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Boz and the Bard Productions, Inc. (aka B&B) excitedly returns on Saturday, November 7th at 7pm with an intriguing dramatic play by David C. Monti. Come down to participate in the reading of this new play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack.

In Monti's play, "Permanent Darkness," estranged brothers Mike and Don are hiking in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado when disaster strikes, leaving them trapped in a cave with daylight quickly fading and the temperature dropping.  As they face the impending darkness, the two are forced to also face each other, and come to terms with the events which pushed them apart so many years ago, and the events which brought them back together on this fateful day.

Boz and the Bard's "Play With a Play" continues to nurture area playwrights by offering a venue to hear their works read, while at the same time  providing a uniquely  exciting way for actors and theater fans to spend a Saturday night. Hess and Avellino, as directors, guide participants through the process. Come take a script in hand and be part of the show, or sit back and watch the story unfold before you. Either way, you'll be playing an integral part in the further development of the play as afterwards you engage in a fascinating conversation with the writer, offering constructive feedback. Our next session is scheduled for December 5th.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is still only $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. The next session is June 6. Please visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.

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This Saturday, April 4th at 7pm., B&B invites your continued participation in the reading of this new play by playwright Joe Del Priore at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack.

In Del Priore's latest piece, "Fur On The Bumper," John, a mail carrier, finds that the ever-increasing stress of his job is taking its toll on him.  When he fails to find any comfort or help coming from his wife, his union representative, or his co-workers, he feels backed into a corner and has to take matters into his own hands. This play was inspired by his own experience as a mail carrier for 30 years, Del Priore explains.

Del Priore's writing has been published since 1982, and in the mid-nineties, he turned his literary attentions to the stage. Workshops in NJ and NY have showcased his skits, monologues and plays.  Some of his plays were featured in a workshop at The Bergen County Players, which was received with great enthusiasm.

Boz and the Bard's "Play With a Play" pledges to continue nurturing area playwrights by offering a venue to hear their works read, while at the same time  providing a uniquely  exciting way for actors and theater fans to spend a Saturday night. Hess and Avellino, as directors, guide participants through the process. Come take a script in hand and be part of the show, or sit back and watch the story unfold before you. Either way, you'll be playing an integral part in the further development of the play as afterwards you engage in a fascinating conversation with the writer, offering constructive feedback. Another session is scheduled for May 9th.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is still $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates, or visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.

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"Hansel and Grettel" Rebaked

"Play With a Play" launches its second year with an adaption by Frank Avellino

Boz and the Bard Productions proudly continues "Play With a Play" in 2009. On Saturday, January 10, at 7pm,  company co-founder Frank Avellino presents his adaptation of the familiar fairy tale, "Hansel and Grettel," called, "The Gingerbread Children."  After a session in 2005, in the early, formative years of "Play With a Play," revisions to the script based on participants' comments are finally complete, and Frank is happily anticipating feedback on this version.

The tale of two children sent into the woods who return as heroes after destroying a wicked witch living in a Gingerbread House adapts a different perspective here. As in the original, it is the late 16th Century, but in an effort to rid themselves of their mean Stepmother, Hansel and Grettel devise a plan that results in an odd discovery, and subsequently, the start of the European witchunts of the 17th century. The play explores history's treatment of powerful women, and how men's religious interpretations attempt to stifle female strength. It also explores competition between three generations of women for dominance and, by playing off of current fears, they can secure a seat in a male-dominated world. The theme has resonated throughout modern times and politics, as well.  Avellino is happily anticipating feedback on this latest edition of his play.

Avellino's first play, "Ice In April," received an Off Off Broadway Review (OOBR) award for best play/best production. He is an art director for an ad agency in Clifton, and also directs at the Bergen County Players (BCP) in Oradell. He's currently directing BCP's February production of "Doubt," by John Patrick Shanley.  Some other directing credits there include "Sweeney Todd," "Moon Over Buffalo," and "Oliver!" For Boz and the Bard, he's directed all three runs of Marjorie Conn's "Miss Lizzie A. Borden Invites You to Tea," starring Karen Asconi, and "A New York Minute," by Michele Palermo. He's designed numerous sets for both Boz and the Bard and BCP, and creates all of Boz and the Bard's print graphics.

