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April 27 - 30

The following format is followed for brevity:

title; Playwright
brief description
COMPANY NAME; (genre)

time; location CODE; box office number; price range; ASL(when applicable)

April 27 -
Long Day's Journey Into Night by Eugene O'Neill
This harrowing tragedy is one of the great plays of the theatre. It's a day like any other for the Tyrone family - filled with bitterness and fighting, denial and blame, but with a powerful underlying love that somehow keeps them gong.
Theatre in the Round Players (drama)
7:00 pm; TRP; 612-333-3010; $13 - $15
 
The Magic Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle by Chad Henry
Can you scuba dive in your bedroom? Roast marshmallows over a chandelier? Unearth pirate treasure in the fireplace? You can in this musical, with Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle (who lives in an upside-down house with a wide cracking parrot!). She's a wizard when it comes to discovering exciting possibilities in life's most humdrum things.
The Children's Theatre Company (children)
2:00 and 5:00 pm; CTC; 612-874-0400; $12 - $34
 
Rabbit Hole by David Lindsay-Abaire
Becca and Howard Corbett have everything a family could want until the accidental death of their four-year-old son leaves the couple drifting perilously apart.
The Jungle Theatre (drama)
7:30 pm; JGL; 612-822-7063; $21 - $36
 
Lady Day by Lanie Robertson
In a seedy bar in South Philadelphia, legendary jazz singer Billie Holiday gives one of her last performances before her death in 1959. While indulging her talent as well as her addictions, she recalls her beginnings, scrubbing steps in Baltimore, through her rise to fame.
Park Square Theatre (drama)
2:00 pm; SPT; 651-291-7005; $18 - $28
 
Blues in The Night by Sheldon Epps, Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer
A compilation of twenty-six hot and torchy blues songs frame and comment on three women's relationships with one snake of a guy. The interweaving stories are defined through music alone - and what music! The evening's music is raunchily forthright, infectiously good-humored and always classically blues.
Ordway Center for the Performing Arts (musical)
2:00 and 7:30 pm; ORD; 651-224-4222; $44 - $65
 
Church Basement Ladies by Janet Martin and Suzann Nelson
A celebration of the church basement kitchen and the women who work there. From the elderly matriarch of the kitchen to the young bride-to-be learning the proper order of things, we see the church ladies handle a record breaking Christmas dinner, the funeral of a dear friend, a Hawaiian Easter Fund Raiser, and, of course, a steaming hot July wedding. They stave off potential disasters, share and debate recipes, instruct the young, and keep the Pastor on due course while thoroughly enjoying, (and tolerating) each other as the true "steel magnolias" of the church.
Plymouth Playhouse (comedy)
2:00 and 6:00 pm; PLY; 763-553-1600; $16 - $30
 

Respect
This show is a musical journey of women. A joyful jaunt down memory lane told through more than 60 top-forty hits. It will have you dancing in the ailes.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
5:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

The Wonder Bread Years by Pat Hazell
A hilarious 90 minutes of genuinely funny observations of our collective youth: Toughskin jeans, Jiffy Pop popcorn, Kool-aid stands and more! This one-man 'Show & Tell' promises to "feed the belly as well as the spirit." It’s an infectiously charming, fast-paced, hilarious production that takes you back to a simpler time in life - when candy was currency and the most dangerous kid in school carried a "switch-comb." THE WONDER BREAD YEARS offers you a chance to return to your childhood; it's an evening of pure escapism, where you have permission to think and act like a kid. Green army men rule, Etch-A Sketch is king and things that don't go your way are a "gyp." This classic material makes you crave the taste of space food sticks and revisit the faint scar from a lawn dart injury.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
5:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

42nd Street by Michael Stewert and Mark Bramble
A musical extravaganza that's polished to sparkle, 42nd Street is the stuff Broadway dreams are made of that's a hit from tip to tap. It zings and soars with a crackerjack toe-tapping cast, colorful sets and costumes, and a fast-moving fairy tale about a chorus girl who comes to the Big Apple to break into show business and is unexpectedly thrust into the starring role on opening night. This high-stepping salute to the allure of Broadway is guaranteed to put a smile on your face, a song on your lips and a spring in your step.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
5:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

 
Incorruptible by Micheal Hollinger
A fast paced comedy about an order of monks who hatch an outrageous plan to save their monastery from financial ruin. This new comedy, featuring Steve Shaffer and Tom Stolz as two of the monks, offers a gentle rib-poking look at how we humans twist our convictions to rationalize our bad behavior. While outrageously funny, the play also offers a warm, comforting message about faith lost and regained.
Old Log Theater (comedy)
2:00 and 7:00 pm; OLT; 952-474-5951; $18 - $26
 
