Ian, our director, and the ensemble during sound check at last night’s event in the Lincoln Center Atrium.
A peek inside the harpsichord at Lincoln Center from our show last night.
Our composer, Nate Weida, jams on his new favorite thing in the world, the gorgeous harpsichord Lincoln Center provided for A Night Under Galileo’s Stars.
Thanks to the fine folk at the Lincoln Center Atrium for how smoothly everything went at our packed show last night! You guys rule.
Come see us perform an evening inspired by our recent production of Brecht’s LIFE OF GALILEO tonight with our composer on harpsichord, a full band, and selected text read by the cast. This is a free event presented by Lincoln Center in the David Rubenstein Atrium as part of their Target Free Thursdays Series!
The Atrium is on Broadway at 62nd Street, just next door to Rosa Mexicano, and the evening kicks off tonight at 8:30pm. It is only about 1 hour in duration and there is food & drink available in the space provided by Tom Coliccho’s ‘WichCraft Cafe & Bar.
If you missed GALILEO or loved the original music, join us as Lincoln Center presents a FREE evening with our composer, Nate Weida, a full band & the cast to highlight the score in a whole new way. The evening kicks off at 8:30pm & will be presented in a cabaret setting (yes there is a bar!) @ Rubenstein Atrium (next to Rosa Mexicano) Celebrate the end of a great show run and the middle of a gorgeous summer with us!
Another Sold Out night at the Kehoe Theater! Only 1 last chance to stargaze with LIFE OF GALILEO, tomorrow at 2pm. Buy ahead here!
Don’t miss the show that Woman Around Town calls “visually stunning,” “well-crafted,” and “emotionally captivating”!
photo (c) Kerry Lee Chipman
“…Portrayed by a magical cast of Fordham Theatre graduates, most notably Tommy Heleringer as Mr. Priuli and the Little Monk, and Jared McNeill as Andrea, Life of Galileo is both visually stunning with its use of two-dimensional puppets meant to represent three important figureheads of Italy, well-crafted costumes, and graphic imagery, as well as emotionally captivating, ranging from humor and devastation, to the feeling of great hopelessness and loss of faith. It is a work that leaves one to question: which is more commendable, sacrifice of self or sacrifice of art?”
Last night was a packed packed packed SOLD OUT Thursday night performance! Don’t miss your last 4 chances to see our debut co-production of GALILEO! Buy tickets here!
photo (c) Kerry Lee Chipman