Cleveland’s Classic Company at the Hanna Theatre presents
April 28–May 21, 2023
April 28–May 21, 2023
On behalf of our artists, staff, and Board of Trustees, welcome to the conclusion of Great Lakes Theater’s 61st season! Our mission, “to bring the pleasure, power, and relevance of classic theater to the widest possible audience,” guides our mainstage productions and educational programming. We believe theater holds the capacity to illuminate truth and enduring values, celebrate and challenge human nature and actions, and provide our student audiences a glimpse of a broader world and the wellspring of learning made possible through the arts.
We are so pleased you have joined us for the finale of our 61st season, Ain’t Misbehavin’. We are overjoyed to share this long-awaited production with you. This gorgeous, vibrant, musical celebration of Fats Waller is a truly fitting way to end this extraordinary season. We are extremely grateful to the Kulas Foundation for sponsoring this musical and many others over the years as part of the Kulas Musical Theater Series at Great Lakes Theater.
As the current season closes, work has already begun on our next season of six spectacular productions. Our 2023-24 season starts with Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 in September, followed by Dracula: The Bloody Truth and A Christmas Carol to ring in the holiday season Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Always...Patsy Cline arrive in the spring to round out the second half of this tremendous season. We hope you will join us again next season by purchasing a season subscription to three or more of our productions!
On a personal note, the two of us have been working together in leadership of the three companies we serve, beginning with Great Lakes Theater in 2002. This is Bob’s 23rd season at GLT and Charlie’s 21st. Our professional partnership is coming to an end this summer as Bob retires from all three of our companies, but the bonds of friendship that we, and our families, have formed will last a lifetime. Working with our committed and loyal year-round staffs, our dedicated and generous boards of trustees, and the artists that form the core of our work, we have created an artistic and business model that is unique in the American Theater: three independently operated, non-profit theater companies spanning the continent from Ohio to Idaho to Nevada. Our model has created tangible opportunities for our entire team, from administration to production and artistic. This is something that we are deeply proud of and view as a legacy of our work together.
The road we have travelled together has not always been easy. In our first year together, we worked to retire an over one million dollar accumulated deficit brought on by recession and the 9/11 shutdown of a major production. Our job was to restructure GLT, eliminate debt, build capital reserves and plan the campaign to re-imagine the Hanna Theatre. Neither of us could have achieved this alone. Based on trust and a shared vision, our partnership saw us through to the successful re-capitalizing of GLT and the opening of the Hanna Theatre following a $20 million campaign in 2008. Bob has taken the lead as the “numbers guy,” yet always with a passionate appreciation and deep understanding of our artistic mission. We are incredibly proud that his legacy will live on, with the company grounded in the firm financial footing we have developed together over these past two decades.
As always, we sincerely thank those who have given their generous support this season. As you read your program and look around the theater tonight, you will see the names of many friends, partners, corporations, and foundations whose donations make all this possible. We encourage you to join these donors by becoming a Great Lakes Theater family member with your gift. In addition, we extend our sincere gratitude to all of our sponsors and Annual Fund donors/members, with continued appreciation to our partners of over 40 years at Playhouse Square and the tireless efforts of our Board of Trustees, dedicated administrative staff, gifted artists, and the tremendous generosity of this community.
We hope to see you in our audience again soon.
Charles Fee, Producing Artistic Director Bob Taylor, Executive DirectorThe mission of Great Lakes Theater (GLT), through its mainstage productions and its education programs, is to bring the pleasure, power and relevance of classic theater to the widest possible audience.
Since the company’s inception in 1962, programming has been rooted in Shakespeare, but GLT’s commitment to great plays spans the breadth of all cultures, forms of theater and time periods –– including the 20th century –– and provides for the occasional mounting of new works that complement the classical repertoire.
Classic theater holds the capacity to illuminate truth and enduring values, celebrate and challenge human nature and actions, revel in eloquent language, preserve the traditions of diverse cultures and generate communal spirit. On its mainstage and through its education programs, GLT seeks to create visceral, immediate experiences for participants, asserting theater’s historic role as a vehicle for advancing the common good and helping people make joyful and meaningful connections between classic plays and their own lives.
The company’s commitment to classic theater is magnified in the educational programming surrounding its productions. Since its inception, GLT has had a strong presence in area schools, bringing students to the theater for matinee performances and sending specially trained actor-teachers to the schools for weeklong residencies developed to explore classic drama from a theatrical point of view. GLT is equally dedicated to enhancing the theater experience for adult audiences. To this end, GLT regularly serves as the catalyst for community events and programs in the arts and humanities that illuminate the plays on its stage.
Great Lakes Theater is one of only a handful of American theaters that have stayed the course as a classic theater. As GLT celebrates more than a decade in its permanent home at the Hanna Theatre, the company reaffirms its belief in the power of partnership, its determination to make this community a better place in which to live, and its commitment to ensure the legacy of classic theater in Cleveland.
Producing
With generous support from:
Artistic DirectorPart of the Kulas Musical Theater Series at Great Lakes Theater
Presents
THE FATS WALLER MUSICAL SHOW
CONCEIVED BY RICHARD MALTBY, JR. & MURRAY HORWITZ
CREATED AND ORIGINALLY DIRECTED BY RICHARD MALTBY, JR.
ORIGINAL CHOREOGRAPHY AND MUSICAL STAGING BY ARTHUR FARIA
MUSICAL ADAPTATIONS, ORCHESTRATIONS, AND ARRANGEMENT BY LUTHER HENDERSON
VOCAL AND MUSICAL CONCEPTS BY JEFFREY GUTCHEON
MUSICAL ARRANGEMENTS BY JEFFREY GUTCHEON & WILLIAM ELLIOTT
Originally produced by The Manhattan Theatre Club
Originally produced on Broadway by Emanuel Azenberg, Dasha Epstein, The Shubert Organization, Jane Gaynor, & Ron Dante
DIRECTED AND CHOREOGRAPHED BY GERRY McINTYRE
Tyrick Wiltez Jones*
Colleen Longshaw*
Music Director
William Knowles
Scenic Designer
Stanley A. Meyer
Hair and Wig Designer
Iran Micheal Leon
Company
Brittney Mack*
Jessie Cope Miller*
Costume Designer
Dustin Cross
William Knowles
David Robbins*
Assistant Director/Choreographer
Jaclyn Miller
Lighting Designer Trad A Burns
Production Stage Manager Sarah Kelso*
Sound Design
David Gotwald
Assistant Stage Managers
Nicki Cathro*
Lindy Warren
*Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States Ain’t Misbehavin’ is part of the Kulas Musical Theater Series at Great Lakes Theater. Great Lakes Theater Youth Savings subscriptions are subsidized by a generous gift from Eaton. There will be one fifteen-minute intermission.
AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ Is presented through special arrangement with Musical Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. www.mtishows.com Any video and/or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited.
Andre Tyrick Wiltez Jones*†
Armelia ............................................................................................ Jessie Cope Miller*
Fats Waller ........................................................................................... William Knowles
Charlaine Brittney Mack*
Nell...................................................................................................Colleen Longshaw*
Ken David Robbins*
Musicians:
Piano/Musical Director .......................................................................... William Knowles
Bass .......................................................................................................... Ray DeForest
Trumpet Juan Ingram
Trombone ................................................................................................ Eric Richmond
Reed Emillo Rosario
Drums ...................................................................................................... Elijah Gilmore
*Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
† Dance Captain
*Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
Great Lakes Theater Camp is a summer drama camp with musical theater elements that immerses students in interactive and educational theater-based activities. Theater Camp is a unique opportunity for students to work with and learn from Great Lakes Theater’s professional teaching artists in a fun, safe and supportive environment.
june 12 - 22, 2023
full and half-day camps available! Two-week session! (Mon.- Thurs.)
a summer camp for students ages 6-17 at Brook Park Elementary School
For more info: GreatLakesTheater.org/camp
All music by Thomas “Fats” Waller alone, except where (*) indicated. Songs not written by Fats Waller were recorded by him.
Act One
“Ain’t Misbehavin’”* (1929) ............................
Music by Thomas Waller and Harry Brooks
Lyrics by Andy Razaf
“Lookin’ Good But Feelin Bad” (1929) ...................................... Lyrics by Lester A. Santly
“’Tain’t Nobody’s Biz-Ness If I Do”* (1922) (The first song recorded by Fats Waller)
Music and Lyrics by Porter Grainger and Everett Robbins
Additional Lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr. and Marray Horwitz
“Honeysuckle Rose” (1939) Lyrics by Andy Razaf
“Squeeze Me” (1925) ........................................................... Lyrics by Clarence Williams
“Handful Of Keys” (1933) ...................... Lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr. and Murray Horwitz (based on an idea by Marty Gross)
“I’ve Got A Feeling I’m Falling”* (1929) .............. Music by Thomas Waller and Harry Link
Lyrics by Billy Rose
“How Ya Baby” (1938) .................................................................. Lyrics by J.C. Johnson
“The Ladies Who Sing With The Band” (1943)
“Yacht Club Swing” (1938)
“When The Nylons Bloom Again” (1943)
Lyrics by George Marion, Jr.
Music by Thomas Waller and Herman Autry
Lyrics by J.C. Johnson
Lyrics by George Marion, Jr.