Boz and the Bard's "Play With a Play" continues to be an invaluable tool for playwrights, and a uniquely  exciting way for actors and theater fans to spend a Saturday night. Hess and Avellino, as directors, will still guide participants through the process. Come take a script in hand and be part of the show, or sit back and watch the story unfold before you. Either way, you'll be playing an integral part in the further development of the play as afterwards you engage in a fascinating conversation with the writer, offering constructive feedback. Our next session will be March 1.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is still $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates, or visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.


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Boz and the Bard Productions' next "Play With a Play" session offers the chance to see first-hand the progression of a script since it's first PWP reading. On Saturday, December 6, at 7pm, come and participate in the reading of this reworked play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack.

New Jersey writer Jamian Nace brings back "Alice and the Angels" to share his revisions with "Play With a Play." If you've attended the June PWP session, you'll recall "Alice and the Angels" takes you to 2012; a comet is hurtling toward Earth, and three Archangels decide to get together to play some poker and have a last meal. Things get shaken up when Lucifer crashes the party, and all are accidentally discovered by Alice, a young astrophysicist aware of the Earth’s imminent demise. The secrets of the universe are soon revealed as they come to terms with the world and themselves before the end.

Nace, a playwright and actor, is a graduate of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and a winner of several literary awards. Since the first reading of "Alice," Nace has continued working on his craft by playing Tom in "The Glass Menagerie" at the Barn Theater, and has begun working on a second play called "Reps," a comedy based on a call center where he works. Nace adds, "All of this has enriched the rewrite of my play. I am very happy for the opportunity to have "Alice and the Angels" read before an audience again. I've found the feedback from the first reading to be invaluable, not only on what didn't work, but also on what did. It's an opportunity every playwright should have."

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates in 2009, or visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.


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Boz and the Bard Productions' "Play With a Play" play-reading series is back on schedule again with a new work-in-progress. On Saturday, October 4, at 7pm, you can once again participate in the reading of this new stage piece.  Come play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack.  

You can take a script in hand and be part of the show — no experience necessary — or you can sit back and watch an original story unfold before you. Steve Hess and Frank Avellino, as directors, will guide you through the process. Afterwards, you engage in a fascinating conversation, oftentimes directly with the writer, offering constructive feedback on the work in progress.

"A Different Blend of Friendship," by Barry Putt, is a comic story about retired senior actresses Louise and Fay, whose lives are in a tailspin. A failed legal battle leaves the ladies bankrupt, so they struggle to resurrect their careers as unpaid bills mount and eviction looms ever nearer. As eviction papers are served, Louise and Fay are forced to face the disillusionment about their success. The comedy turns sentimental, as they struggle to carve out a new route to travel. This enables them to find success and prosperity as a comedy team. Soon, they are recounting the misadventures of their career together to packed houses. They are happier than they have been in years and now understand that at any age necessity is the mother of invention.

"Play With a Play" is at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. For more information, visit www.bozandthebard.com.


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Reaching Where No Man Has Gone Before
Harpo Finds the Van Regal Diamond and "Play With a Play" Tries a Musical

Boz and the Bard Productions' "Play With a Play" play-reading series offers its audience something different: the reading of a musical. On Saturday, August 2, at 7pm, you can still participate in the reading of this new play; volunteers reading from the script can share the floor and the play's characters with singers who will perform the songs.  Come play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack. 

The next session, Saturday, August 2, 7pm, offers us "The Most Ridiculous Thing You Ever Hoid," by Andy Seiler, Jim Beckerman, and Fred Wemyss. This play is a semi-musical comedy based on the 1930s Marx Brothers radio series, "Flywheel, Shyster and Flywheel."  When William Tecumseh Flywheel (Groucho), Fiorello Ravelli (Chico) and Ringling T. Ringling (Harpo) are let loose on an unsuspecting radio studio, the airwaves will never be safe for detergent commercials again!  Young newlyweds, Margaret Dumont, and the crazy Marx Brothers are some of the fun characters available to read, while singers provide the songs interspersed throughout the radio show.

