Season 4

2005 - 2006

Visiting Mr. Green

by Jeff Baron

September 22 - October 16, 2005

Maine Premiere
Mr. Green, an elderly, retired dry cleaner wanders into traffic on New York's Upper West Side and is almost hit by a car driven by Ross Gardiner, a 29-year-old corporate executive. The young man is charged with reckless driving, and is given a community service sentence of helping Mr. Green once a week for six months. The play follows the two men's growing and changing relationship over several months.

  • Mr. Green - Chris Horton
    Ross - Allen Bergeron

    Directed by Bob Fish
    Stage Manager - Karen Dunton
    Set Design - Craig Robinson
    Lighting Design - Jamie Grant
    Sound Design - Stephen Underwood
    Costume Design - Joan McMahon
    Deck Crew - Amanda Fickett, Natasha Mieszkowski

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • ‘VISITING MR. GREEN’ RAISES TIMELY, IMPORTANT ISSUES
    the Forecaster October 5, 2005
    by Josh Harriman

    The sarcastic, biting humor of Mr. Green is delivered consistently and effectively by the experienced Chris Horton, as the character uses the situation for a little amusement. Allen Bergeron fits comfortably in his role as Ross, giving energy to the dialogue. In his first appearance with Good Theater, Bergeron brings alive the story of Ross’s struggles. "…the play succeeds wonderfully. It is careful on the details, visible in the exact décor of Craig Robinson’s stage design." "Visiting Mr. Green" is highly recommended for anyone who wants a serious conversation on equal rights or anyone who feels they need to hear another voice on the issue.

    PORTLAND PHOENIX
    by Megan Grumbling October 13, 2005

    Director [Robert] Fish’s forthright production has the benefit of Allen Bergeron and Chris Horton, both fine local actors. Horton is one of the city’s veteran greats…Horton and Bergeron are dynamic… Horton and Bergeron bring to this direct script great humanity and wit. Craig Robinson’s impressive set is an elaborate execution of realism…even the brick building across the alley is visible through his living room window. The set makes this old home at once comfortable and claustrophobic.

The Dining Room

by A.R. Gurney

November 3 - 27, 2005

Six actors change roles, personalities and ages with virtuoso skill as they portray more than 50 roles in this delightful comedy. The Dining Room marked A.R Gurney's first critical and commercial success.

  • Cast:
    Tootie Van Reenen
    Stephen Underwood
    Amy Roche
    Denise Poirier*
    Craig Ela
    Sean Demers

    Directed by Lee K. Paige
    Stage Manager - Karen Dunton
    Set Design - Jon Wojciechowski
    Lighting Design - Jamie Grant
    Costume Design - Joan McMahon

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • A GREAT GOOD THEATER CAST GLITTERS IN DINING ROOM
    Portland Press Herald, November 6, 2005
    By Mary Snell
    Let's make this clear - I loved Good Theater's current production of A.R. Gurney's "The Dining Room." Great acting, great design, great directing. In this case, a wonderful production of an expertly crafted play...

    This fast-paced play is a series of short, unrelated scenes by mostly unrelated characters who play out funny, smart, sexy, vulnerable, irritating moments in the lives of a mulitude of families - all in a dining room. Whew! What a challenge this play is for the six actors! The ensemble cast mustswitch from character to character - from an elderly man, to a boy, to a lover, for instance - with barely enough time for a costume change.

    These moments capture a rich range of experiences - from children trying to get close to a depression era patriarch, a troubled daughter asking to come home, a father needing to defend the family honor and his brother, mothers trying to control her sons and daughters, servants knowing their place, loversmeeting, friends talking. Kudos to the fine cast: Tootie Van Reenen, Stephen Underwood, Amy Roche, Denise Poirier, Craig Ela and Sean Demers.

    In addition to the great acting, the stunning set by Jon Wojciechowski, the warm, rich lighting by Jamie Grant, and the suitable (but mosty importantly, practical) costume design by Joan McMahon make this production candy for the eye.

    GOOD THEATER EULOGIZES A WASP INSTITUTION
    Portland Phoenix, November 23, 2005
    By Megan Grumbling

    "Good Theater’s latest production is built to awe."

    The success of The Dining Room depends on the strength of its cast and a strong directorial hand on the rudder. Once again, Good Theater demonstrates its virtuosity, wit, and mastery of the stage. Its formidable ensemble includes Tootie Van Reenen, Stephen Underwood, Amy Roche, Denise Poirier, Craig Ela, and Sean Demers. These well-established actors are as agile in their talents as they are ebullient, clearly having a great time stretching their theatrical sinews as five year-olds in party hats, iconoclastic domestics, and patrician bores. At the same time, nobody overdoes it, and with director Paige’s impeccable pacing, these overlapping scenes make a beguiling succession of treats.