“Cash For Your Trash” (1942) .......................................................... Lyrics by Ed Kirkeby
“Off-Time”* (1929)
Music by Thomas Waller and Harry Brooks
Lyrics by Andy Razaf
“The Joint Is Jumpin’” (1938) ............................... Lyrics by Andy Razaf and J.C. Johnson
Act Two
“Spreadin’ Rhythm Around”* (1935)
Music by Jimmy McHugh
Lyrics by Ted Koehler, Additional lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr.
“Lounging At The Waldorf” (1936) ........................................
Lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr.
“The Viper’s Drag” (1943) “The Reefer Song” (Traditional)
“Mean To Me”* (1929) ..........................
“Your Feet’s Too Big”* (1936)
Music and Lyrics by Roy Turk and Fred E. Ahlert
Music and Lyrics by Ada Benson and Fred Fisher
“That Ain’t Right”* (1943) ...................................... Music and Lyrics by Nat “King” Cole
Additional Lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr. and Murray Horwitz
“Keepin’ Out Of Mischief Now” (1932)
Lyrics by Andy Razaf
“Fat And Greasy”* (1939) .......... Music and Lyrics by Porter Grainger and Charlie Johnson
“Black And Blue”* (1929)
Music by Thomas Waller and Harry Brooks
Lyrics by Andy Razaf
Finale: Songs by others which Fats Waller made hits
“I’m Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter”* (1933)
Music by Fred E. Ahlert, Lyrics by Joe Young
“Two Sleepy People”* (1938) Music by Hoagy Carmichael, Lyrics by Frank Loesser
“I’ve Got My Fingers Crossed”* (1935)..... Music by Jimmy McHugh, Lyrics by Ted Koehler
“I Can’t Give You Anything But Love”* (1928)
Music by Jimmy McHugh
Lyrics by Dorothy Fields
“It’s A Sin To Tell A Lie”* (1933).................................. Music and Lyrics by Billy Mayhew
“Honeysuckle Rose” (reprise)
Black Americans have witnessed their share of suffering as the ancestors of people who were forcefully emigrated from West Africa to the American colonies and throughout the Americas for their skilled free labor. While suffering is part of the story told by W.E.B. Du Bois in his chapter on Sorrow Songs in The Souls of Black Folk, he also writes that suffering affects him in multiple ways:
They that walked in darkness sang songs in the olden days — Sorrow Songs —for they were weary at heart. And so before each thought that I have written in this book I have set a phrase, a haunting echo of these weird old songs in which the soul of the [B] lack slave spoke to men. Ever since I was a child these songs have stirred me strangely. (Du Bois, chapter 14)
Founding editor of Crisis, the magazine of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, W. E. B. DuBois was a leading thinker and activist in promoting African-American achievement.
and response, improvisational jazz and Black joy. While much has been written on call and response and improvisational jazz, we are just beginning to acknowledge Black joy. Serita Cannon’s “The Subversive Potential of Black Joy: Reimagining Protest In the Work of James Baldwin and Lorraine Hansberry” appropriately cites moments of joy in the lives of these two literary and social justice authors. While they both critique American culture and racism through their writing, they were not without joy and love for one another. That joy is seen in the way their characters celebrate their lives by acting out and acting up amid fighting daily economic oppressions and social injustice.
Du Bois’ soul is stirred by those songs of sorrow as an expression of the struggle that enslaved Africans endured. He goes on to tell how these songs are “the music of unhappy people, the children of disappointment; they tell of death and suffering of unvoiced longing. …” These sorrow songs passed throughout America and Europe in the hearts of the Fisk Jubilee singers, which led to them raising enough funds to found Fisk University (The Souls of Black Folk, Du Bois). Fisk Jubilee singers are world-renowned 150 years later, earning both a Grammy and a Dove award. Those songs, in the hands of the Fisk Jubilee singers, are a celebration of Black joy. This music history is celebrated by the musical Ain’t Misbehavin’ through the sorrow in the song “Black and Blue” and the joyful wink and nod of “Ain’t Misbehavin’” and “Your Feets Too Big.”
Ain’t Misbehavin’ pays homage to three significant features of Black spiritual and music life: call
Celebrating black music and black art and recognizing black pain acknowledges the humanity of black people. A world in which joy is evoked in and enliven the production of Ain’t Misbehavin’. For a few hours, we are without sorrow, suffering or hurt. This same Black joy was visible during the UK June protest of George Floyd’s murder. Floyd was murdered by a white police officer in May of 2020 in the United States. Afro-British citizens, in the middle of a protest, danced the electric slide to “Candy” by Cameo. Dancing was a deliberate “act of healing.” It was needed and acknowledged, it was a reprieve from frustration and pain, if just for the moment. This, too, was an act of resistance. Ain’t Misbehavin’ is Black joy, center stage.
Denise Harrison is a writer and lecturer at Kent State University, focusing on intersectionality, cross roads of race, class and gender, black woman writers, food sourcing, sustainability and activism and the history of African and African-American cooking, as well as Native American traditions, culture and environmental issues.
Billie Holliday sang of it in 1939:
Southern trees bearing strange fruit Blood on the leaves and blood at the roots Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.
In words penned by a Jewish schoolteacher, Holliday testified in the song “Strange Fruit” to the “bitter crop” of the “pastoral” south — the lynched bodies of African-Americans. Along with restrictive segregationist laws and the debt-saddling sharecropping system, mob violence was a central feature of the dangerous life 6 million black people left behind between 1916 and 1970 as they fled the rural South in what has been called “The Great Migration.” Labor shortages during WW I provided the first opening, and 400,000 AfricanAmericans flowed North between 1916 and 1918 alone.
The industrial North did not welcome the newcomers with open arms, but they gained a foothold nonetheless and sent money back for family and friends to join them. Among cities across the North, no destination attracted greater numbers than New York City, and no neighborhood more so than the several square miles known as Harlem. Overbuilt in the 1880s as an exclusive suburb for upper- and middle-class whites, the neighborhood offered available housing in the 1910s and 1920s. Black-owned businesses, churches, shops, restaurants and nightclubs sprang up along the increasingly crowded and cosmopolitan streets of Harlem. Writers, singers, musicians, scholars and artists came from all over. A “renaissance” of the “New Negro” was underway.
The denizens of the Harlem Renaissance read and contributed essays, poems and stories to The Crisis, the monthly NAACP magazine launched in 1910 by founding editor W.E.B. Du Bois; to the “race-conscious” Voice, which first appeared in
1917, and to the National Urban League’s Opportunity: A Journal of Negro Life, which first came out in 1924. They read about themselves in scholar Alain Locke’s magazine issue, Harlem: Mecca of the New Negro. They sought each other’s
work in Locke’s groundbreaking 1925 literary anthology, The New Negro , which heralded a transformation of “social disillusionment to race pride.”
The syncopated rhythms of jazz spilled out of Harlem nightclubs in the 1920s, and into Broadway theaters. Poet Langston Hughes often credited the 1921 musical revue Shuffle Along with ushering in the Harlem Renaissance. The show’s four collaborators were African-American vaudeville performers who crossed paths at an NAACP benefit in Philadelphia in 1920. Comedians Flournoy Miller and Aubrey Lyles were childhood friends from Tennessee; piano player Eubie Blake hailed from Baltimore and songwriter Noble Sissle was from Indiana. Together, they concocted a show
that made its way to a music hall on the edge of Broadway at 63rd Street. Lively jazz songs, torrid dance numbers and a cast that included Paul Robeson and Josephine Baker ignited a successful run of 484 performances. Shuffle Along paved the way for a number of musical revues on Broadway that were created by African-American collaborators, including a 1928 sequel Keep Shufflin’ — with Thomas “Fats” Waller at the piano.
Shuffle Along and its successors represented the kind of artistic effort that Langston Hughes wrote about in his 1926 essay, “The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain”:
We younger Negro artists who create now intend to express our individual dark-skinned selves without fear or shame. If white people are pleased we are glad. If they are not, it doesn’t matter. We know we are beautiful. And ugly too. … If colored people are pleased we are glad. If they are not, their displeasure doesn’t matter either. We build our temples for tomorrow, strong as we know how, and we stand on top of the mountain, free within ourselves.
Every “Top 10” list of African-American musicians of the 1920s and 1930s includes the name of Thomas “Fats” Waller. Although pneumonia cut short Waller’s life at age 39 in 1943, he is acclaimed as the best-known of the “Harlem Stride” jazz pianists, and the composer of such standards as “Honeysuckle Rose” and “Ain’t Misbehavin’.” It’s estimated that he wrote more than 400 compositions during his alltoo-brief career. It’s also rumored that he sold numerous songs to white songwriters that were never credited to him.
Waller had an early start in music. Born in 1904 in New York City to a father who was a Baptist preacher and a mother who was a church organist, Thomas Waller learned how to play the piano before the age of six. Worship at his parents’ church involved ecstatic singing and “ring shout” dancing. Both parents originally encouraged their son’s musicality. His mother provided lessons in reading music, and his father pictured him using his talent in praise of God.
