Featured image for post: “All in the Timing and Other Outrageous Short Comedies” Opens the Theatre Season October 20-23

“All in the Timing and Other Outrageous Short Comedies” Opens the Theatre Season October 20-23

WILSON, N.C. — October 12, 2016 — Theatre at Barton College opens its 2016-2017 season with “All in the Timing and Other Outrageous Short Comedies” by award-winning American playwright David Ives. Performances will be held Thursday and Friday, Oct. 20-21, at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 22-23 at 3 p.m. in the Kennedy Family Theatre on the Barton campus.

Tickets will be sold at the door and online at barton.edu/theatre. Tickets are $10 for adults, $8 for seniors, military and alumni, $6 for non-Barton students, and free of charge for Barton students, faculty, and staff.

A witty collection of short comedies, “All in the Timing” was first produced in 1993 as six uniquely quirky, situational plays, which were then expanded to 14 plays for a 2013 revival,” shared Adam Twiss, director of Theatre at Barton. “We took this marvelous lot, coupled it with David Ives’ follow-up, “Time Flies,” for a collection of 28 short pieces. Then, we set eight equally unique and quirky directors (alumni, faculty, community members) to work reviewing the plays and considering which of the 28 pieces they might direct as part of an outstanding evening of entertainment here at Barton. The result is an extraordinary, engaging performance that enlists talent from every quadrant of our campus, as well as from our community…a fitting approach to a work of theatre offered for the very first time on Barton’s Homecoming Weekend!

“Since the opening of our Kennedy Family Theatre in 2009, Barton’s performing arts programs have had a fitting home to produce and perform high quality material, and each year as we are rehearsing over Homecoming Weekend, I have had to break the news to former Stage and Script members and other enthusiastic alumni, that they will have to be satisfied wandering through the building and watching a rehearsal because the timing was not right for mounting a full-scale production in late-October,” Twiss continued. “This year, we challenged ourselves to re-think that possibility, and, indeed, it’s all in the aforementioned “timing.” This show is dedicated to the Stage and Script pioneers, who kept the flame lit for so many years, till we could catch up and craft a program around their vision!”

END