Bold new works. Intimate staging. Something different. FUT in the HAT.

Here on the Flight Path


Performance Date: 11/23/2010, 7:30 pm

As part of our Readers Theatre series, FUT in the Hat presents HERE ON THE FLIGHT PATH at the Prickly Pear Cafe downtown on Tuesday, November 23 at 7:30 pm. Here on the Flight Path is written by Norm Foster and is a comedy, guaranteed to make you laugh. Tickets are only $5.00 and are available at the door. Come early and have supper if you like. Come and see what "Barenaked Theatre" is all about!

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Sitting on Paradise


Performance Date: 9/28/2010, 7:30 pm

Our first Readers Theatre of the 2010-2011 season is ready to make you howl at one of the funkiest venues downtown, the Prickly Pear Cafe on 2nd Street.

Our Bare-Naked Reader's Theatre nights are performed the last Tuesday of every month . We call it  Bare-Naked Theatre not because of the lack of any clothes, but because the production is stripped-down, un-staged, and maybe a bit more intimate than what you are used to - the experience is between the performers, the audience, and the playwright's words.

We kick of our season this Tuesday night with some madcap musings on the eternal question of materialism vs spiritualism.

Have supper first if you like, and then enjoy this comedic romp by the Governor General's Award-winning playwright Eugene Stickland. Sitting on Paradise tells the tale of a nature-loving developer and his would-be Wild Man buddy as they plot to build a New Age development in an as-yet unspoiled tract of forest.
But first they have to convince the developer's hard-nosed materialist wife.

Find out how a man gets things done; Discover how much stuff you really need; and marvel at the most peculiar couch transaction ever.  All this happens at 7:30 pm at the Prickly Pear.  Tickets are available at the door only.


2010 - 2011 season Auditions


Audition Dates  : 9/13/2010, 7:30 pm         9/14/2010, 7:30 pm

The summer was spent busily politicking to halt the proposed give-away of the City of Medicine Hat Cultural Centre. The College administration has decided that it finds the Visual Communications department an inconvenient obstacle to their scheme to build a new sports building. Happy to spend dollars on the proposed sports complex, the college is less willing to spend their money on the VisCom students; so they cravenly made a play on the Cultural Centre.   Embarrassingly, the College admin has tried to spin this as "support"  for the Visual Communications program.  It would be damn near comedic if it weren't so appalling!  The Cultural Centre was built with your tax dollars for the use of our cultural organizations - let us hope that our Aldermen can stay true to the people they are meant to represent, and will not betray the trust of the civic leaders who founded one of THE MOST SUCCESSFUL of Medicine Hat's cultural institutions.

But now that fall begins to colour the landscape the FUT in the HAT is gearing up for our 2010- 2011  Season.   We will be kicking our season off with the successful raw and unplugged Reader's Theatre, performed the last Tuesday of every month at the Prickly Pear Cafe. We call this Bare-Naked Theatre, not because of the lack of any clothes, but because the production is stripped-down, unstaged, and intimate as all heck.  The experience is between the performers, the audience, and the playwright's words.   And we promise to call the next day if you need us to.

In the new year we will be premiering a new play, set in Medicine Hat  and based on a ground-breaking court decision. Supper Waltz is written by Shirley Roll Tucker, who grew up in Medicine Hat and has her own history with local theatre. We hope you will all stay tuned for further news on this production as February nears

Auditions September 13 &; 14; 7:30 pm  at the Cultural Centre
To get the ball rolling we are planning mass auditions for the winter season to be held September 13 and 14. On those days we hope everyone will show up at 7:30 pm  at the Cultural Centre (That is, if we haven't been kicked out!)  Remember, part of FUT in the HAT's mandate is to provide a welcoming space for new faces and to give everyone a chance - so don't be shy about coming out.

We will be auditioning for 5 Raw Readers' Theatre pieces and one full stage production.

The Readers' Theatre pieces are:
Sept. 28 -- Sitting on Paradise; a comedic romp by The Governor General's Award - winning playwright Eugene Stickland
Oct. 26 -- Private Peaceful  ; the Edinburgh Fringe Festival sell-out by Michael Morpurgo adapted by Simon Reade
Nov. 23 -- Here on the Flight Path by Norm Foster
Jan. 24 -- Mrs. Brown The howlingly hilarious character created by Brendan O'Carroll and enjoyed by millions via the hit internet youtube phenomenon.  Have a look at the clip below if you haven't watched one yet!
Mar. 22 - Shirley Valentine by Willy Russell


Feb 24 -26 Mar 3 -5 a new script, Supper Waltz by Shirley Roll Tucker.
We will be work-shopping this production October 16 and 17 with Eugene Stickland and rehearsals will start at the beginning of January. Casting will take place at the September auditions and actors will be expected to attend the October workshop.