But the burgeoning musical scene of Harlem also beckoned. Waller started picking up popular tunes by ear and dissecting player piano rolls in order to teach himself the music that his stern father regarded as “from the devil’s workshop.” He
left school at age 15 and found a job at the Lincoln Theatre on 135th Street near Lenox Avenue, one of the first theaters in Harlem that permitted black patrons. The teenager accompanied silent films on the organ and played during the breaks between films and reels. Later, he would headline live musical shows in the same auditorium.
After his mother died in 1920 when Waller was 16, the conflict with his father intensified. The young man moved in with the family of a friend who also played piano and brought Waller to rowdy all-night Harlem rent parties or “rent shouts,” where piano virtuosos Willie “The Lion” Smith and James P. Johnson held sway.
James P. Johnson was the “father” of the emerging “Harlem Stride” jazz piano style, an East Coast evolution of the earlier Ragtime style. In Ragtime playing, the left hand made steady, march-like jumps, or strides, between a bass note and a chord, while the right hand wove a melody. Johnson and others pushed the style further by using the left hand to stride even more freely up and down the keyboard, jumping octaves and more, while the right hand improvised ever more intricate melo-
dies. Hearing Waller play one night, Johnson told his wife, “I know I
And Waller was an apt pupil. Within two years of his mother’s death, at age 18, he was recording his first singles for Okeh Records’ “race record” series. He began cutting player piano rolls that same year. In addition to playing in Harlem, he began booking engagements in such cities as Philadelphia and Chicago. By 1926, he had a contract with the RCA Victor label, the company he would record with for the rest of his life.
Waller soon immersed himself in the Harlem nightclub scene, where a mix of African-American musicians, dancers and comic performers were cooking up sizzling musical revues. Waller was still a teenager in 1921 when the pioneering Shuffle Along took Broadway by storm. But by 1926, Waller was writing songs for Adelaide Hall, one of the stars of Shuffle Along, in a revue called Tan Town Topics, which opened at Harlem’s Lafayette Theatre and subsequently toured to Baltimore, Chicago and Philadelphia.
When hatching a Shuffle sequel — the 1928 Keep Shufflin’ which also starred Adelaide Hall — creators Miller and Lyles tapped James Johnson to write the music. Johnson in turn enlisted his protégé, who teamed up with lyricist Andy Razaf on several songs. Razaf was born in Washington D.C., where his mother was living in exile after the death of his father, a diplomat from the Kingdom of Madagascar. Raised in Harlem, he quit school at age 16 and worked as an elevator boy on Tin Pan Alley, while publishing poems in literary magazines and hoping for a break as a songwriter. He would pen the words to some of Waller’s best-known songs.
When impresario Lew Leslie built Blackbirds of 1928, around Adelaide Hall and Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Leslie recruited the songwriting duo of Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields, who wrote revues at the Cotton Club — a Harlem nightclub that catered to white patrons. “I Can’t Give You
Anything But Love,” credited to McHugh and Fields, became a huge hit. Waller’s family always claimed that Waller and Razaf wrote the song but sold it to McHugh.
Waller worked often at Connie’s Inn, a 7th Avenue nightclub operated by brothers Connie (Conrad), George and Louie Immerman, who were Latvian immigrants. A 1929 Connie’s Inn revue, titled Load of Coal, introduced the song “Honeysuckle Rose,” composed by Waller with lyrics by Razaf. The duo’s other Grammy Awardwinning song “Ain’t Misbehavin’ ” debuted in a 1929 musical comedy at Connie’s, titled Hot Chocolates, that transferred to Broadway in June 1929, when Louis Armstrong took over as orchestra director and played the song in a trumpet solo. Hot Chocolates also featured the song, “(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue,” which later became a hit for Armstrong as well as for Ethel Waters.
True to his nickname, “Fats,” Waller was a larger-than-life character. Razaf described the pianist as “the soul of melody ... a man who made the piano sing ... both big in body and in mind ... known for his generosity ... a bubbling bundle of joy.” Waller developed an exuberant wisecracking performing style that transferred well to radio and film. After trying out several radio formats, he launched his own weekly “Rhythm Club” broadcast in 1934, featuring his own combo, Fats Waller and his Rhythm. He performed as himself in several films, most notably the 1943 film “Stormy Weather,” with an all-star cast headed by Bill “Bojangles” Robinson.
Had he lived longer, Waller might have attempted more long-form instrumental compositions. He recorded the ambitious “London Suite” after a 1938 tour of England. Married twice, Waller had a zest for women, drink and music. He fell ill after a triumphant engagement at the Zanzibar Room in Santa Monica in 1943, and died of pneumonia on a cross-country train. He lived hard and died young but pursued his own sense of calling to the fullest.
can teach that boy.”
In the 1920s and 1930s, African-American artists incubated musical revues in nightclubs; some were able to move their work to Broadway theaters. Decades later, a musical tribute to “Fats” Waller took the same route.
The first iteration of Ain’t Misbehavin’, a “Fats” Waller revue, opened at the Manhattan Theatre Club’s cabaret in February 1978. Featuring five actor-singer-dancers and a live musical combo, the show swept onto Broadway by May. Developed by book writers Murray Horwitz and Richard Maltby Jr., the original Broadway cast featured Nell Carter, André DeShields, Armelia McQueen, Ken Page and Charlayne Woodard, with Luther Henderson on piano. The show ran for 1,604 performances and won Tony Awards in 1978 for Best Musical, Best Director (Maltby), and Best Featured Actress (Carter). A London tour, a television broadcast, a revival and two national tours ensued.
A pioneer “jukebox musical,” the show doesn’t recap Waller’s biography. Rather, says guest director Gerry McIntyre, “It’s an event. It’s about the music. It’s almost a memorial — to raise him up.”
Whether audiences know Waller’s work or not, they’ll encounter familiar tunes. “There’s a sense of discovery,” explains McIntyre. “Many people know so many of his songs. They just don’t know he wrote them.”
McIntyre’s production relies on all the senses to
create a celebration. The original production had dancing, but McIntyre, a dancer and choreographer himself, wanted more. “There’s no standing and singing,” he says. “I have the actors moving so much.” Each performer has to be a standout dancer, singer and actor. The musicians also have to measure up to the virtuosity of Waller and his combo.
Visually, there’s also what McIntyre describes as an “explosion” of color in the work of costume designer Dustin Cross. Cross uses “silhouettes” — clothing styles — that evoke the period of the 1920s and at the same time allow the freedom of movement that McIntyre’s choreography requires.
Set designer Stanley A. Meyer was tasked with conjuring the look and atmosphere of a nightclub onstage. But, Meyer says, “it’s a very theatrical, non-literal representation of a club.” The décor and architectural details are in a whimsical art deco style. In a show that focuses on a pianist, a piano has to feature prominently onstage. While a grand piano would interfere with audience sightlines and take up stage space needed for movement, a small upright piano best serves the immediacy and energy of the show.
Every production detail delivers the experience of an evening at the Cotton Club or Connie’s Inn. Get ready for the joy and jubilation of “Fats” Waller.
Tyrick Wiltez Jones*
Andre Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Broadway/New York credits include Jagwire in Bat Out of Hell, Howard in Finian’s Rainbow and Hairspray. Broadway national touring credits include Bat Out of Hell, Miss Saigon, Seussical, Fosse and Show Boat
Regional credits include Putting It Together, Smokey Joe’s Café, Ain’t Misbehavin’, Stick Fly, Mom’s Gift with Cindy Williams, The Wiz, Once On This Island, Witness Uganda and From My Hometown (WILDE Award). Other credits include Grammy Awards “Sam Smith Performance,” PHISH 2011 New Year’s Eve concert at Madison Square Garden, Mary Wilson of the Supremes Motown/Rock and Roll North America Tour and United States premiere of Sacred Ellington starring Jessye Norman with the Carnegie Hall Honor Series. Film credits include Fresh Kills (upcoming), Back to Me (an independent short), A Joyful Noise (assistant choreographer) and Nickelodeon’s Shimmer and Shine (choreographer).
IG: @tyrickwjones
William Knowles
Fats Waller/Music Director
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
As a composer, arranger, music director and pianist, William Knowles has worked at regional theaters around the country. He looks forward to his first visit to Great Lakes Theater, reuniting with many of his Ain’t Misbehavin’ compatriots from summer 2022 at Idaho Shakespeare Festival. William’s hometown is Washington, D.C., where he has
received five Helen Hayes nominations for Musical Direction, winning twice. Originally from Milwaukee, William attended Howard University and the University of Massachusetts. Offstage he has released eight jazz CDs with music partner Mark Saltman, most recently Native Speaker, a mix of originals and covers. Visit saltmanknowles.com and @saltmanknowles.
Nell
Five seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include Kiss Me Kate (national tour) and The Groove Factory (New York Musical Theatre Festival). Regional credits include Hairspray (Northshore Music Theatre, Porthouse Theatre), The Full Monty (Northshore Music Theatre), Ghost (Beck Center), Caroline or Change (Tantrum Theatre, Karamu/Dobama, Mercury Theatre), Blackademics, Pipeline and The Piano Lesson (Cleveland Play House), The Color Purple (Karamu House), Sister Act (Karamu House, Porthouse Theatre), Hurricane Diane (Dobama Theatre), Twelfth Night (Ohio Shakespeare Theatre), Dreamgirls (Cain Park) and Aida (Beck Center). IG: cocoloco_13 Thanks be to God. Thanks to the Ain’t Misbehavin’ team for the invitation to the party! Thanks to my husband, mom, friends, and family for their grace, patience, and endless support.