Andy Seiler (book and lyrics) has written about film and entertainment for USA Today, The Home News-Tribune and the Courier-News. He has been writing songs with Jim Beckerman for 30 years. He lives in Washington D.C.  Jim Beckerman (music, book and lyrics) is an entertainment writer for The Record of Hackensack.  He has played in bands including The VooDudes, The Hammers, and The Noisy Neighbors, and released a solo album, "Born to Boogie." He lives in South Amboy, N.J.  Frederick Wemyss (book) has been a Marx Brothers fan ever since he saw DUCK SOUP on the big screen at the Uniondale Mini-Cinema in 1973. He lives in Huntington, NY.

You can take a script in hand and be part of the show — no experience necessary — or you can sit back and watch an original story unfold before you. Steve Hess and Frank Avellino, as directors, will guide you through the process. Afterwards, you engage in a fascinating conversation, oftentimes directly with the writer, offering constructive feedback on the work in progress.

"Play With a Play" is at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. For more information, visit www.bozandthebard.com.

7
Reaching Where No Man Has Gone Before
Harpo Finds the Van Regal Diamond and "Play With a Play" Tries a Musical

Boz and the Bard Productions' "Play With a Play" play-reading series offers its audience something different: the reading of a musical. On Saturday, August 2, at 7pm, you can still participate in the reading of this new play; volunteers reading from the script can share the floor and the play's characters with singers who will perform the songs.  Come play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack. 

The next session, Saturday, August 2, 7pm, offers us "The Most Ridiculous Thing You Ever Hoid," by Andy Seiler, Jim Beckerman, and Fred Wemyss. This play is a semi-musical comedy based on the 1930s Marx Brothers radio series, "Flywheel, Shyster and Flywheel."  When William Tecumseh Flywheel (Groucho), Fiorello Ravelli (Chico) and Ringling T. Ringling (Harpo) are let loose on an unsuspecting radio studio, the airwaves will never be safe for detergent commercials again!  Young newlyweds, Margaret Dumont, and the crazy Marx Brothers are some of the fun characters available to read, while singers provide the songs interspersed throughout the radio show.

Andy Seiler (book and lyrics) has written about film and entertainment for USA Today, The Home News-Tribune and the Courier-News. He has been writing songs with Jim Beckerman for 30 years. He lives in Washington D.C.  Jim Beckerman (music, book and lyrics) is an entertainment writer for The Record of Hackensack.  He has played in bands including The VooDudes, The Hammers, and The Noisy Neighbors, and released a solo album, "Born to Boogie." He lives in South Amboy, N.J.  Frederick Wemyss (book) has been a Marx Brothers fan ever since he saw DUCK SOUP on the big screen at the Uniondale Mini-Cinema in 1973. He lives in Huntington, NY.

You can take a script in hand and be part of the show — no experience necessary — or you can sit back and watch an original story unfold before you. Steve Hess and Frank Avellino, as directors, will guide you through the process. Afterwards, you engage in a fascinating conversation, oftentimes directly with the writer, offering constructive feedback on the work in progress.

"Play With a Play" is at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. For more information, visit www.bozandthebard.com.

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WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE
Can a Human Shake Up the Devil on The Eve of Armageddon?
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Boz and the Bard Productions' next "Play With a Play" session takes you to the near future when the fate of the planet may rest with one savvy, young woman. On Saturday, June 7, at 7pm, come and participate in the reading of this new play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack. 

New Jersey playwright, Jamian Nace, brings to the table his play, "Alice and the Angels." It's 2012, a comet is hurtling toward Earth, and three Archangels decide to get together to play some poker and have a last meal. Things get shaken up when Lucifer crashes the party, and all are accidentally discovered by Alice, a young astrophysicist aware of the Earth’s imminent demise. The secrets of the universe are soon revealed as they come to terms with the world and themselves before the end.

Nace, a playwright and actor, is a graduate of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and a winner of several literary awards. He has appeared in several plays, including "The Hotspell," (which he authored) performed in Stratford Connecticut. "Play With a Play" regulars will recognize Nace; he's read roles in the last two sessions and delighted the audiences with his talents.

No experience is necessary to participate.  Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, you can take a script in hand and be part of the show, or choose to sit back and watch the story unfold before you. Either way, you'll be playing an integral part in the further development of the play as afterwards you engage in a fascinating conversation with the writer, offering constructive feedback. The next "Play With a Play" is July 12 - watch for more details.

For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. Visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.