The Children's Hour


Performance Date: 4/7/2010, 7:30 pm

‘Children’s Hour’ not for children
AMANDA STEPHENSON
astephenson@medicinehatnews.com

The Medicine Hat College Players and the FUT in the Hat theatre group have come together to tackle the dramatic classic, “The Children’s Hour.”  Written by Lillian Hellman in 1934, the play is based on the true story of two school teachers wrongly condemned for lesbianism in 19th century Scotland because of the lie of a spiteful student. Today, the play is recognized in theatre circles as a masterpiece, although its subject matter shocked audiences when it debuted.  “She (Hellman) probably would have got the Pulitzer Prize for it, but because of the topic, some of the people on the committee didn’t want to give it to her,” says FUT in the Hat’s Karen Cunningham, director of the upcoming production. 

The script of “The Children’s Hour” is very dramatic, full of high emotion with very little humour. It makes for a real challenge for the actors, but Cunningham says it’s exactly the kind of thing FUT in the Hat members enjoy.  “We like the stuff with the meat,” she says. “Stuff that’s got a story behind it, that’s going to make you stop and think and give the actors a real challenge to
discover who they need to be on stage.”

The partnership between the College Players and FUT in the Hat is something that started this year. College students contributed to FUT in the Hat’s reader’s theatre series over the fall and winter, and this time around, FUT in the Hat is lending a hand to the college group. Two of the 13 roles in the play will be filled by FUT in the Hat members.

“Often for me at the college, the difficulty is finding older actors to play the older roles. It’s not naturalistic to have someone who’s 17 playing somebody who’s 60,” says Charlie Wilson,
drama instructor at Medicine Hat College and technical director for “The Children’s Hour.” “It’s also great to be able to combine the strengths of the two groups — I have a lot of new students who have an interest in theatre, which is fantastic, and she (Cunningham) has a lot of experienced actors who have something to give.”

“The Children’s Hour” will be performed April 7, 8, 9, and 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the Medicine Hat
College Cultural Centre Black Box Theatre. Tickets are $15 and available through the Esplanade Box Office, www.tixx.ca, or at the door if available. Doors open at 7:15 p.m.
Due to its subject matter, the play is not recommended for children.

© Copyright by Medicine Hat News.com




The Children's Hour


Performance Date: 4/7/2010, 7:30 pm

Dashiell Hammett brought the true story of two school teachers wrongly condemned for lesbianism by the lie of a spiteful student to Hellman's notice. Her play has earned its place as one of the enduring works of the American Theatre. While it was shunned by the Pulitzer Prize selection committee for drama, the outrage at the play's exclusion for that award sparked the creation of the Drama Critics Circle award to honour her achievement.



Join College Players and Fut in the Hat as they bring their own adaptation of this highly emotional charged drama of two teachers plight. At the Cultural Centre, Black Box Theatre with four nightly shows starting Wednesday, April 7 through to Saturday, April 10 at 7:30 PM. Cost to see this highly acclaimed drama is $15.00 + S/C, GST

***Mature content not recommended for children.***


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And The Winner Is


Performance Date: 2/23/2010, 7:30 pm

FUT in the Hat’s next show a real ‘Winner’
Alex McCuaig
amccuaig@medicinehatnews.com
It might be February and the flowerbeds are still covered in snow but award season is in full bloom with the fruit of the coveted Academy Awards waiting to be picked. And with that timely segue, FUT in the Hat theater group is presenting “And The Winner Is,” a Mitch Albom play about one man’s attempt to secure himself an Oscar.
Albom is best known for his book and subsequent play, “Tuesdays with Morrie,” along with his work as a sports journalist for the Detroit Free Press.
This will be the last of the four Barenaked Theatre plays performed by the company at the Prickly Pear Cafe and FUT artistic director Karen Cunningham expects it to be a sold-out show.
Directed by FUT president Julie Tracey and starring well-known local thespians Grant Bray and Jim Rissling, the play will be a stripped-down version performed in its essence with actors reading lines.
“There are no costumes or sets, it’s just a readers theatre style,” said Cunningham.
“It’s an opportunity for us to do more. A (regular) show takes three months, (each) readers theatre takes us three rehearsals.” But that’s not to say quality suffers with good crowds filling up the cozy confines of the Prickly Pear.
“We’ve found that venue has been really pleasant for the audience because they can sit back and relax and have something to eat or drink a fancy coffee,” said Cunningham. “But it’s limited seating so you have to get there early.” She added the group’s show is just an addition to a long and distinguished history of live theatre in the city. “There have been theatre groups in the
city going back to the founding of Medicine Hat — it has always been here.”
This is the 10th year for the theatre group formed in response to the need for a company dedicated to non-musical performances. Over the past decade the group has performed such plays as “The Vagina Monologues” and” Tommy Douglas: The Arrows of Desire.”
The one-night only show is on Feb. 23 beginning at 7 p.m. The regular Prickly Pear opening hours will be extend past the usual 4 p.m. closing until the end of the play. Tickets are $5 available exclusively at the door.



© Copyright by Medicine Hat News.com