Everybody is a modern retelling of the medieval morality play Everyman, where the title character embarks on a journey toward death, exploring life's ultimate questions.
This existential and unpredictable narrative brings humor and depth to the human condition, blending audience interaction and experimental staging with timeless reflections on life and mortality.
Little Shop of Horrors follows the story of Seymour Krelborn, a hapless florist who discovers a mysterious plant that brings him fame—but at a sinister cost.
This darkly comedic tale of ambition and consequences combines campy horror with 1950s rock music, offering a zany yet cautionary homage to the perils of unchecked desire.
Silent Sky tells the story of Henrietta Leavitt, whose innovations and ideas changed our understanding of the cosmos.
This story of the indomitable human spirit called for an ethereal homage to the history of Astronomy partnered with a classical formatting style.
Mother Courage and Her Children follows the enterprising Mother Courage as she discovers the strength of values in the face of untold adversity.
This project necessitated a dystopian future still reminiscent of the horse and wagon era.
Edward Albee's The Goat, or Who is Sylvia? tackles the complexity of life, family relationships, and homosexuality eloquently using the engine of absurdism to keep the audience guessing at every turn.
This show required an absurd sense of humor coupled with close collaboration with the cast to accomplish this ridiculous catalog of promotion.