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Cole Porter's - Kiss Me Kate
Featuring the amazing choreography of Bob Fosse...!
Buy Tickets Online Now!
If you cannot purchase your tickets online, we recommend all those who can purchase ahead of time.
Although we cannot guarantee tickets will be available at the door there is a strong likelihood.
Recommended arrival time is 30-45 minutes prior to showtime.
We urge that you call our ticket outlets to pre-purchase tickets with cash or checks.
PETROGLYPH
125 Walnut Avenue
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
(831) 458-1117
VICTORIA'S DANCE
104 Lincoln Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
(831) 469-9316
ONLINE TICKETS only available '24 hours or more' before the showtime.
Only will-call tickets are sold online. Please bring your ID to the show.
If all the available online tickets have been sold, please contact one of our other box offices, or call the main All About Theatre phoneline: (831) 345-6340.
Show Location
Louden Nelson Community Center, downtown Santa Cruz.
Show Dates:
May 7th-16th, 2010.
Friday May 7th - at 7pm
Saturday May 8th - at 7pm
Sunday May 9th - at 2pm
Thursday May 13th - at 7pm
Friday May 14th - 7pm
Saturday May 15th - 2pm & 7pm
Sunday May 16th - at 2pm
Cast List:
Click Here to Open the PDF of the Cast List.
Pay Your Tuition Online Now:
Click on the link to pay full amount, sibling discounts calculated and single child installments.
Kiss Me Kate tuition payments
Quick Review
Kiss Me Kate tells the tale of two once-married, now-divorced musical theater actors,
Fred Graham and Lilli Vanessi, who are performing opposite each other in a Broadway-bound
musical version of William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, in the roles of
Petruchio and Katharina. Already on poor terms, the pair begin an all-out emotional war
midperformance when Lilli discovers Fred sent his latest fling, Lois Lane, Lilli's
wedding bouquet. (Lois plays the role of Bianca in "The Taming of the Shrew".) The only
thing keeping the show together are threats from a pair of gangsters: Lois's steady
boyfriend (and the show's Lucentio), Bill Calhoun, loves to gamble, and to avoid the
responsibility of paying his debts, has signed Fred's name to an I.O.U. Gangsters have
come to collect on it, and this show will provide the money that Fred needs to avoid
getting his fingers broken. Fred, in turn, uses the gangsters to prevent the furious
Lilli from walking out on the show after she discovers that the wedding bouquet was
really meant for Lois and throws a tantrum, prompting Fred to literally spank her
onstage. In classic musical comedy fashion, madness ensues, and both pairs of lovers
are ultimately reconciled. Fred and Lilli presumably re-marry.
Awards (1999-2000)
4 Tony Awards for Best Actor, Best Costumes, Best Director and Best Orchestrations.
Brief History
KISS ME, KATE played for 1,077 performances on Broadway at the New Century Theatre and for 501 performances in London at the Coliseum Theatre. The original cast included Alfred Drake, Patricia Morison, Lisa Kirk and Harold Lang. The original cast album issued in 1948 by Columbia Records had the distinction of being the very first Broadway cast recording to be issued on LP. KISS ME, KATE was revived in 1999 at the Martin Beck Theatre on Broadway, where it played for 881 performances starring Brian Stokes Mitchell and Marin Mazzie, and at the Victoria Palace Theatre in London, where it played for about 300 performances starring Brent Barrett and Marin Mazzie.
Youtube Links
Another Openin' Another Show - London 1999 Revival
Brush Up Your Shakespeare - Broadway
So In Love - Rachel York
It's Too Darn Hot - 2002 UK Cast
Staff:
| Artistic Director |
Lindsey Chester |
| Director |
Heather LaForge |
| Musical Director |
Eleanor Hunter |
| Choreographer |
Brance Souza |
Song List
Overture
Another Op'nin', Another Show
Why Can't You Behave?
Wunderbar
So In Love
We Open in Venice
Tom, Dick, or Harry
I've Come to Wive It Wealthily in Padua
I Hate Men
Were Thine That Special Face
Cantiamo D'Amore (We Sing of Love)
Kiss Me, Kate
Too Darn Hot
Where Is the Life That Late I Led?
