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Stages Theatre Company is dedicated to exploring the eternal answers that offer hope and inspiration for the human condition. The company strives to "give you the truth in the pleasant disguise of illusion" (Williams, The Glass Menagerie). Productions include works ranging from Shakespeare to Neil Simon, T.S. Eliot to Tennessee Williams.
Stages Theatre Company performs year-round on Cape Cod in Orleans, Massachusetts and has toured the east coast and many southern states performing at conferences, schools, and churches, as well as leading theater workshops. The company includes a thriving children's program and outreach to local schools.
Members of Stages Theatre Company have received training with well-established teachers from such institutions as Shakespeare and Company (Lennox, MA) and Central School of Speech and Drama (London, England), Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (London), Shakespeare's Globe (London), the Royal Shakespeare Company (London), the National Theatre (London), and the Spontaneity Shop (London). The company has studied and taken part in intensive workshops with Patsy Rodenberg, Joanna Weir-Ouston, Glynn MacDonald, Deborah White, Vanessa Ewan, Sue Lefton, and Deborah Green. Their voice training holds specific emphasis on the Linklater method.
“Stages Theatre Company has a winner on its hands. Shaffer’s riotous script provides a workout for your funny bone. A skilled comic actress, Dwyer is onstage in almost every scene and handles a mountain of dialogue with aplomb.”
Cape Cod Times Lettice and Lovage
“Excellent performances, a well-designed and detailed set, well-chosen costumes and creative lighting. Stages Theatre Company and director David Haig have taken on this demanding production with a great show of understanding and fine performances by each cast member.”
Cape Cod Times The Glass Menagerie
“This production by Stages Theatre Company brings all the blackness of Richard’s heart and the redness of spilt blood to bear on a three-hour show that left Sunday night’s audience leaping to their feet in applause.”
Cape Cod Times Richard III
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