9
Friends Who Can No Longer Stand Each Other
On The Next Boz and the Bard's "Play With a Play"

On Saturday, May 3, 7pm, you can participate in the reading of this new play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack. This session also promises a unique surprise!

Maryland playwright, Jerry DiCairano, offers us "Angels of Mercy," a contemporary comedy about two old friends who can no longer stand each other. Unfortunately, Ken and George rent adjoining hangars at a rural airport and can't seem to avoid each other's company as they fuss over their small airplanes. Fueling their foul humor is their growing awareness of troubling circumstances: they are both very old and otherwise friendless, both in bad health, and both soon likely to lose their flying privileges. It also doesn't help that selfish Ken is fighting with his free-spirited daughter and that sensitive George is looking for love from a casual acquaintance who has no interest in building a serious relationship with him. As the insults fly, we wonder if the two old pilots will forge a permanent truce with each other or, perhaps more mercifully, find a way to permanently escape each other's company.

Boz and the Bard's "Play With a Play" is an invaluable tool for playwrights, and is fast becoming a uniquely exciting and informative way to spend a Saturday night.  No experience is necessary to participate.  Hess and Avellino, as directors, guide participants through the process. You can take a script in hand and be part of the show, or choose to sit back and watch the story unfold before you. Either way, you'll be playing an integral part in the further development of the play as afterwards you engage in a fascinating conversation with the writer, offering constructive feedback.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates, or visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.



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The next play featured in Boz and the Bard Productions Inc.'s  "Play With a Play" series starts right off inside the main character's strange dreamworld. On Saturday, April 5, 7pm, you can participate in the reading of this new play at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack. 

Ohio playwright, Stacey Lane's piece, "Residue," was inspired by her own attempt to deal with a series of nightmares. In her quest for understanding, she began the study of lucid dreaming, in which the dreamer is aware of being in a dream-state, and can attempt to control the characters and circumstances therein.  "I was fascinated by the behavior of the 'make-believe' people in the dreams and the very human ways in which they resist being controlled by the dreamer," says Lane.  In this dark comedy, Eleanor overcomes a nightmare by turning her attacker into her lover, and develops an interest in lucid dreaming. While she seeks to create and control her dream world and her dream man, she finds that she cannot conquer her guilt about her imaginary infidelity.

Boz and the Bard's "Play With a Play" is an invaluable tool for playwrights, and is fast becoming a uniquely exciting and informative way to spend a Saturday night.  No experience is necessary to participate.  Steve Hess and Frank Avellino, as directors, guide participants through the process. You can take a script in hand and be part of the show, or choose to sit back and watch the story unfold before you. Either way, you'll be playing an integral part in the further development of the play as afterwards you engage in a fascinating conversation with the writer, offering constructive feedback.

Avellino and Hess continue to plan an exciting assortment of these works-in-progress. The May 3rd session presents "Angels of Mercy," by Jerry DiCairano, of Maryland.  This is a contemporary comedy about two old friends who can no longer stand each other. DiCairano had participated in our program in 2005, and is excited to be back with this play.  The night holds a very unique surprise for our audience members.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates, or visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.


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Audience members continue to help writers “Play with a Play,” the monthly play-reading workshop sponsored by Boz and the Bard Productions, Inc. at the Center For Modern Dance Education, Hackensack.

"The Audition," by New Jersey writer Benjamin Jacob Rose, simply put, examines an actor awaiting an audition as a series of revelations unravel before him. Upon closer inspection, the play explores the vulnerability of confidence when placed before the power of scrutiny. Comic, tragic and satiric by turns, the actor comes apart at the seams, serving as an allegory to the trade at large.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates, or visit www.bozandthebard.com. To submit a script for consideration in a future session, contact: frank@bozandthebard.com


12
Audience members continue to help writers “Play with a Play,” the monthly play-reading workshop sponsored by Boz and the Bard Productions, Inc. at the Center For Modern Dance Education, Hackensack.

The next session, February 2, at 7pm, features  a play by NYC playwright Julie Halpern. “Shining Days” explores the relationship of poet William Butler Yeats with his fellow members of The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, an elite occult society which flourished in London and Paris from 1887 to 1918.  The Golden Dawn attracted many of Europe's literary and artistic giants, who fused scholarly pursuits with occult studies which profoundly catalyzed modern theatrical and literary traditions.  The Golden Dawn was the first organization of its type to initiate women as equal partners.

