Ophelia's Jump presents: VANYA and SONIA and MASHA and SPIKE
Date and Time
Friday Feb 5, 2016
8:00 PM - 10:00 PM PST
February 5 and 6 at 8 p.m. February 7 at 4 p.m. February 12 at 8 p.m. Feb 13 and 14 - Special Valentine?s performances with Pre-show at 7 p.m. Feb 19 and 20th at 8 p.m. February 21 at 4 p.m. Ticket prices: $25 General Admission, $22 Students/Seniors. $35 for Special Valentine?s Performances On February 13 and 14 (includes drink and dessert).
Location
The Theatre Company Performing Arts Studio, 1400 N. Benson Ave, Upland
Fees/Admission
Ticket prices: $25 General Admission, $22 Students/Seniors. $35 for Special Valentine?s Performances On February 13 and 14 (includes drink and dessert).
Website
Contact Information
Randy Lopez, 909-380-2753 randy@opheliasjump.org
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Description
Ophelia’s Jump Productions opens its 4th season with Christopher Durang’s 2013 Tony award winning play, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, directed by company co-founder, Caitlin Lopez. The production plays February 5-21, 2016 at The Theatre Company Performing Arts Studio, 1400 N. Benson, Upland.
In Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, master of comedy, Christopher Durang, takes characters and themes from Chekhov, pours them into a blender and mixes them up. The utterly hilarious and occasionally touching result is his latest play set in present day Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
Vanya and his stepsister Sonia have lived their entire lives in their family's farmhouse. While they stayed home to take care of their ailing parents, their sister Masha has been gallivanting around the world as a successful actress and movie star, leaving Vanya and Sonia to feel trapped and regretful. Their soothsayer/cleaning woman Cassandra keeps warning them about terrible things in the future, which include a sudden visit from Masha and her twenty-something boy toy Spike.
“Rarely has middle-aged despair over dashed dreams and squandered hopes been put to more hilarious effect than in ‘Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike,’ Christopher Durang's giddy farce on Chekhovian themes that won the Tony for best play.” - Charles McNulty, LA Times