Charlaine
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Brittney is excited to be doing her favorite shows at GLT. Favorite credits include Broadway: SIX (Anne of Cleves). Tour:
Memphis (Networks). Regional: Beehive, Ain’t Misbehavin’, Avenue Q, All Shook Up, Shrek and Rent. International: Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines. TV: Empire. Thank you so much to the entire Ain’t Misbehavin’ team for the creative opportunity to dig in and do my thing! Cast and crew love ya’ll. #heybestfriiieeend. CEO and Founder of HowtoSlay. @BrittMack8 @howtoslayu Romans 8:28
Jessie Cope Miller*
Armelia
Nine seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Recent shows include Romeo and Juliet, A Christmas Carol, Chaining Zero, The Tempest, The Music Man and Julius Caesar. She also played the Witch in Into the Woods during Great Lakes Theater’s inaugural season at the Hanna Theatre, and has spent four seasons at The Idaho Shakespeare Festival and Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival, GLT’s sister companies. Other regional credits include The Taming of the Shrew, Macbeth, Love’s Labour’s Lost, In The Heights, Monty Python’s Spamalot, Hello Dolly! and Pippin. A proud alum of the Baldwin Wallace Musical Theatre program and now an even prouder member of the acting faculty of the Baldwin Wallace University School of Theatre and Dance. Actors’ Equity member since 2005. Much love and thanks to the entire company! For family and friends and for Dougfred, Always.
David Robbins* Ken
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Happy return to the theater that gave him his first equity points. Chicago native. Select regional: Spamilton: An American Parody (original Chicago cast), Jesus Christ Superstar (Lyric Opera), Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Idaho Shakespeare), The Scottsboro Boys (Theatre Raleigh), Memphis (Phoenix Theatre, Cape Fear Regional Theatre), Forever Plaid (Theatre Raleigh), Avenue Q (Mercury Theatre Chicago). Film/TV: Fargo (FX, guest star), Lovecraft Country (HBO,
featured dancer), Target, Jimmy Dean, and AutoZone commercials. Thank You, Mom, my big family, host of friends, Gerry McIntyre for the opportunity and agents over at Big Mouth Talent. For Pat Rusk. @david.s.robbins
Kechante Baker, Zoe Mclean-Lewis, Praise Oranika, Justin Lee Price
Gerry McIntyre
Director/Choreographer
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Gerry is acclaimed for his choreography in the Berkshire Theatre Group’s Godspell. Other credits include associate artistic director of the York Theatre in NYC; director of Hallelujah Baby! at The York, Kinky Boots at The Hangar Theatre and Once on This Island at Martin Beck Theatre, Virginia Stage, Pioneer Theatre, Actors’ Theatre of Louisville, La Mirada Theatre (Robby Award, Best Director; Ovation nomination, Best Choreography and Best Musical); and choreographer of Ain’t Misbehavin’, Anything Can Happen in the Theatre, Side by Side, Tommy and My Fair Lady at the Berkshire Theatre Festival; Laura Comstock’s Bag-Punching Dog, The Color Purple, Cinderella, Ragtime, and The Wiz at the Music Circus Broadway Sacramento. He’s performed as OBC of Once on This Island and in Anything Goes with Patti LuPone, and was one of three Americans cast in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat with Donny Osmond. gerrymcintyre.net
Charles Fee
Producing Artistic Director
Twenty-one seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Directing credits at GLT include Much Ado About Nothing, Sleuth, Witness for the Prosecution, A Christmas Carol, Misery, Macbeth, Hamlet, And Then There Were None, Dial “M” for Murder, Deathtrap, Blithe Spirit, Romeo and Juliet, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night, The Comedy of Errors, Macbeth, All’s Well That Ends Well, Hay Fever, The Importance of Being Earnest, 19
Arms and the Man and The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged). Charles holds a unique position in the American theater as producing artistic director of three independently operated, professional theater companies: Great Lakes Theater in Cleveland, Ohio (since 2002); Idaho Shakespeare Festival in Boise, Idaho (since 1991); and Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival in Incline Village, Nevada (since 2010). His appointments have resulted in a dynamic and groundbreaking producing model for the companies, in which more than 60 plays have been shared since 2002. In 2009, Charles was honored to receive recognition for his leadership by the Cleveland Arts Prize as a recipient of the Martha Joseph Award. Other awards include The Mayor’s and Governor’s awards for Excellence in the Arts, Idaho. From 1988 to 1992, he held the position of artistic director at the Sierra Repertory Theatre in California. He has also worked with The Old Globe, La Jolla Playhouse, the Milwaukee and Missouri repertory theaters, Actor’s Theatre of Phoenix and the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival. In addition to his work with the companies in Ohio, Idaho and Nevada, Charles is active within the community. He has served as a member of the strategic planning committee for the Morrison Center, as producer of the FUNDSY Award Gala (’96, ’98 and 2000) and as producer of the 1996 Idaho Governor’s Awards in the Arts. Charles has served on the board of the Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce and as a member of the Downtown Rotary Club. He received his B.A. from the University of the Pacific and Master of Fine Arts from the University of California, San Diego. Along with his wife, Lidia and daughter, Alexa, Charles resides in Boise, Cleveland and Lake Tahoe — a feat that is only possible because of the incredible love and support of his family, and the generous communities he serves!
Jaclyn Miller Assistant Director/ChoreographerSix seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Director credits for GLT: Sense and Sensibility, The 39 Steps; choreography/ movement credits for GLT: Romeo and
Juliet, Little Shop of Horrors, Much Ado About Nothing, The Tempest, The Music Man, Julius Caesar, Mamma Mia! The Taming of the Shrew, Pride and Prejudice and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Regional credits: Oregon Shakespeare Festival (It’s Christmas, Carol! Hairspray, Alice in Wonderland, Book of Will, Shakespeare in Love, Twelfth Night, Yeoman of Guard, Fingersmith (world premiere), The Cocoanuts and My Fair Lady; South Coast Rep (She Loves Me), Arizona Theatre Company (Cabaret and The Music Man), Guthrie Theatre (The Cocoanuts) and Baltimore Center Stage (Fun Home). Additionally, Jaclyn has worked as an associate director and/or choreographer around the country in theaters that include Arena Stage, Kirk Douglas Theater, Ogunquit Playhouse, Portland Opera and Lyric Theatre of Oklahoma.
Dustin Cross Costume Designer
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Broadway credits include The 24 Hour Plays. Select off-Broadway credits include Love Actually (NY/Chicago), The Office (NY, national tour) Forbidden Broadway: The Next Generation, Spamilton (New York, Chicago, Pittsburgh, LA, London, national tour/Lucille Lortel nomination, Henry Hewes nomination), The Glass Menagerie, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Cougar The Musical, The Other Josh Cohen, Forbidden Broadway: Comes Out Swinging (NY, national tour, London). Regional theater productions include: Peter and The Starcatcher (NH Theater nomination) Kinky Boots, The Prince of Egypt, The Witches of Eastwick, Billy Elliot, Cinderella, Sister Act, Grumpy Old Men, From Here to Eternity, Heartbreak Hotel, The Christmas Rose (Carnegie Hall)
The NY Knicks Dancers and The NY Jets
Drumline. Film: Celtic Heart (PBS), Buttons: A Christmas Tale (Paramount Pictures starring Dick Van Dyke and Angela Lansbury)
Enjoy! dustincrossdesigns.com Instagram: @dustincrossdesigns
Trad A Burns
Lighting Designer
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater Theater designs include Little Shop of Horrors (Great Lakes Theatre/Idaho Shakespeare Festival), Nickel and Dimed (Great Lakes Theater/Cleveland Public Theatre), Doubt and Inherit the Wind (Cleveland Play House), The Legend of Georgia McBride, Broadway Bound, Matilda, American Idiot and Altar Boyz (Beck Center for The Arts, Playhouse Square), Pippin, Gloria (Texas State University) and Ragtime and Rock of Ages (Cain Park). Dance designs include world premieres for Cincinnati Ballet, Kansas City Ballet, Richmond Ballet, Louisville Ballet, Tulsa Ballet, Joffrey Ballet, BalletMet, Pacific Northwest Ballet, Colorado Ballet, Royal Winnipeg Ballet, Hong Kong Ballet, American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Pittsburgh Ballet, Grand Rapids Ballet, Ballet Oregon, BalletWest and Sacramento Ballet. Themed entertainment designs include Rise of the Resistance (Hollywood Studios, Disneyland), Beauty and the Beast (Hollywood Studios)
and The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Undersea Adventures (Magic Kingdom, Disneyland, Tokyo DisneySea). Associate professor of practice in lighting design at Texas State University.