Dubbed "Karaoke for Actors" by a New Jersey reporter, "Play With a Play" audiences need only bring their interest in theater in order to participate in an evening of live entertainment.  For less than the price of a movie, the “Play with a Play” sessions will continue monthly at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. Watch for upcoming dates, or visit www.bozandthebard.com. To submit a script for consideration in a future session, contact: frank@bozandthebard.com


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Events & Calendar / Boz and the Bard's Monthly 'PLAY WITH A PLAY' Series
« on: December 25, 2007, 07:44:34 PM »
Audience members can help writers “Play with a Play,” a continuing play-reading workshop starting January 12, 2008, sponsored by Boz and the Bard Productions, Inc., at the Center For Modern Dance Education in Hackensack.

You can take a script in hand and be part of the show — no experience necessary — or you can sit back and watch an original story unfold before you. Steve Hess and Frank Avellino, as directors, will guide you through the process. Afterwards, you engage in a fascinating conversation, oftentimes directly with the writer, offering constructive feedback on the work in progress.

Boz and the Bard is also looking for playwrights with a developed script that could benefit from an informal first reading. If you'd like to participate in a session, please contact Frank via email (frank@bozandthebard.com), to learn how to submit a script for consideration.

The “Play with a Play” sessions will continue the first Saturday of each month after January 12, at the Center For Modern Dance Education, 84 Euclid Avenue, Hackensack, NJ. All sessions start at 7:00 PM. Admission is $10 at the door, $7 for students and seniors. For more information, visit www.bozandthebard.com

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Events & Calendar / Boz and the Bard Remounts Lizzie Borden Play
« on: September 27, 2007, 10:58:30 PM »
Hackensack's Boz and the Bard Productions, Inc. Brings Back Acclaimed Hit
"Miss Lizzie A. Borden Invites You to Tea" For Halloween

Come hear the makings of a true horror story

In “Miss Lizzie A. Borden Invites You To Tea,” by Marjorie Conn, Lizzie is an aging, lonely spinster, in 1913. Twenty one years after the murders of her parents, the notoriety of her trial has waned and her status as 'social celebrity' has faded. She’s been forgotten by all but a handful of hungry local journalists, and a bitter, taunting few. In this one-woman tour-de-force, starring Karen Asconi of Jersey City, we witness Lizzie's powerful lust for freedom and learn how such a yearning can drive one to acts of unimaginable desperation.

Boz and the Bard Productions, Inc. is proud to bring back our critically acclaimed production of “Miss Lizzie A. Borden Invites You To Tea” to the Fair Lawn Community Center for a special, co-sponsored, limited engagement. Ms. Asconi’s “...fascinating, high-strung performance...under Frank Avellino’s taut direction...is a worthwhile experience,“ claimed Peter Filichia, of The Star Ledger afer reviewing the 2004 production in Hackensack.

Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00 PM and Sundays at 2:00 PM, October 19-21 and 26-28, 2007, at the Fair Lawn Community Center, 10-10 20th St., Fair Lawn, NJ. There will be a special Q&A after each Saturday performance. Tickets are $20.00 in advance, $25 at the door. For tickets call 866-811-4111 or visit www.bozandthebard.com for more information.

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Boz and the Bard Productions is holding a new session of our actor-training program.

If you're interested in trying acting, looking for a place to practice and improve your skills; if you're returning to the basics to gain new insights, or just want a new approach to developing a character, come and explore the world of theatrical performance as you participate in a 10-week series of classes exploring the concept of Acting: Character Psychology.

In this introductory course, in our relaxed and nurturing environment, you’ll participate in theatrical exercises that will hone listening skills to increase focus; establish self-trust and foster creativity; and explore our provocative, exciting process of character development and script analysis.

This program is offered to theatre-lovers aged 16 through adult, regardless of level of experience.

Classes run Thursday nights, 7:30 pm to 10:00 pm
from Sept. 6 through Dec. 6
at the Center For Modern Dance Education. Tuition is $350.
Pre-registration by Aug. 27th is required.
Please reserve your space by emailing frank@bozandthebard.com

Minimum number of participants is 8, maximum is 10.

Thanks for your interest and continued support!

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