    These actors can do it all. The angular Underwood moves easily from a patrician father of the ‘30s, gracefully patronizing the servant, to young Michael, a boy home sick from school and upset that the maid will be leaving for greener pastures. Roche does the old folks particularly well, whether it be decrepit old servants or a batty grandma, and Poirier’s fabulous matrons speak in those restrained upper-class tones that lend devastating gravity to everything from dance lessons to the celery soup. (Poirier and Roche also do a mean scene together as school-girls sneaking gin-and-vodka-and-Frescas.) Ela has snared himself some of the quirkier roles of the show (the best of which is man-of-the-house Standish, who must forego dinner with the family to go down to the club and defend his brother’s honor against an insult delivered in the sauna), and he pulls off this character with great dry restraint. And the versatile Demers and Van Reenen have, among others, a great scene as an Irish carpenter and a divorcée under the dining room table.

    That silent role of the dining room is sometimes a flawed one, as Gurney points out with gentle digs at class relations, and a tragicomic one. As it turns out, Harriet is explaining the roses in the old finger bowls for the sake of her nephew’s school project in anthropology. With empathy, intelligence, and mischief, the Good Theater’s fine performance reminds us that the dining room’s real power to awe lies indeed in the past, and in evoking it.

The Mystery of Edwin Drood

by Rupert Holmes

February 16 - March 12, 2006

Cast off the winter blues with this funny and delightful musical comedy. Join us for a trip to the British Music Hall where the actors of the Theatre Royale are presenting the inaugural performance of the musical, The Mystery of Edwin Drood. The problem is the author, Charles Dickens, died before completing the story, so the audience is engaged to help solve the mystery, select a detective and unite a pair of lovers. A comic delight!!!

  • Chairman - Glenn Anderson
    John Jasper - Stephen Underwood
    Edwin Drood - Tanya Whitman
    Rosa Bud - Karen Stickney
    Princess Puffer - Cathy Counts
    Neville Landless - Graham Allen
    Helena Landless - Jessica Peck
    Reverend Crisparkle - Chris Handy
    Bazzard - William Sandstead
    Durdles - John B. Nutting
    Deputy - Christopher D'Iorio
    James Throttle - Evan Charest
    Flo - Betsy Melarkey Dunphy
    Dancers - Tyler Sperry, Nell Green

    Directed by Brian P. Allen^
    Musical Director - Aaron Robinson
    Choreographer - Samantha Fitschen
    Lighting - Jamie Grant
    Costumes - Joan McMahon & Repertory Theatre of St. Louis
    Stage Manager - Karen Dunton
    Concept/Artistic Set Design/Scenic Artist - Janet Mongomery
    Technical Set Design - Stephen Underwood
    Assistant Technical Director - Craig Robinson
    Set Construction - Craig Robinson, Paul Drinan, Peter Dunphy
    Photography - Craig Robinson, Stephen Underwood
    Show Sponsor - Target

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • DROOD'S ENOUGH FUN FOR ALL
    The Portland Phoenix March 1, 2006
    By Megan Grumbling

    "...Good Theater's spectacularly entertaining latest musical comedy..." "Under the exemplary direction of Brian Allen, this stellar ensemble of fifteen portrays the rowdy Music Hall gang..." "In the rollicking tradition of the British music hall, Good Theater's Drood is robustly bawdy and wittily self-reflexive." "All this calls for strong and supple acting, and the performers of Good Theater's Drood make up one of the most accomplished, cohesive, and genuinely fun casts I have seen in any city." "Technically, too, this production is nothing short of stunning." "All said, Good Theater's technical design and direction is hot stuff, it is delectable to the eye, and it is stagecraft at its finest." "Good Theater's Drood is supremely satisfying stuff. At once effervescent and earthy, performed with impeccable humor and timing, this show of a show is truly delightful, and that delight is highly contagious."

    THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD
    The Forecaster February, 22, 2006
    By Scott Andrews,

    "Last weekend, Good Theater... opened its excellent professional (non-Equity) production of The Mystery of Edwin Drood. It's one of the company's best shows ever, and one that every theater aficionado will want to see." "Of the cast of 15, directed by Good Theater artistic director Brian P. Allen, I especially liked three actors. The driving force is provided by Steve Underwood as the all-to-obvious villain..." "Underwood's range of facial expressions and body language is one of the high points of the evening." "I also loved Cathy Counts as the loud-mouthed mistress of a London opium den..." "...and ingénue Karen Stickney, the innocent young soprano who's the love interest of several characters..." "Good Theater's technicals are spot on, most notably the scenic design by Janet Montgomery & elegantly detailed costumes, which were rented from a professional company."

