Get your headphones on and listen up to our latest episode — February in Review! The transcript for this episode can be found below.
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Get your headphones on and listen up to our latest episode — February in Review! The transcript for this episode can be found below.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Get your headphones and listen up to our latest episode about the Theater’s department’s production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”!
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Check out this week’s pics of the A Midsummer Night’s Dream performance!

"A Midsummer's Nights Dream", performed at the Branding Iron Theater. Photo courtesy of the WTAMU web site.
The WTAMU theatre department will perform “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The play opens its doors from Feb. 9-11 and Feb. 15-18 in the Branding Iron Theatre.
Reilly Downes, a senior Musical Theatre major, will be playing role of Hyppolyta, the queen of the Amazon. Downes recommends the play for its mystical qualities.
“It will leave you questioning the idea of dream versus reality. The comedic attributes of Shakespeare’s writing bring to life out-of-this-world characters,” said Downes.
“A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” written in 1590 by William Shakespeare, takes place in Athens in ancient Greece. The play is a light-hearted comedy about the difficulties of love.
Lysander and Demetrius are both in love with Hermia but Hermia’s heart belongs to Lysander. Helena is head-over-heels in love with Demetrius, but the love is not mutual. Continue reading
The WT Theater department put on its latest production, Urinetown. Check out our photos. To read more about it, click here.
The WTAMU Department of Theater will journey into a world where water is so scarce that you have to pay to use the restroom. The unusual concept is this year’s musical, Urinetown.
In the story, the government controls the supply of water because of a twenty-year drought. It’s illegal to use a private bathroom and the people must pay a fee to use public amenities. The main characters are Bobby Strong, a poor janitor that leads the revolution, and Hope Cladwell, the daughter of the CEO of Urine Good Company.
The musical was originally created by Mark Holmann and Greg Kotis, which was their first successful comedy that was performed in New York in 2001. Kotis got the idea for the story after being in Europe where he had to pay to use the restroom.
“Aristophanes, a Greek dramatist, tells us that every comedy should have a happy idea,” said Royal Brantley, director of Urinetown. “There’s this ridiculous notion at the heart of a comedy. Bobby sees things differently and brings a revolution to Urinetown with the inspiration of Hope.”
Chris Ratliff, a sophomore Musical Theater major who plays the role of Bobby Strong said Bobby leads the revolution.
“As I read through the lines, I thought, ‘how can a janitor who is frightened every day because of his job overcome his situation?’” he said. “When everything changes, there is no more fear for Bobby and he has to get the people to follow him.”
Brantley said he directs the performers to sing in character.
“It’s my job to make sure they perform the character well,” said Brantley.
Rarliff said he enjoyed the show.
“Our department has so many talented people and it’s so much fun to get to work with them,” he said. “At the beginning of working on the play, we worked individually on dancing, then singing, then acting, to bring it all together. It’s tough at first, but once you get it, it pops.”
Jared Roberts, a senior Technical Theater major who worked on the scenic design for the show said Brantley gave him key concepts he wanted him to work with to start the scene.
“I help with all the preparation, design and painting,” he said. “I started off as an actor, but decided to go into technical theater because there was this whole other side of acting that I didn’t know about. The whole design of theater lets me work with my creative side.
The Urinetown cast began working on the play in late September. Performances started on Nov. 10-12 and continue Nov. 16-19 at 7:30 p.m. in the Branding Iron Theater.

AJ Holmes as Frederick Frankenstein and Rory Donovan as The Monster in Young Frankenstein - The Mel Brooks Musical. Direction and Choreography: Susan Stroman © Paul Kolnik / paul@paulkolnik.com
The Broadway spotlight is back in the Panhandle as Mel Brooks’ musical comedy “Young Frankenstein: The Musical” hits the Amarillo Civic Center stage Nov. 16.
“Young Frankenstein: The Musical” is the Civic Center’s first Broadway show of a four-show season, coming to Amarillo through Celebrity Attractions in Tulsa, Okla.
“This is the start of a very, very good four-show season for us,” Michael Thero, marketing administrator of the Amarillo Civic Center, said.
From the writer of comedy classics such as Blazing Saddles and The Producers, Mel Brooks brings the story of Frankenstein to a comedic level. It follows the work of a young scientist, Dr. Frankenstein, and his attempts to bring a corpse back to life. However, after his assistant Igor chooses the wrong brain for the corpse, Dr. Frankenstein’s success does not come without frightening and comedic consequences, according to Randy Cole, marketing director for Celebrity Attractions. Continue reading
The theater department is putting on a production of Urinetown. Want to learn more? Then listen up!
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The WTAMU theatre department is featuring a production of Lillian Hellman’s “The Children’s Hour” at the Happy State Bank Studio Theater. The play opened on Oct. 7 and will continue until Oct. 15.
The play is directed by Stephen Crandall, assistant professor of theatre.
“The play is about an all-girls boarding school in New England in the 1930´s,” Crandall said. “Two women, in their late 20´s, establish a rural boarding school that was converted from an old farmhouse.”
The play’s protagonist is named Mary, who feels like she is mistreated and punished unnecessarily; therefore, she wants to leave school and takes it upon herself to leave the school without permission. Continue reading