Skip to main content (Access Key S)
Print/Share
Print Page
Send to a Friend
Digg
Del.icio.us
Stumble upon
Ma.gnolia
Furl
Blinklist
Facebook

Past Productions



CHAMPLAIN THEATRE presents ...

2008-2009 Productions

 

 

How I Learned To Drive


How I Learned to Drive

by

Paula Vogel

 

Winner of the 1998 Pulitzer Prize, co-winner of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. The Lucille Lortel Award for outstanding play. As well as the New York Drama Critics' Circle, Drama Desk, and the Obie awards for the best play of the year.

Winner of the 1998 Pulitzer Prize, co-winner of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. The Lucille Lortel Award for outstanding play. As well as the New York Drama Critics' Circle, Drama Desk, and the Obie awards for the best play of the year.

 

How I Learned to Drive is a funny, surprising and devastating tale of survival and self-forgiveness as seen through the lens of a troubling relationship between a young girl and an older man. The play is about families, growing up, becoming independent, and the unpredictable ways in which we learn to take ownership of the driver's seat.

SEPTEMBER 17-20 & 25-27
8:00 P.M.
ALUMNI AUDITORIUM
CHAMPLAIN COLLEGE
$15.00/GENERAL
CHAMPLAIN STUDENTS WITH I.D. FREE
TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THE DOOR

Mature language and content; not suitable for young audiences


 

The Beauty Queen of Leenane

The Beauty Queen of Leenane

by

Martin McDonagh


"Mr. McDonagh has managed to celebrate what remains enduring and alive in human nature even in the most appalling circumstances."- New Republic.

"Mr. McDonagh...[is] like a young version of Synge in exile whose voice, worn with sorrow and savage humor owes a debt to Synge's Playboy of the Western World...The Beauty Queen of Leenane is a gothic dark comedy."- NY Observer

Co-winner of the 1998 Lucille Lortel Award for outstanding play. Set in the mountains of Connemara, County Galway, The Beauty Queen of Leenane tells the darkly comic tale of Maureen Folan, a plain and lonely woman in her early forties, and Mag, her manipulative aging mother whose interference in Maureen's first and possibly last change for a loving relationship sets into motion a train of events that leads inexorably towards the play's terrifying denouement.

April 1-4 & 9-11
8:00 P.M.
FLYNN SPACE
147 MAIN STREET, BURLINGTON
$20.00/GENERAL
To purchase tickets, call the Flynn Regional Box office 863-5966

Mature language and content; not suitable for young audiences


 

Slideshow of Past Productions

 

Burlington, VT, USA
Phone: 802-860-2700 or 800-570-5858
Campus Safety & Security: 802-865-6465