Dreamweavers Theatre 2000 Season Shows


Three Viewings

By Jeffrey Hatcher


To be presented as a special preview at the new Dreamweavers Theatre facility at 1637 Imola Avenue in the River Park Shopping Center (formerly Marlowe's)

Show Dates:
Nov. 10, 11, 12, 17, 18

Show Times:
Fridays & Saturdays at 8 pm, Sundays at 2 pm

Director:
Debbie Baumann

Producer:
Daryl Roberts

Cast:
1 Male; 2 Female

Synopsis:
Three comic/dramatic monologues set in a Midwestern funeral parlor over a three-day Christmas weekend.

TELL-TALE is the story of Emil, the mild-mannered undertaker whose unspoken passion for a local real estate woman who comes to all his funerals leads him to commit crimes and plot a way to confess his true feelings before time -- and bodies -- run out.

THE THIEF OF TEARS is Mac, a beautiful Los Angeles drifter, who makes her living stealing jewelry from corpses. When her wealthy grandmother dies, leaving her nothing, Mac returns to her hometown and attempts to pry loose her inheritance, a diamond ring her grandmother promised Mac when she was a child. Her attempt leads Mac to find there are more obstacles to getting the ring off grandma's finger than she had imagined, and more revelations about her own past than she had bargained for.

THIRTEEN THINGS ABOUT ED CARPOLOTTI is the story of Virginia, the widow of a wheeler-dealer contractor, who discovers that her husband has left her in debt to the banks, her family, and the mob. As Virginia struggles to escape her creditors and understand how her husband could have left her in such pain and doubt, a mysterious list of "thirteen things" embarrassing to Ed is offered to her if she can come up with one million dollars in three days. Virginia doesn't have the money, but she does have hidden resources, and is saved by an unseen benefactor. As the play ends, Virginia's benefactor is revealed, along with what the mysterious "thirteen things" are -- revelations that resurrect the love and trust thought lost forever.

"Hatcher's three brief, intermissionless playlets have the merits and liabilities of that style of American short-story writing which started with O. Henry and, from the careful set-up to the ironic payoff, has never really ended." – NY Post

"Nowadays it is rare to encounter a genuine writer in the theater -- someone, that is, who thinks about such things as character and structure, someone who has a genuine feel for language. So when such a thing comes along, it's exciting....THREE VIEWINGS is the genuine article.... Hatcher's voice is one I want to hear again soon." – NY Daily News

Preview

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