David Gotwald
Sound Designer
Eight seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Great Lakes Theater productions include The Music Man, Mamma Mia! My Fair Lady, Little Shop of Horrors, The Fantasticks and The Secret Garden. He was the sound supervisor and mixer for numerous Broadway productions including A Chorus Line (1981), Dreamgirls, Sweet Charity, Cabaret, Jerome Robbins’ Broadway, Crazy For You, Fosse, The Producers, Gypsy, and A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder. He was a concert sound engineer for Tommy Tune, Mandy Patinkin and Patti LuPone, as well as for special events at The Brooklyn Academy of Music, Lincoln Center, NY City Center Encores and Carnegie Hall. David is a faculty adviser in sound design at Carnegie Mellon University.
Iran Micheal Leon
Hair and Wig Designer
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
He has designed shows throughout the West Coast as a hair/wig designer and costume designer. Previous work includes wig master and interim key hair stylist for the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Other theaters include Cleveland Play House, Great Lakes Theater, Celebration Theater, Pasadena Playhouse, Hollywood Bowl, A Noise Within, Azusa Pacific University and Askew Theatre Company. Instagram: iml_design_elements
Stanley A. Meyer
Scenic Designer
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include being the original designer for Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, Broadway, 2022-25 UK-AU Tour, League of American Theatres & Producers National Broadway Award. American premieres include Sir Tim Rice’s From Here to Eternity, Saturday Night Fever, REV; Disney’s Aida, Alliance; Treasure Island, Arkansas Rep; WarholCapote, ART; The Three Musketeers, SALT Award for Best Scenic Design, Syracuse Stage; and The Merry Wives of Windsor, The Comedy of Errors, King Lear and A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Grove Shakespeare Festival. Tours: Steve Miller Band, Disney on Ice, Alice Cooper, Barbie Live! Cyndi Lauper, Ringling Brothers Circus. Tournament of Roses Parade, 28 award-winning float designs. Thanks Gerry McIntyre for hiring me! stanleyameyerdesignllc.com
Sarah Kelso*
Production Stage Manager
Six seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Previous shows include Sense and Sensibility, Romeo and Juliet, Much Ado About Nothing, The 39 Steps, Sleuth, Million Dollar Quartet, Beehive the ’60’s Musical and A Christmas Carol. Twelve seasons with Idaho Shakespeare Festival: Ain’t Misbehavin’, The 39 Steps, Sleuth, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged), Million Dollar Quartet, Beehive the ’60’s Musical, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Forever Plaid, The
Fantasticks and Steel Magnolias. Ten seasons with Boise Contemporary Theater: With Love and a Major Organ, Good Bitch Goes Down, Hedwig and the Angry Inch and A Skull in Connemara. Sarah is a graduate of Boise State University’s Department of Theatre Arts.
Nicki Cathro*
Assistant Stage Manager
Seven seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Previous credits include production stage manager for As You Like It, A Christmas Carol, Romeo and Juliet, Little Shop of Horrors, Much Ado About Nothing, The Tempest and Julius Caesar; assistant stage manager for Sense and Sensibility, Sleuth, The Music Man, Witness for the Prosecution, Misery, Macbeth and Pride and Prejudice; production assistant for Hamlet, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. ASM for Every Brilliant Thing at Actor’s Theatre of Louisville. Nicki earned a BFA in radio, television and film from the University of North Texas and is a member of AEA.
Lindy Warren
Assistant Stage Manager
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Lindy is thrilled to join the Ain’t Misbehavin’ team! She recently worked as a production assistant on The 39 Steps for Idaho Shakespeare Festival. She also works for Great Lakes Theater’s Residency Program. Lindy is a graduate of Baldwin Wallace University ’22.
Richard Maltby Jr.
Broadway credits include conceiving and directing two Tony Award-winning musicals Ain’t Misbehavin’ (1978: Tony, N.Y. Drama Critics, Outer Critics, Drama Desk Awards and Tony Award for Best Director) and Fosse (1999: Tony, Outer Critics, Drama Desk Awards), as well as Ring of Fire (2006). With composer David Shire, he is director/lyricist for Baby (1983, seven Tony nominations); lyricist for Big (1996, Tony nomination: Best Score; also Dominium Theatre London 2019). With Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel
Schonberg, he is co-lyricist for Miss Saigon (Evening Standard Award, London 1990; Tony nomination: Best Score, 1991) and co-lyricist for The Pirate Queen (2007). He directed The Story of My Life (2009), and was director/co-lyricist for Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Song & Dance (1986 Tony Award for star, Bernadette Peters.) Off-Broadway credits with David Shire include director/lyricist for Starting Here, Starting Now (1977, Grammy nomination) and Closer Than Ever , (1989, two Outer Critics Circle Awards: Best Musical, Best Score; also Off-Broadway Alliance Award, Best Musical Revival 2013; and London Jermyn Street Theatre 2014) and director for Just Jim Dale (Roundabout Theatre 2014, Vaudeville Theatre, London 2015). Regional credits include being lyricist/conceiver of Take Flight (Menier Chocolate Factory, London 2010; McCarter Theatre 2012); book and lyrics for Waterfall (2015, Pasadena Playhouse and Seattle’s Fifth Avenue Theatre); and is lyricist for Sousatzka (2017, Toronto). Film credits include the screenplay for Miss Potter (2007: Christopher Award, Best Screenplay.) He contributes cryptic crossword puzzles to Harper’s Magazine ; is the son of the well-known orchestra leader; and has five children: Nicholas, David, Jordan, Emily and Charlotte.
Murray Horwitz
Productions include Ain’t Misbehavin’ (associate director, based on his original idea and featuring songs with additional lyrics (Original, Musical, Revue May 9, 1978–Feb. 21, 1982; and Revival, Musical, Revue,
Aug. 15, 1988–Jan. 15, 1989) and André De Shield’s Haarlem Nocturne (book and direction, Original, Musical, Revue, Nov. 18, 1984–Dec. 30, 1984).
Fats Waller ✶
Fats Waller, born May 21, 1904, was an African-American jazz pianist, organist, composer and comedic entertainer. He was born Thomas Wright Waller in New York City. Having studied classical piano and organ, he apprenticed under legendary Harlem stride pianist, James P. Johnson. Now considered one of the very best who ever played in the stride style, his songwriting and lovable, roguish stage personality often took center stage. Before his solo career, he played with many performers, from Erskine Tate to Bessie Smith, but his greatest success came with his own five- or six-piece combo, Fats Waller and His Rhythm. He collaborated with the Tin Pan Alley lyricist Andy Razaf and had a commercially successful career, which according to some music critics eclipsed his great musical talent. He composed “What Did I Do (To Be So Black and Blue)?” which became a hit for Louis Armstrong. This song, a searing treatment of racism black and white, calls into question the accusations of “shallow entertainment” levelled at both Armstrong and Waller. On December 15, 1943, at age 39, Waller died aboard a train in the vicinity of Kansas City, Missouri, following a West Coast engagement. ✶ Rita & Charles Maimbourg | Thomas G. & Ruth M. Stafford | A.J. & Nancy Stokes
✶Thank you to our Composer Sponsors for their generous support of the Great Lakes Theater artistic company.
The trustees, staff, and artistic company of Great Lakes Theater express our deepest gratitude to the hundreds of supporters of Cleveland’s Classic Company. The donors listed below and on the following pages made generous gifts to our Annual Fund between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022. “I can no other answer make but thanks.” Twelfth Night, Act III, Scene iii
Great Lakes Theater serves more than 100,000 students, adults, and artists annually through our Hanna and Mimi Ohio Theatre mainstage productions and education programs throughout Northeast Ohio. Please consider joining the Great Lakes Theater family by making a gift today!
To learn more about Donor Membership and other gift-giving opportunities, visit us online at GreatLakesTheater.org/Support, or contact Jeremy Lewis, Development & Donor Relations Manager at (216) 453-4457 or jlewis@greatlakestheater.org.
$100,000 and above
The George Gund Foundation
John P. Murphy Foundation
$50,000 to $99,999
David and Inez Myers Foundation, a supporting foundation of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
John & Barbara Schubert
$25,000 to $49,999
Arthur L. Thomas
Over 800 patrons generously donated the value of their tickets back to support Great Lakes Theater during pandemic-related disruptions during our 2019-20, 2020-21, and 2021-22 seasons. This vital “intermission” support has enabled us to raise our curtain once again. We are truly grateful! Check out the full list of donors online.
Annual Fund donors of $1,000 and above are members of Great Lakes Theater’s “Shakespeare Society” and are entitled to exclusive benefits, including access to special services, events, and opportunities to connect deeply with Cleveland’s Classic Company. To learn more, contact Jeremy Lewis at (216) 453-4457.