From This Moment On
Keep it gay
Always True to You in My Fashion
Bianca
So In Love - Reprise
Brush Up Your Shakespeare
I Am Ashamed That Women Are So Simple
Kiss Me, Kate" - Reprise
Full Synopsis
KISS ME, KATE was originally produced in 1948 and has been considered one of Broadway's
treasures. It was revived in 1999, taking advantage of new technology in music and
keeping in mind evolving social values. In the Revised Version all the basic music
material for the show was taken back to the fundamentals of its melody, harmony and
rhythm, and a new score was written. All seventeen of the original songs are present
in the revised score, and the song From This Moment On from Porter's OUT OF THIS WORLD
as well as from the 1953 film version of KISS ME, KATE has been added. The book was
carefully refined, not changed, for the new version. The character Harrison Howell has
become a General with political ambitions, and adds some topical humor from the exact
period of the show to the Revised Version.
Another Op'nin' Another Show welcomes you to
Baltimore and to the opening of a musical version of Shakespeare's "The Taming of the
Shrew." The cast of the play is on stage and receiving final instructions from Fred
Graham, the director. A play-within-a-play unfolds, where each of the four main cast
members' on-stage performance is complicated by what is happening in his off-stage life.
Fred takes the roles of director and male lead, Petruchio. His ex-wife Lilli, now a
movie star with a reputation for being difficult to work with, plays Katharine, the
shrew. Fred's current love interest, Lois, plays the role of Bianca, and the other
man in Lois' life, Bill, plays the role of Lucentio.
Before the curtain rises on "The
Shrew" we find out that Bill has a gambling problem. He tells Lois that he signed a
$10,000 IOU for a debt in Fred's name, instead of using his own name. Not long after
Lois begs Bill to stop gambling, two thugs show up at the theater to make it clear that
Bill will have to make good on that IOU. But they confront Fred instead of Bill, since
Fred's name is on the gambling debt. Lois asks Bill Why Can't You Behave? Fred and Lilli
reminisce nostalgically about their other performances together, and their warm feelings
for each other return -Wunderbar. When flowers sent by Fred to Lois mistakenly get
delivered to Lilli, Lilli falls even more deeply in love with Fred -So in Love.
We are brought into Shakespeare's world with We Open in Venice. It is not long before we are
told that Lucentio (Bill) may not marry his love Bianca (Lois), until Bianca's older
sister Katharine (Lilli) the shrew is married off. Bianca enjoys flirting with her
gentlemen callers in Tom, Dick or Harry. Fortunately for Bianca and Lucentio, Petruchio
(Fred) comes to town looking for a wealthy wife and is not scared off by Katharine.
Petruchio explains his goal in I've Come to Wive It Wealthily in Padua and Katharine
makes her feelings clear in I Hate Men. Lilli finally discovers that the flowers Fred
sent her were actually intended for Lois, and we hear her shriek in outrage from offstage.
In Were Thine That Special Face Petruchio sings of his strong feelings for Katharine.
Lilli threatens to walk out of the show, but is forced to stay. Fred convinces the two
gangsters that he will be able to pay them the money he allegedly owes them, if they can
make sure Lilli continues to play her role. The gangsters put on costumes and become
part of the cast of "The Shrew" to stay close to Lilli. Lilli uses her anger toward Fred
to express herself as Katharine for the rest of the show. Fred is forced to get tough
with Katharine as he plays Petruchio. Kiss Me, Kate closes the first act.
The second act opens with Too Darn Hot, which gives the cast a chance to relax outside
the theatre during intermission. Back at "The Shrew" Petruchio marries Katharine, and
already misses his relatively peaceful single life in Where Is the Life That Late I Led?
Lois and Bill sing of their relationship in Always True to You (In My Fashion) and then
Bill sings Bianca. When the gangsters call their boss to 'check in,' they find out that
the boss has been killed. This makes Bill's IOU worthless, so the gangsters can leave.
Lilli takes the opportunity to walk off the show, and leaves with her dependable fiance
Harrison, as Fred reprises So in Love. The gangsters get caught up in the limelight and
pay an unusual tribute to Shakespeare in Brush Up Your Shakespeare. Bianca and Lucentio
are finally married. As "The Taming of the Shrew" comes to a close, Lilli unexpectedly
returns to the stage, and in Katharine's words expresses her intention of returning to
Fred -I Am Ashamed That Women Are So Simple. Lilli and Fred are reunited, and Lois and
Bill are together.
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