
Season in a Box
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Call the box office with questions: (360) 943-2744
Performances are Wednesday through Saturday* at 7:30pm and the Sunday matinee is at 2pm.
- Always...Patsy Cline (Sept. 29-Oct. 16)
- Scrooge, the Musical (Dec. 1-30)
- Hair (Jan. 26-Feb. 19)
- Hello, Dolly! (Mar. 15-Apr. 1)
- The Full Monty (May 10-27)
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Always...Patsy Cline (Ted Swindley Productions, Inc.)
Written by Ted Swindley
Always...Patsy Cline is based on the true story of Patsy Cline's friendship with housewife Louise Seger. Seger, a devoted fan of Cline's, coincidently meets her at a show, and the two women strike up a friendship that lasts until Cline's untimely death in 1963. Seger supplies the narrative of a relationship that begins as fan worship and evolves into a faithful pen-pal friendship while Cline floats in and out of the set singing the tunes that made her famous: “Anytime,” “Walkin' After Midnight,” “Sweet Dreams,” and “Crazy” – to name a few. A combination of humor, sadness and reality, this unique story captures the essence of the music that made Patsy Cline a legend and millions fall in love with her.


Scrooge (Samuel French)
Book, Music and Lyrics by Leslie Bricusse
Need a little more Dickens to complete your 2011? We present this ever-popular holiday gift, the musical adaptation of Charles Dickens’ timeless A Christmas Carol, at the persistent demand of our valued patrons. Scrooge the musical will complete your family’s festivities! Join the curmudgeonly Scrooge, Tiny Tim, the Spirits of Past, Present and “What-is-yet-to-come” and their fellow Dickensians for the revival of a Capital Playhouse holiday tradition. Scrooge will undoubtedly live up to its own standard of sell outs night after night — these tickets will be devoured as fast as figgy pudding!


Hair (Tams-Witmark)
Book and Lyrics by Gerome Ragni and James Rado
Music by Galt MacDermot
Hair tells the story of the “tribe,” a group of politically active, long-haired hippies of the “Age of Aquarius” counter-culture of the 1960s living a bohemian life in New York City and fighting against conscription into the Vietnam War. Claude, his good friend Berger, their roommate Sheila and their friends struggle to balance their young lives, loves and the sexual revolution with their rebellion against the war, their conservative parents and society. These youths are awkwardly but exuberantly creating their rite of passage with songs-turned-anthems of the anti-Vietnam War peace movement, use of illegal drugs, and civil disobedience. Hair proudly illustrates the '60s generation's search for meaning through “be-ins,” “love-ins” and protests.


Hello, Dolly! (Tams-Witmark)
Book by Michael Stewart
Music and Lyrics by Jerry Herman
Hello, Dolly! is an ebullient and irresistible story alive with the personality of one of the most fabulous characters on the musical stage...Dolly Gallagher Levi! We are off on a whirlwind race around New York at the turn of the twentieth century, as we follow the adventures of America's most beloved matchmaker! As she puts it, “Some people paint, some sew...I meddle.” Dolly sets her sights to marry Horace Vandergelder, the well-known half-a-millionaire, and send his money circulating among the people like rainwater the way her late husband taught her, and along the way succeeds in matching three other couples. Dolly is as charming as her winks to the audience are legendary in this most delightful of musical comedies, featuring one of the most famous songs in the history of American musical comedy, “Hello, Dolly!”


The Full Monty (MTI)
Book by Terrence McNally
Music & Lyrics by David Yazbek
In this Americanized musical stage version adapted from the 1997 British film of the same name, six unemployed Buffalo steelworkers, low on both cash and prospects, decide to present a strip act with their “real man” bodies at a local club after seeing their wives' enthusiasm for a touring company of Chippendales. One of them, Jerry, declares that their show will be better than the Chippendales dancers because they'll go “the full monty” – stripping all the way. As they prepare for the show, working through their anxiety and self-consciousness, they overcome their inner demons and find renewed self-esteem and strength in their camaraderie.