$10,000 to $24,999
The Eva L. and Joseph M. Bruening Foundation
Gail Cudak
Carol Dolan & Greggory Hill
Eaton
Fifth Third Bank
Martha Holden Jennings Foundation
Robert° & Janet E. Neary
The Nord Family Foundation
Nordson Corporation Foundation
Donald F. & Anne T. Palmer
Georgianna T. Roberts
Ms. Ana G. Rodriguez
The Shubert Foundation
Thomas G. & Ruth M. Stafford
The Stocker Foundation
The Family of Jill Hearey
The Treu-Mart Fund, a supporting organization of the The Cleveland Foundation and the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
U.S. Bank
The Thomas H. White Foundation, a KeyBank Trust
Robert C. & Emily C. Williams
$5,000 to $9,999
Dalia & Robert Baker
Carol A. Barnak
Fred & Mary Behm
Mr. Todd M. Burger & Ms. Kristie Beck
Bill & Judie Caster
Evelyn Dolejs°
Natalie Epstein
Elizabeth Grove & Rich Bedell
The Harry K. and Emma R. Fox Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Hartwell
Diane K. Hupp
Paul R. Keen & Denise Horstman Keen
Donna M. Koler
Rita & Charles Maimbourg
Thomas A. Piraino & Barbara C. McWilliams
Tim & Lynn Pistell
Greg Pribulsky & Donna Heinz
A.J. & Nancy Stokes
$2,500 to $4,999
Anonymous
Chuck & Bonnie Abbey
Beth A. Adams
Michelle R. Arendt
Walt & Laura Avdey
Kim & Bart Bixenstine
Mitch & Liz Blair
Glenn R. & Jeanette G. Brown
Homer Chisholm° & Gertrude Kalnow
Chisholm Fund
George A. M. & Heather Currall
Timothy J. Downing & Ken Press
Charles, Lidia & Alexa Fee
Dianne V. Foley
Lynn M. Gattozzi & Glenn Myers
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur C. Hall III
Katie Kennedy & Doug White
Faisal Khan & Angela DiCorleto
Ms. Catherine M. Kilbane & Mr. Donald H. Bullock
Mr. & Mrs. John J. Lane, Jr.
The Laub Foundation
Victor C. Laughlin, M.D. Memorial Foundation Trust
Susan & John Lebold
David & Denise Maiorana
Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Mayer
Jack E. McGrath
Karen Nemec
The NRP Group LLC
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick W. O’Connor
Dr. Scott & Mrs. Judy Pendergast
Michael & Barbara Peterman
Rick & Paula Reed
Kim Sherwin°
Sally J. Staley
Geoff & Catherine Tanner
Kris & George Tesar
Mr. & Mrs. Paul L. Wellener IV
$1,000 to $2,499
Anonymous
The Alvah Stone & Adele Corning
Chisholm Memorial Fund
Gary D. Benz & Betsy A. Karetnick
John & Laura Bertsch
Kip T. & Catherine Bollin
Joanne R. Bratush
Jack & Janice Campbell
Donald & Annamarie Chick
Christopher & Nancy Coburn
Mrs. Anthea Daniels & Mr. Matthew Burke
Mr. Mark Davis
Rebecca Dunn
Dr. Howard Epstein
The Giant Eagle Foundation
James Graham & David Dusek
Rich & Barbara Gray
The Gries Family Foundation
Drs. Thomas & Cynthia Gustaferro
Geoffrey Michael Heller Memorial Fund
Mary Elizabeth Huber
Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc.
James & Rosemary Koehler
Jim & Paula Lang
Eva & Rudolf Linnebach
Ken & Mary Loparo
Mr. & Mrs. John S. Lupo
Mr. & Mrs. William E. MacDonald III
Katie McVoy & Justin Cernansky
Jennifer & Peter Meckes
Roy & Cindy Moore
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Morley
Deborah L. Neale
Michael Novak
M.B. Perkins Donor Advised Fund
Mr. & Mrs. Wilmer M. Piper
John & Norine Prim
Linda Schlageter
Katherine Stokes-Shafer
Anita Stoll & Pete Clapham
Diana & Eugene Stromberg
Mr. Frederick & Mrs. Elizabeth G. Stueber
James L. Wagner
Nancy-Anne Wargo
Mary C. Warren
Mr. & Mrs. Harold L. Williams
Welcome! The following individuals made their first gift, returned as active donors, or increased their gift to Great Lakes Theater’s Annual Fund during the period of July 1, 2022 through March 3, 2023. The Great Lakes Theater family is grateful for their support!
Anonymous (7)
Akron Children’s Hospital
Dr. Nancy J. Arndt & Mr. Andrew P. Houghton
Cherie Arnold & David Pavlich
Walt & Laura Avdey
Mary S. Baker
Thomas & Joan Baker
Jennifer Barden
Ms. Lisa Bennett
Scott & Pam Benson
Brian & Teresa Bester
Biedenbach/Draper Family
Kim & Bart Bixenstine
Mr. & Mrs. David R. Blackman
Amelia & Heather Blonsky
Bernice A. Bolek
Kip T. & Catherine Bollin
Mr. William Bost
H.F.° & J.C. Burkhardt
Mr. David Byrnes
Calfee, Halter & Griswold, LLP
Robert Carlyon
Mr. Jason Chance
The Alvah Stone & Adele Corning
Chisholm Memorial Fund
Mr. Edward A. Chuhna
Michael Cleaver
Brandon Collier
Patricia Brownell & James Collins
Ms. M. Judith & Mr. Ronald J. Crocker
Gail Cudak
Lowell & Carole Davis
Jennifer Desberg
David DiCicco
Mr. Mark DiDonato
Eva & Larry Dolan
John & Maryann Doucette
Michael Dunn
Rebecca Dunn
Bob & Kay Eikenburg
Katharine Elek
Evans Charitable Foundation
Elinore Evans
Gene & Patricia Ewald
Mr. Joseph Ferritto
Rhonda Fink
Mr. & Mrs. Fishwick
Dianne V. Foley
The Char and Chuck Fowler Family Foundation
Michael Frank & Pat Snyder°
Carla & Jim Gallagher
Tom & Janet Genco
Larry & Jean Gilbert
Joe Giuffrida
Dr. Sidney Goldstein
David Gotwald & Peter Franzen
The George Gund Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Hahn
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur C. Hall III
Jackie Hartfiel
Craig Hassall
Paul & Cynthia Haubrich
Meredith Hester
Ms. Natalie Hewitt
Thomas Higgason
Lynn & Mark Hofflund
Carrie Hujarski
Susan K. Jagoda
Robert & Linda Jenkins
Jan Jones
Marilyn & Howard Karfeld
Will & Susan Kirchner
Mr. & Mrs. David R. Knowles
Drucilla Knutsen
Mr. & Mrs. Mark D. Kozel
Susan & John Lebold
The Lehman Family
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Letts
Harris Levine
Ms. Cathy Lincoln
Eva & Rudolf Linnebach
Ken & Mary Loparo
The Lubrizol Foundation
Andrea & Michael Lyons
Rita & Charles Maimbourg
Prof. James Marino & Ms. Brooke Conti
Gretchen Mates
Ms. Constance May
John & Theresa Mazzella
Cathy J. McCall
Mr. & Mrs. Steve McMahon
Medical Mutual of Ohio
Barbara C. Megery
Tim & Vicki Miller
Glenn & Susan Morley
The Music and Drama Club
Nordson Corporation Foundation
Mr. Gerald Norton
The NRP Group LLC
David Oldham
Ms. Diane L. Pauley
Mr. & Mrs. James M. Petras
Mr. & Mrs. Wilmer M. Piper
Jeffrey & Lita Powell
Ms. Karen Powers
Larry & Susan Rakow
Tom L. & Helen Rathburn
Keith Reynolds
Ms. Lori Riga
Kim & Stan Robinson
Reinhold & Ginny Roedig
Mr. & Mrs. Todd Rustad
Pauline Ryder
Sarah & Bryan Salisbury, a Donor
Advised Fund of Renaissance
Charitable Foundation
Doris A. & Richard E. Schultz
Alan & Debbie Shubert
Theresa A. Simek
Jack & Terry Southworth
Barbara Spiga
Brent Stansen
Christopher & Gail Steward
Stephen Stoner
Sean & Tabitha Swick
Jaclyn & Alexander Szaruga
Doug Taylor
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Lance Whitson & Terry Juhn
Dorothy A. Whittenberger
Mr. & Mrs. Harold L. Williams
Mr. Warren I. Williamson & Ms. Lael A. Kilpatrick
Thomas & Suann Winczek
Thomas M. & Barbara A. Wladyka
Gerry & Jeanne Wojciechowicz
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Jane Zaharias
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$750 to $999
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Christopher & Gail Steward
$500 to $749
Ms. Carol Arbaczewski
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Mary S. Baker
Gary & Kay Bluhm
Julia & Ben Brouhard
Eileen Kennedy & Greg Cloyd
Jim & Berni Cockey
Audrey DeClement
Barry & Suzanne Doggett
Jennifer Dowdell Armstrong
Michael Dunn
Evans Charitable Foundation
Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Fairchild
Mr. Joseph Ferritto
Deborah A. Geier
Janet & Patricia Glaeser
Mrs. Edith Hirsch
Gary Nemeth & Gail Jones-Nemeth
Thomas Jorgensen & Jocelyn Ruf
Bernie & Nancy Karr
Linda & Bob Katz
Larry & Joy Kent
Ursula Korneitchouk
Stephen & Carolyn Kuerbitz
Chris & Laura Larson
Barbara & Mark Mazzone
Helen & Harry Mercer
David & Leslee Miraldi
Toni & Linda Moore
The Music and Drama Club
Barbara B. O’Connor
Max Rabinovitsj & Mary W. Trevor
Mr. John Rampe
Tom L. & Helen Rathburn
Mrs. Sharon L. Rogers
Jacob Scholl & Charlotte A. Estafen
Dina & Richard° Schoonmaker
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Scoggin
Jack & Terry Southworth
Rex & Judy Stanforth
Karl & Carol Theil
Jeanette H. Thomas
Chris & Mary Weaver
Brian Wynne & Patrick Cozzens
Mr. Lee C. Zeiszler
John & Jane Zuzek
Anonymous
The Thomas and Joann Adler
Family Donor Advised Fund of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
Judie & Bruce Amsel
Joel & Teresa Andreani
Mr. & Mrs. Benham S. Bates
Mrs. Kathryn Berkshire
John & Jeannene Bertosa
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Beyer
Mike & Carole Brown
V. Elizabeth Brown
Cindy & Tim Carr
Rollin & Anne Conway
Dr. & Mrs. Kevin D. Cooper
Gilbert & Lisa Corwin
Pete & Margaret Dobbins
Mr. Theodore Elrick
Jon & Mary Fancher
Bill & Terri Frey
Carla & Jim Gallagher
Elizabeth Hecht & Peter Savoy
Doug & Suzanne Hicks
Mr. Herbert J. Hoppe, Jr.
