get Tickets

Tickets for the April 14 performance at Towngate Theatre in Wheeling are $10. Purchase online, by calling 304-242-7700 or at the door, if available.

The Gallery at Towngate

Towngate’s box office opens one hour prior to the show. Guests can come early and view the latest exhibit in The Gallery at Towngate, featuring the work of photographer Gary Zearott and developed as part of  the citywide Wheeling 250 Celebration. Zearott specializes in aerial, panoramic and arts photography – capturing the architectural and natural beauty of Wheeling and the Upper Ohio Valley.

About Towngate

A cornerstone of creative life in Wheeling, Towngate brings together people of all ages and backgrounds to create and experience art onstage. Through educational programs, community theater and other live performances, Towngate fosters an appreciation for performing arts, celebrates the essential power of the theater to illuminate our common humanity and serves as an entertainment destination for residents of the Ohio Valley and beyond.