Putting it Together
Books and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Aug 28 – Sept 20

PUTTING IT TOGETHER is a smart, sophisticated musical revue built entirely from songs by Stephen Sondheim, woven into a loose narrative about ambition, money, power, and relationships in the world of high society. Set at a cocktail party in a Manhattan penthouse, the show follows a wealthy, middle-aged producer, his much younger wife, a successful but guarded female executive, and an eager young composer. Through Sondheim’s songs—drawn from various shows and recontextualized—the characters reveal their desires for artistic success, financial security, love, validation, and relevance. Rather than telling one continuous traditional story, the musical uses familiar Sondheim numbers to illuminate shifting alliances and emotional undercurrents..

Making God Laugh
by Sean Grennan
Nov 13 – Dec 6

MAKING GOD LAUGH is a warm, heartfelt family comedy that follows one Midwestern family over the course of 30 years. Beginning in 1980 and revisiting the same living room every decade, the play captures holidays filled with big dreams, sibling rivalries, unexpected detours, and the gentle passage of time. As adult children return home with evolving careers, relationships, and disappointments, their parents offer love, exasperation, and hard-earned wisdom. With humor and poignancy, the play explores how life rarely unfolds according to plan — and how family remains a constant through it all. Tender, relatable, and quietly moving, Making God Laugh reminds us that while we make plans, life has its own ideas.

Marjorie Prime
by Jordan Harrison
Feb 26 – Mar 21 (2027)

MARJORIE PRIME is a thoughtful and haunting drama set in the near future, where lifelike AI companions—called “Primes”—are programmed with the memories and personalities of loved ones who have passed away. Eighty-five-year-old Marjorie, struggling with memory loss, is introduced to a Prime modeled after her late husband. As Marjorie shares stories to help the artificial version of him “learn,” the boundaries between memory and reality begin to blur. Her daughter Tess and son-in-law Jon grapple with their own grief and the ethical implications of rewriting the past through technology. As stories are shared and reshaped, Marjorie Prime explores memory, loss, and the fragile line between truth and the stories we choose to keep?

The Colored Museum
by George C. Wolfe
June 11–27 (2027)
[Director Already Selected]

THE COLORED MUSEUM has electrified, discomforted and delighted audiences of all colors, redefining our ideas of what it means to be Black in contemporary America. Its 11 “exhibits” undermine Black stereotypes old and new and return to the facts of what being Black means.


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Apply by April 15