LANCASTER – Will Geer’s Theatricum Botanicum has announced the Antelope Valley Theatre Project, an immersive theater program that will expand the company’s reach to the Lancaster/Palmdale area with support from The James Irvine Foundation Exploring Engagement Fund.
“Theatricum has been working to build a relationship with communities in the Antelope Valley for some years,” explains project director Elizabeth Tobias. “We are always searching for a way to translate the education programming we do with kids in schools into programming for adults that will similarly inspire and engage them with the arts.”
The Antelope Valley Theatre Project is a three-pronged program that includes bringing professional performances to the region; engaging local residents through acting classes and workshops; and presenting a culminating Community Theater Festival.
Theatricum Botanicum’s professional repertory company will offer free admission to public performances of its award-winning production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at three area venues:
- The Lancaster Performing Arts Center (Sunday, Oct. 13 at 3 p.m. – reservations required: 661-723-5950);
- Jackie Robinson Park in Sun Village (Sunday, Nov. 10 at 2 p.m.); and
- The Antelope Valley College Performing Arts Theatre (Friday, Dec. 13 at 7:30 p.m.).
In addition, local residents will be offered the opportunity to participate in one of six different workshops during the months of October, November and December, at no charge.
The free theater classes for adults and families in Antelope Valley include technique workshops for adults in Elizabethan Dance, Fencing and Stage Combat; Classical Acting residencies for adults; Writing and Performing residencies for adults; and a multi-generational residency for families titled Families Act the Classics, during which family groups (each group must include at least one child and one adult) will be directed by Theatricum directors in their own performance of an edited version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Workshops will take place at various locations throughout the Antelope Valley, including Antelope Valley College; Living Stone Cathedral; Jackie Robinson Park; Piute and Lowtree Wellness Homes in Lancaster; and Legacy Commons Senior Center in Palmdale.
To learn more about these free workshops, visit http://www.theatricum.com/avtp.htm. To enroll, email avtpreserve@gmail.com.
The third and final component of the Antelope Valley Theatre Project will be a culminating Community Theater Festival at the Antelope Valley College Performing Arts Theatre on Saturday, Dec. 14 and Sunday, Dec. 15, where class participants will present final demonstrations of their work and the multi-generational Dream will perform twice for the public.
Working with Theatricum artistic director Ellen Geer, education director Susan Angelo and company member Earnestine Phillips, Tobias has spent over eight months laying the groundwork for the project by organizing community outreach meetings with local community leaders, public officials and the general public.
“The bulk of our work so far has been forming partnerships,” she says. “We want to make sure the project is carefully integrated into any enrichment programming already taking place in the area so we can reach as many people as possible. We are planting the seeds for what we hope will blossom into a long-lasting, more permanent theater program that develops organically from the amazing support of The James Irvine Foundation, our own expertise and enrichment/development of the community’s existing programs and passion.”
Theatricum was founded by actor/botanist Will Geer, best known for his portrayal of Grandpa Zebulon Tyler Walton in the 1970s TV series The Waltons.
To learn more about Will Geer’s Theatricum Botanicum, visit http://www.theatricum.com/.
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candice says
are you going to do this again..i would love to sign up and do it.