    CAST OFFERS FUN 'DROOD' WITH CHOICE ENDING
    Maine Sunday Telegram February 19, 2006
    By Mary Snell,

    "It's a lot of fun for the audience - and a lot of work for the actors, because they must learn and keep fresh different line, lyrics and scenes - never knowing when and what will be chosen each night." "Director Brian Allen has assembled & directed a big cast (which he considers small for the show) that delivers the basically silly story & the fine score with energy & flair." "As the audience filed out of the theater, they were humming the same tunes that were in my head, and saying what I was thinking, "We should come back to see how it ends another night."

Enchanted April

by Matthew Barber

April 13 - May 7, 2006

Portland Premiere
When two frustrated London housewives decide to rent a villa in Italy for a holiday, they recruit two very different English women to share the cost and the experience. There, among the wisteria blossoms and Mediterranean sunshine, all four bloom again - rediscovering themselves in ways that they - and we - could never have expected.

  • Lotty Wilton - Amy Roche
    Mellersh Wilton - Mark Rubin
    Rose Arnott - Denise Poirier*
    Frederick Arnott - Paul Drinan
    Mrs. Graves - Lee K. Paige
    Lady Caroline - Jessica Peck
    Mr. Wilding - Todd Daley
    Constanza - Tootie Van Reenen

    Directed by Brian P. Allen^
    Set Design - Janet Montgomery
    Lighting Design - Jamie Grant
    Costume Design - Jodi Ozimek
    Technical Director/Sound Design - Stephen Underwood
    Assistant Technical director - Craig Robinson
    Costume Assistant - Joan McMahon
    Wardrobe - Jason Cook
    Production Stage Manager - Adam Gutgsell
    Assistant Stage Manager - Natasha Mieszkowski

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • "...evokes the warmth of the blossoming season."
    "...a fun evening at the theater."
    "...such a pleasing show."
    "...a visual pleasure."
    By Steve Feeney
    Maine Sunday Telegram

    "Good Theater has mounted a wonderful professional (non-equity) production of this 2003 Tony Award nominee for Best Play that is this season's must-see."
    "...Good Theater offers a romantically engaging 'Enchanted April'."
    By Scott Andrews
    The Forecaster

No Biz Like Show Biz

created by Brian P. Allen

September 15 - 18, 2005

Relive the musical memories of two of Broadway's greatest legends, Ethel Merman and Mary Martin, when Good Theater presents this world premiere concert as its season opener. Hear favorite songs from Gypsy, Call Me Madam, Anything Goes, South Pacific, The Sound of Music, Peter Pan and many more. Good Theater is proud to announce Broadway star Andrea Burns (Beauty and the Beast, The Full Monty, Songs for a New World) as our special guest artist. This event is sure to sell out quickly, so order your tickets early and relive the Golden Age of Broadway.

  • Andrea Burns*
    Kelly Caufield
    Lynne McGhee*

    Directed by Brian P. Allen^
    Musical Director - Aaron Robinson

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

Broadway at the St. Lawrence III

annual fundraiser concert

December 16 - 18, 2005

Good Theater is thrilled to announce Broadway veteran Raymond Jaramillo McLeod as this year's Broadway star. McLeod recently received a Drama Desk nomination for his work in the Broadway revival of Wonderful Town starring Donna Murphy and later Brooke Shields. McLeod has also been featured on Broadway in Jekyll & Hyde, Dance of the Vampires and off-Broadway in The Wild Party as well as playing Peron in the national tour of Evita. He has sung not only on Broadway, but also with the Metropolitan Opera, and has starred in productions of South Pacific, Oklahoma and Oliver.

The singers will be performing songs of Broadway as well as holiday favorites. Highlights will include numbers from Sunset Boulevard, Company, The Secret Garden, Fiddler on the Roof and a preview of Good Theater's upcoming production of The Mystery of Edwin Drood to name a few of the Broadway shows represented.

  • Starring:
    Raymond Jaramillo McLeod

    Featuring:
    Graham Allen
    Timothy Bate
    Laura Darrell
    Ellen Domingos
    Laura Harris
    Jackie McLean
    Jennifer McLeod
    Bethann Renaud
    Amy Roche
    Karen Stickney
    Christian Schwebler
    Thomas Whateley
    Tanya Whitman

Maine Hysterical Society

annual fundraiser

December 26 - 28, 2005

This will be the Maine Hysterical Society's third year-end series of shows at the St. Lawrence. The first two years sold out completely, so we encourage folks to buy tickets early for this family friendly event. The Hystericals are Randy Judkins, Stephen Underwood and Barney Martin. They are known for delighting audiences of all ages with a variety of down Maine humor, song parodies and plenty of wicked good juggling. A fun and funny evening.