Season Calendar

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

By August Wilson

September 12 – October 7, 2007

Chicago 1927 - in a studio somewhere in the city, Ma Rainey’s band is gathering to record a new album. But legendary Blues singer Ma Rainey hasn't turned up, the new young trumpeter wants to play the music his way and the other band members bicker, fight, laugh and tell stories. It looks increasingly unlikely that any songs will be recorded at all. August Wilson died in 2005 and is considered one of America's greatest modern playwrights. Ma Rainey... was the first of an epic cycle of plays chronicling every decade of the African-American experience in the 20th century.

"Searing ... funny, salty, carnal and lyrical.... Wilsonhas lighted a dramatic fuse that snakes and hisses through several anguished eras of American life. When the fuse reaches its explosive final destination, the audience is impaled by the impact." -The New York Times
 

Hamlet

By William Shakespeare

October 17 – November 11, 2007

William Shakespeare comes to Actors Guild of Lexington for the first time with AGL’s production of perhaps the greatest play ever written: Hamlet. Starring AGL Associate Artist Adam Luckey and directed by AGL Artistic Director Richard St. Peter, this promises to be a Hamlet for the 21st century. Featuring new media design by the Washington DC-based Cyburbia Productions, Hamlet promises to be a feast for the eyes and ears as it unfolds in all of its glory: ghost story, kings and queens, political intrigue, and murder most foul make for a gripping and engrossing evening of theatre. This soaring production is not to be missed!
 

She Loves Me

Book by Joe Masteroff

Lyrics by Sheldon Harnick

Music by Jerry Bock

Based on a play by Miklos Laszlo

Presented in Association with Paragon Music Theatre

November 28 – December 23, 2007

Georg and Amalia are two feuding clerks in a European parfumerie during the 1930s who secretly find solace in their anonymous romantic pen pals, little knowing their respective correspondents are none other than each other. Funny, intelligent, honest and sentimental, She Loves Me is a warm romantic comedy with an endearing innocence and a touch of old world elegance and nostalgia, yet as universal and relevant as ever in this age of internet romances. An ideal Holiday show, this heart-warming work by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick (the songwriting team of Fiddler On The Roof) and Joe Masteroff (the bookwriter of Cabaret) is a pleasure whatever the occasion.
 

Boston Marriage

By David Mamet

January 30 -- February 24, 2008

Anna and Claire are two bantering, scheming “women of fashion” who have long lived together on the fringes of upper-class society. Anna has just become the mistress of a wealthy man, from whom she has received an enormous emerald and an income to match. Claire, meanwhile, is infatuated with a respectable young lady and wants to enlist the jealous Anna’s help for an assignation. As the two women exchange barbs and take turns taunting Anna’s hapless Scottish parlor maid, Claire’s young inamorata suddenly appears, setting off a crisis that puts both the valuable emerald and the women’s futures at risk. To this wickedly funny comedy, acclaimed playwright David Mamet brings his trademark tart dialogue and impeccable timing, spiced with Oscar Wilde-type wit.

“Devastatingly funny…exceptionally clever…demonstrates anew Mamet’s technical virtuosity and flexibility.” The New York Times
 

Arcadia

By Tom Stoppard

March 12 – April 6, 2008

From the Academy Award-winning screenwriter of Shakespeare in Love comes this dazzling play of wit, romance, genius and poetry. Widely regarded as one of the most brilliant plays of the 20th century, Arcadia is an intriguing mystery that takes place in both 1809 and the present day. Set in a large country house in Derbyshire, the drama plays on the emotions, carefully mixing sadness and humor, at times leaving the audience unsure whether to laugh or cry. Although it broaches high-brow subjects like the chaos theory and the second law of thermodynamics, the play is wickedly funny and accessible to all, and includes lashings of Stoppard’s legendary humor and wit.

"Pure entertainment for the heart, mind, soul.... The best Broadway play for many, many a season. It is a work shot through with fun, passion and, yes, genius." The New York Post.
 

Moonlight and Magnolias

By Ron Hutchinson

April 16 – May 11, 2008

1939 Hollywood is abuzz. Legendary producer David O. Selznick has shut down production of his new epic, Gone with the Wind, a film adaptation of Margaret Mitchell’s novel. The screenplay, you see, just doesn’t work. So what’s an all-powerful movie mogul to do? While fending off the film’s stars, gossip columnists and his own father-in-law, Selznick sends a car for famed screenwriter Ben Hecht and pulls formidable director Victor Fleming from the set of The Wizard of Oz. Summoning both to his office, he locks the doors, closes the shades, and on a diet of bananas and peanuts, the three men labor over five days to fashion a screenplay that will become the blueprint for one of the most successful and beloved films of all time.

“… a Hollywood dream-factory farce…At once a hyperventilating slapstick comedy, an impassioned love song and a blazing critique of Hollywood…” The Chicago Sun Times