Robert & Linda Jenkins
Stephen L. Kadish
Deb & Gar Kaminski
Charles King & Catherine Keating
Bob° & Nanci Kirkpatrick
Michael & Lynn Kleinman
Ronald G. Kollar
Mr. & Mrs. Mark D. Kozel
Robert & Jennifer Larson
Daniel Leschnik
Kenneth E. & Anne R. Love
The Mersol Family
Bill & Marilyn Miller
Steve Z. & Mary Gibbs Mitchell
Glenn & Susan Morley
Ms. Barbara H. Nahra
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Patalon
Ms. Diane L. Pauley
Frederick Perry
Ms. Lori Riga
Dr. Edward J. Rockwood
Sarah Sessions Reid
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Frank & Vicki Titas
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Lori Trehan
Ken Vinciquerra & Louise Acheson
Mr. & Mrs. James L. Wamsley III
Dr. & Mrs. Gregory A. Watts
Jerry & Carolyn Webb
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Juliet Zavesky
Zilber Family Foundation, a supporting foundation of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
Anonymous (5)
Cheryl Barnes
Pam & Scott Benson
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Berges
Roger Bielefeld
Mr. & Mrs. David R. Blackman
Susan Bobey
John Bolton
Larry & Andi Carlini
Robert Carlyon
Gary Ciolli
John & Donna Clifford
David & Gayle Cratty
Ronald Cross
Daniel Divis
John & Maryann Doucette
Bob & Kay Eikenburg
Mr. & Mrs. L. William Erb
Clyde & Janice Evans
Gene & Patricia Ewald
Mr. & Mrs. Fishwick
David V. Foos
Ms. Gay Maire Goden
Ms. Linda Grau
John Greene
Jean E. Gubbins
Richard & Jo Anne Harris
Curt & Karen Henkle
Thomas Higgason
Lynn & Mark Hofflund
Ms. Marie Ivkanec
James & Gale Jacobsohn
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Janson
Marilyn & Howard Karfeld
Lauren Kawentel
William & Marion Kettering
Mr. & Mrs. David R. Knowles
Mike Kupiec & Pat Murphy
Ms. Leslie Lahr
Jeremy Lewis & Daniel Napolitano
Gregory & Vickie Leyes
Brian & Renee Lowery
Antoinette Miller
Tim Miller
Tom & Mary Neff
Ms. Brenda Norton
Mr. Gerald Norton
Joan M. Oravec
Brian Perry & Ka Pi Hoh
Mr. David Porter
Bette Prendergast
James & Susan Prince
John & Betsy Quinn
Dr. James E. Racic
Frank Rausche
Ms. Jacqueline Y. Rhodes
Robinson Family Philanthropic
Fund of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Rosen
Doris A. & Richard E. Schultz
Mr. Richard Shirey
William E. Spatz
Susan St. John
Mr. Glenn S. Steffens
Sean & Tabitha Swick
Jeffrey Tasse
Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Tatman
The Edward & Katherine Thomas
Family
Dr. & Mrs. Ken Tomecki
Dr. Joanne M. Uniatowski
Mary Velotta
Christine & Daniel Vento
Kimberly Vivolo
Mr. & Ms. Michael Wagner
Ms. Kathleen Waits
Mr. David Wildermuth
Thomas M. & Barbara A. Wladyka
James & Sandra Wood
John & Dianne Young
$75 to $124
Anonymous (2)
Lori Adler
Thomas & Joan Baker
Ms. Carol Barasha
Ms. Kimberley Barton
Mr. Thomas D. Basco
Tom & Dorothy Bier
Amelia & Heather Blonsky
Dr. & Mrs. Dieter F. Bloser
Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Bolton
Richard & Mary Ann Brockett
Kathy Caldwell
Ms. Patricia Campbell
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Cercone
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Charlick
Mr. Edward A. Chuhna
David & Carol Consolo
Dr. & Mrs. Dale H. Cowan
Ms. Linda Cowie
George & Mary Crehore
Judith Darus
Mr. Brad Dawson
Chris & Mary Ann Deibel
Mr. Alex Derkaschenko
Mrs. Mary Helen Doherty
The Eldridge Family
Dr. J. Robert & Carol A. Fowler
Kurt & Barbara Fretthold
Mr. Gregory Fritz
Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Gabb
Jeffrey M. Gamso
Ms. Pamela S. Goetsch
Virginia T. Goetz
Marian Hancy
Iris & Tom Harvie
Debra & Tom Hayes
Jean Heller
Mr. Steven M. Izen & Mrs. Susannah Muskovitz
Ron & Mary Ann Janke
Dr. Kalish R. Kedia
Ms. Kerry King
Albert & Karen Kirby
Bill & Susan Kirchner
Benjamin R. Kirkpatrick
Ms. Amanda Kost
Richard B. Kotila
Ms. Margaret K. Krall
Jacob Kronenberg & Barbara Belovich
Charles Kruger
James & Tayna Lewan
Timothy Liston
David & Cheryl Lundgren
Susan E. Lust
Robert MacDougall
Kenneth & Joan MacGillivray
Paul S. Malchesky
Ms. Anne Martin
Ms. Shari Mathisen
Ms. Constance May
Lynda & Charlie Mayer
Mr. John A. Mazzella
Cathy J. McCall
Ms. Allison E. McCallum
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. McDonald
Jeanette McGovern
Jean McQuillan
Elizabeth Meister
Ms. Cheryl A. Moskwa
Mr. John M. Moss & Mrs. Karen J. Moss
Mr. & Mrs. Oliver° & Mary Emerson
Joseph M. & Meribeth A. Pannitto
Lou M. Papes
Christa Petryszyn
Mr. & Mrs. Harold I. Pittaway III
Chandana A. Reddy
Judy & Clifford Reeves
Kathryn & Heath Reinhardt
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Rencehausen
William Robak
Carolyn Rufo
Stephen Ruscher
Bryan Salisbury
Cindie Carroll-Pankhurst & Mark Salling
Ben & Amy Schaum
Ms. Meredith M. & Mr. Oliver E. Seikel
Donna Sheridan
Dr. Dave & Faye Sholiton
Mr. & Mrs. Vernon C. Sponseller
Todd & Patty Standen
Betsy Sullivan
Laura Lee Sutera
Ian & Kara Suzelis
Marcia J. Terstage
Ms. Leslie N. Thomas
Anne Unverzagt & Richard Goddard
Natalie & James Vloedman
Thomas Wagner & Malinda Smyth
Rev. & Mrs. David M. Walker
William Wallis
Mr. Raymond Washio
Lance Whitson & Terry Juhn
Thomas & Suann Winczek
Dr. Thomas Zarlingo
Patrick M. Zohn
Gifts to the Great Lakes Theater Endowment Fund were received from the following donors between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022.
Edward Godleski
Gifts were received in honor of:
Melanie Bordelois by: Sylvia Bordelois
Jack & Janice Campbell by: Holly Tomasch
Carol Dolan by: Mary Dolan & David Haracz
Natalie G. Epstein by: Marilyn Bedol
Chad & Andrea Deal
Mr. Gene DiVincenzo
Dr. Lauren Goldman
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Goodman
Rabbi Eddie & Dr. Roxanne Sukol
Wulf & Moira Utian
Mr. David I. & Mrs. Ann K. Warren
Mr. & Mrs. Philip Wasserstrom
Mr. Adam Weinsein
Mr. & Mrs. Steven Wiesenberger
Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival
Interns 1977-78 (A Merry Band of Players) by: Mary Beidler Gearen
Maddie Halapy by: The Halapy Family
Denise Horstman Keen by: George Leggiero
Catherine Tanner by: Christie Lucco & Michael Devlin
Bob Taylor by: Mitch & Liz Blair Charles, Lidia & Alexa Fee
Gifts were received in memory of:
Cancio & Susan Castro by: Christine Castro
Charles “Chuck” Dickson by: Georgianna T. Roberts
Elsie Glassford by: Angela Kovacs
William W. Jacobs by: Ms. Deborah Glosserman
Bob Kirkpatrick by:
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Chernus
Elizabeth Manolio by: Joseph M. & Meribeth A. Pannitto
Michael John McGann by: Desiree Ball
Dougfred Miller by: Vince Reddy
Carole Nicolosi by: Ms. Joyce L. Adams
Mary Louise Stecher Douthit by: Rebecca Dunn
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. & Ann Gross
Lawrence & Linda Hatch
Mr. John J. Kropf
Kathlyn & Harry Stenzel
Dr. James Sheridan by: Donna Sheridan
James Weiss by: Holly McTernan
William W. Jacobs by: Ms. Deborah Glosserman
Many companies, like the ones listed below, match all or a portion of their employees’ charitable giving. Is your employer a matching gift company? Find out by contacting your employer or the Great Lakes Theater Development Office at (216) 453-4457.
