ΊμΠΣΚΣΖ΅ Theatre presents spring production β€œWords and What We Do with Them”

cast members rehearsing

March 9, 2021
Story and photos by Joe Vinduska

ΊμΠΣΚΣΖ΅ Theatre will showcase six thoughtful plays by David Ives in its hilarious yet introspective spring production β€œWords and What We Do with Them.” The show will have four runs at the following dates and times with social distancing guidelines being followed and live-stream tickets also available: 7:30 p.m. March 19, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. March 20, and 2 p.m. March 21 in the Fine Arts Auditorium. In-person tickets and live-stream passes (available on select showings) are available now at . In-person, general admission tickets are $10 (includes two free children tickets) and patrons are encouraged to purchase them in advance. General admission tickets bought at the door will be $20. ΜύSocial distancing will be practiced for in-person viewings and masks are required when not seated. Live-stream passes are $15.

Theater Director Miller James said he chose the play for several reasons.

β€œIt’s smart, clever, funny and a thrilling challenge for actors,” he said. β€œAlso, rehearsals can be done with only two to four actors at a time, so social distancing and COVID safety rules can be followed.Μύ David Ives is my favorite contemporary American playwright because of his out-of-the-box thinking and his deconstruction of language. He allows us to see words for what they are; and aren’t - without being pretentious.”

Cast member Caden Rowan said working on this play has been a unique experience.

β€œThis production is special due to the smaller cast size, especially on a rehearsal-by-rehearsal basis,” he said. β€œIt's strange to me to be in a show with only 2 other people and rehearse with those few. I know that there are many more people in the show than those I rehearse with, but I rarely see them so it's a little weird to me. It’s going to be a fantastic series of well-put-together shows.”

Kaitlyn Sperka is a cast member and has also helped direct the show. She said although there are a lot of different topics, it feels like a unified production at the end of the day and there is a lot of ground covered.

β€œThe plays transition into each other in such fun ways, not a single moment of this show is boring,” she said. β€œIt's been a blast working with everyone as well. With a show like this you have to cut loose and get comfortable with your castmates quickly for the energy of the show to be what it needs to be, and I think everyone had a really easy time doing that. Audiences can expect a night of unusual fun, familiar theater and to even learn something, too. It has been a really cool experience being a student and getting to direct alongside Miller. I feel like this has been a big opportunity for me and I'm really thankful. I'm looking forward to learning more in the future.”

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