Home

 

 

Stones In His Pockets
May 31 at 8
June 1-2, 7-9 at 8
June 3 at 3

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shakespeare’s
R & J

 

May 20 at 3pm
May 21 at 8pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dignity Players and Bay Theatre are thrilled to announce they will be producing a staged reading of Dustin Lance Black’s new courtroom drama “8″ on Sunday, July 22 at 6:00pm at the

Unitarian Universalist Church of Annapolis. “8″ is co-produced by the American Federation for Equal Rights and Broadway Impact. Dignity Players and Bay Theatre are two of a select group of national schools and theatres to be granted performance rights to this new play about the federal case against proposition 8 in California. Please join us as we join the fight for marriage equality in Maryland. Visit the national website for “8″ to view detailed information on Dignity Players production. General seating tickets for $10 can be purchased now by clicking here. The price includes a reception and Q&A following the performance.

Untitled Document


2009 Season

 

The Diary of Anne Frank
By Frances Goodrich
& Albert Hackett

 

Newly Adapted by
Wendy Kesselman

 

Directed by Beth Terranova

 

With Terry Averill, Bryan Barrett, Nick Beschen, Mary Cecere, Carter MacLeod, Mary MacLeod, Lesley Miller, Theresa Riffle, Gerald Riley, Eric Schaum

 

In this transcendently powerful new adaptation by Wendy Kesselman, Anne Frank merges from history a living, lyrical, intensely gifted young girl, who confronts her rapidly changing life and the increasing horror of her time with astonishing honest, wit, and determination. An impassioned drama about the libes of eight people hiding from the Nazis in a concealed storage attic, The Diary of Anne Frank captures the claustrophobic realities of their daily existence – their fear, their hope, their laughter, their grief.

 

Director’s Notes

When I first entered Anne Frank’s world via her iconic work of courage and hope, The Diary of A Young Girl, I was just about the same age as the young writer – and her words resonated deeply and immediately. It was amazing to me that someone in the face of such harrowing circumstances could maintain such a life-affirming perspective. Anne Frank became my hero and role model and … I wanted everyone to know her story! So when I was asked to direct this production of The Diary of Anne Frank, I could not say yes fast enough – for the chance to bring to life a gifted writer gone too soon; to share the words of a young woman wise beyond her years…

 

What is it about Anne Frank’s words that are so compelling? In Time Magazine’s retrospective on the most important people of the 20th Century, essayist Roger Rosenblatt speaks for me: “Anne…wrote in an early [diary] entry, ‘I hope that you will be a great support and comfort to me.’ She had no idea how widely that support and comfort would extend…In her diary she showed the world not only how fine a person she was, but also how necessary it is to come to terms with one’s own moral being, even – perhaps especially – when the context is horror. The diary suggests that the story of oneself is all that we have, and that it is worth a life to get it right.”

 

Anne Frank surely did get it right. At one point, as if by premonition, Anne writes: “I want to be useful or give pleasure to people around me who yet don’t really know me. I want to go on living even after my death!” With the best selling diary in the world – over 25 million copies – I think Anne has achieved her goal. In directing this production of The Diary of Anne Frank, I have made a step in achieving mine.

 

REVIEWS
Download the show’s press release