The Albert M. Higley Co. Dominion Foundation
Eaton
GlaxoSmithKline Foundation
The Lubrizol Foundation
Nordson Corporation Foundation
The Perkins Charitable Foundation
PNC Foundation
Progressive Insurance Foundation
Schneider Electric North America Foundation
The Women’s Committee
Formed in 1961, the committee is Great Lakes Theater’s longest standing volunteer support group. Members act as hosts for our actors, provide support in our administrative office and at events, and cheer us on throughout the season. If you would like to become a member, call Joanne Hulec at (216) 252-8717 for more information.
Officers
Janice Campbell, President
Barbara Chernus, Recording Secretary
Bernice Bolek, Corresponding Secretary
Nanci Kirkpatrick, Treasurer
°Deceased: The legacy of these generous donors lives on for future generations.
Samantha Jacobs & Aubrey Wynne
Thank you to our donors! Every effort is made to ensure that our donor records are current and correct. Please contact the Great Lakes Theater Development Office at (216) 453-4457 to share an update or request a revision.
Chair
Samuel Hartwell*
President
Kim Bixenstine*
Secretary
Elizabeth A. Grove*
Treasurer
Kathleen Kennedy*
Trustees
Beth A. Adams
Michelle Arendt
Jennifer Dowdell
Armstrong*
Walter Avdey*
Dalia Baker
Gary D. Benz
Kip T. Bollin
Todd M. Burger*
William Caster*
Gail L. Cudak
George A. M. Currall
Anthea Daniels
Christopher Dean
Carolyn Dickson†
Barry Doggett†
Carol Dolan*
Timothy J. Downing*
Dr. Howard G. Epstein*
Natalie Epstein†
Dianne V. Foley*
Lynn M. Gattozzi
Arthur C. Hall III*
David M. Hopkins
Mary Elizabeth Huber
Diane Kathleen Hupp
Faisal A. Khan*
John W. Lebold*
Andrea S. Lyons
William MacDonald III†
Charles Maimbourg*
David M. Maiorana
Ellen Stirn Mavec†
John E. McGrath†
Katie McVoy*
Ingrid A. Minott*
Janet E. Neary†
Michael Novak
Michael J. Peterman†
Timothy K. Pistell†
David P. Porter†
Gregory Pribulsky*
Uma M. Rajeshwar
Georgianna T. Roberts†
John D. Schubert†
Peter Shimrak†
Thomas G. Stafford*†
Sally J. Staley
Diana W. Stromberg
Catherine Tanner*
Kristine M. Tesar*
Arthur L. Thomas
Nancy Wellener
* Executive Committee
† Life Trustee
In 2002, Great Lakes Theater (Cleveland, Ohio) and Idaho Shakespeare Festival (Boise, Idaho) conceived a unique, strategic producing alliance designed to maximize return on organizational investments, increase production efficiencies, create long-term work opportunities for artists and share best practices. In 2010, Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival (Incline Village, Nevada) joined the collaborative — further contributing to the momentum of the producing prototype’s success. The long-term results have been remarkable. The alliance’s three independent, 501c3 regional theaters have shared over 60 jointly-created productions — each featuring long-term, multi-city employment opportunities for artistic company members. This revolutionary producing model has realized its vision and exceeded expectations while simultaneously resulting in notable audience growth for each company.
Leadership
Charles Fee, Producing Artistic Director
Bob Taylor, Executive Director
Management Team
Associate Artistic Director Sara Bruner
Director of Educational Services Kelly Schaffer Florian
Managing Director................................ Todd Krispinsky
Resident Artist & Interim Production Manager Jaclyn Miller
Director of Educational Programming Lisa Ortenzi
Director of Administration...................Stephanie Reed
Director of Marketing & Communications Kacey Shapiro
Development
Development & Donor Relations Manager Jeremy Lewis
Patron Services Coordinator Marilyn Niksa
Marketing
Audience Cultivation Coordinator Amy Essick
Education
Education Outreach Associate...............David Hansen
School Residency Program
Actor-Teachers Noelle Elise Crites, Kelly Elliott, Gabe Heffernan, Tim Keo, Amaya Kiyomi, Olivia Morey, Avery LaMar Pope, A’Rhyan Samford, Asia Sharp-Berry
Production
Assistant Production Manager Lindsay Mandela
Company Manager ............................... Lauren Tidmore
Technical Director ...................................... Mark Cytron
Assistant Technical Director Richard Haberlen
Associate Scenic Designer Jason M. Curtis
Assistant Scenic Designer ..................... William Beilke
Master Carpenter ...................................... Lindsay Loar
Carpenters Bill Langenhop, Ralph Melari, Gary Zsigrai
Properties Master ............................ Bernadine Cockey
Assistant Properties Master..................... Gina Meluso
Charge Scenic Artist Ruth Lohse
Costume Director Esther M. Haberlen
Assistant Costume Shop Manager/Tailor .....Leah Loar
Crafts Artisan/Milliner ........................... Zachary Hickle
Draper Diana Sidley
Lead First Hand Tina Spencer
Design Assistant/Stitcher Serenity-Grace Tate
Wardrobe Supervisor .......................... Cheyenne Moore
Wardrobe Crew Serenity-Grace Tate
Resident Hair & Wig Supervisor Iran Micheal Leon
Master Electrician Tammy Taylor
Audio Supervisor ................................... Josh Brinkman
Audio 2 Daniel Zilka
Music Contractor Matthew Webb
Resident Production Stage Manager Nicki Cathro
Run Crew ............................. Ralph Melari, Gary Zsigrai
Hanna Theatre Crew .............................Thomas Boddy, Shaun Milligan, Lester Parker Jr., Nathan Tulenson
Health and Safety Team Jaclyn Miller, Amy Essick, Lindsay Mandela, Lauren Tidmore
Great Lakes Theater is a member of the League of Resident Theaters (LORT) and operates under agreements with LORT, Actors’ Equity Association, American Federation of Musicians, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, and the United Scenic Artists, which are unions representing professional actors, stage managers, musicians, stagehands, directors, choreographers, and designers, respectively, in the United States.
Playbill Editor: Linda Feagler
For advertising information, please contact Matthew Kraniske: 216-377-3681
Flanagan’s
Becoming Dr. Ruth
In The Heights
Becoming Dr. Ruth
Meet Vera Stark
The Musical Box
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical
Meet Vera Stark
Ain’t Misbehavin’ K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
The Tina Turner Musical
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical
Flanagan’s Wake Becoming Dr. Ruth By the Way, Meet Vera Stark Balanchine’s Serenade/Symphony of Life
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Flanagan’s Wake By the Way, Meet
Vera Stark
Ain’t Misbehavin’
Flanagan’s Wake Becoming Dr. Ruth The Piano Guys In The Heights
Flanagan’s Wake Becoming Dr. Ruth Meet Vera Stark Balanchine’s Serenade/Symphony of Life Limón Dance Co.
Tina Flanagan’s Wake
Meet Vera Stark
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Superstar/Helen Welch
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical
Ain’t Misbehavin’ K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Dear Evan Hansen
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Dancing Classrooms
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Ain’t Misbehavin’ K. Ludwig’s Moriarty The Shalva Band Comedy, Errors, Vanity, and Stupidity
Dear Evan Hansen
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
The First Snow of Summer
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Ain’t Misbehavin’ K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Ain’t Misbehavin’ K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Ain’t Misbehavin’ K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Tina Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Hiccup
Junie B.’s/Guide to School Step Afrika!
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Fade
Dear Evan Hansen
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Escapegoat
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty
Samantha Bee Louder
Dear Evan Hansen
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Tom Papa One-Shot
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Menopause The Musical
Dear Evan Hansen
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Tom Papa
Tina: The Tina Turner Musical
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Menopause The Musical Natalie Merchant
Dear Evan Hansen
Ain’t Misbehavin’
K. Ludwig’s Moriarty Miranda Sings
2023 Dazzle Awards
Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous, Nat Geo Live!
John Mellencamp
John Mellencamp
Cleveland Celtic Ensemble
Shows are announced every week. Sign up at playhousesquare.org to get advance notices by email!
We believe that all Cleveland youth should have access to high-quality arts education. Through the generosity of our donors, we are investing to scale up neighborhoodbased programs that now serve 3,000 youth year-round in music, dance, theater, photography, literary arts and curatorial mastery. That’s setting the stage for success. Find your passion, and partner with the Cleveland Foundation to make your greatest charitable impact.
(877) 554-5054
www.ClevelandFoundation.org/Success