Folks go to musicals to be entertained and this SCC production of Disney's The Little Mermaid does just that.
"I'm so pleased Valerie DiLorenzo continues to call women together to utilize theater for causes like this," Kate Mueth said. "It's all so very personal and when we fight hardship by creating beauty and with story telling, the communal results are myriad, powerful and rich."
"I believe the more we want to help people, the more real one has to become. That was my reason for starting this show," Lampanelli told Hamptons.com.
"I think it's the literature, because the work is singular in the sense that we can now look and we can see so many things based on it," Burnough told Hamptons.com about Capote's legacy.
"He was really the most classic square peg in a round hole, certainly that neurology had ever seen," Burns told Hamptons.com about Sacks.
"The winters were definitely a time of reflection and introspection, and that was where the setting for The Artist's Wife came to me," Dolby told us about setting his latest film in the Hamptons.
"It was like sitting down with a bunch of former spies," Landsman said about spending time with former National Enquirer staffers.
"This is a special show that, we are confidant, will be an extension of our successful summer slate of art exhibits," reflected ArtRemsenburg committee member Paul Dempsey.
"I want people to fall in love with rom coms all over again, the way I did when I was making the film," Sankey told Hamptons.com.
"The films this year are either complete tearjerkers or films that educate you on something thoroughly that you really didn't understand or know about, or they're sort of white knuckled, hold on to the armrest because it's so thrilling," Chaisson told Hamptons.com.
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Saunders Broadcasting Corp.
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| Contact Us