The Best of Zenon Dance Company
You're invited to help celebrate the company's 25th anniversary, watching extraordinary dancers as they reprise legendary works by emerging and master choreographers showcasing the best of Zenon Dance Company.
The Southern Theater, (dance)
2:00 pm; SOT; 612-340-1725; $12 - $28
 
A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
Weaving three stories of love, magic and perception in a moonlit forest on a midsummer night, Shakespeare's fantastical play remains an audience favorite. Add a sexy music beat to the mix, and you've got a truly unforgettable night when anything can happen.
The Guthrie Theater (comedy)
7:00 pm; GUT; 612-225-6238; $11 - $53
 
Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet) by Ann-Marie MacDonald
A coded manuscript (lost source material for Shakespeare’s Othello and Romeo & Juliet?) hurls Constance Ledbelly head over heels into the two plays, turning tragedy to comedy - twists, fights, dances, seductions and surprises. Winner of the Governor General's Literary Award for Drama, 1990.
Theatre Unbound (drama)
2:00 pm; PHT; 612-207-3659; $10 - $15
 
The Lilies of the Field From the novel by William E. Barrett
Homer Smith is looking for a life of freedom after being discharged from the army. When his old station wagon passes a group of nuns working a dry field he stops to offer his assistance. One day of hired labor stretches into months of unpaid work for Homer as he slowly integrates into the nuns’ way of life. What starts out as an unlikely pairing of a Southern Baptist soldier and a German Catholic nun blossoms into an incredible mission that unites a community and inspires them to have faith, whether it be in a higher power or in each other.
Lyric Arts Main Street Stage (drama)
2:00 pm; LAM; 763-422-1838; $12 - $16
 
Zenon Dance Company’s 25th Anniversary Spring Season
Zenon’s Spring Season includes new works and the Best of Zenon Dance Company. In true Zenon style, this concert will feature a modern dance premiere by a New York choreographer, Jeanine Durning, who will create solo works for members of Zenon Dance Company. The dancers will steam up the stage with the sultry work “Like an Octopus” by Argentina’s Susana Tambutti. This torrid duet features music by Carla Bley and Edgardo Rudnitzky. The program will also include a new jazz piece with original, live music accompaniment. Two other “Best of Zenon” works will round out the concert.
Zenon Dance Company (dance)
2:00 pm; SOT; 612-340-1725; $10-25
 
Border Crossing by Off Leash Area
Border Crossing is a puppet and dance performance that reenacts the dramatic journey of Mexican immigrants who cross the Arizona/Mexico desert border, as seen through the eyes of the creatures who inhabit it. Poignant, beautiful, tragic, and heartbreaking. The story traces the footsteps of one little girl as she follows her family across one of the harshest environments in North America in search of a better life.
Ritz Theater Foundation (movement theatre)
2:00 pm; RTZ; 612-333-2172; $12 - $24
 
April 28 -
Nothing has been posted here as yet.
 
April 29 -
Rabbit Hole by David Lindsay-Abaire
Becca and Howard Corbett have everything a family could want until the accidental death of their four-year-old son leaves the couple drifting perilously apart.
The Jungle Theatre (drama)
7:30 pm; JGL; 612-822-7063; $21 - $36
 
Blues in The Night by Sheldon Epps, Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer
A compilation of twenty-six hot and torchy blues songs frame and comment on three women's relationships with one snake of a guy. The interweaving stories are defined through music alone - and what music! The evening's music is raunchily forthright, infectiously good-humored and always classically blues.
Ordway Center for the Performing Arts (musical)
8:00 pm; ORD; 651-224-4222; $44 - $65
 

The Six-Ring Circus
This is an improvisational experience featuring student improv teams from the Brave New Institute.
Brave New Workshop (satire)
7:30 pm; BNW; 612-332-6620; $1

Respect
This show is a musical journey of women. A joyful jaunt down memory lane told through more than 60 top-forty hits. It will have you dancing in the ailes.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
6:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

The Wonder Bread Years by Pat Hazell
A hilarious 90 minutes of genuinely funny observations of our collective youth: Toughskin jeans, Jiffy Pop popcorn, Kool-aid stands and more! This one-man 'Show & Tell' promises to "feed the belly as well as the spirit." It’s an infectiously charming, fast-paced, hilarious production that takes you back to a simpler time in life - when candy was currency and the most dangerous kid in school carried a "switch-comb." THE WONDER BREAD YEARS offers you a chance to return to your childhood; it's an evening of pure escapism, where you have permission to think and act like a kid. Green army men rule, Etch-A Sketch is king and things that don't go your way are a "gyp." This classic material makes you crave the taste of space food sticks and revisit the faint scar from a lawn dart injury.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
6:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

42nd Street by Michael Stewert and Mark Bramble
A musical extravaganza that's polished to sparkle, 42nd Street is the stuff Broadway dreams are made of that's a hit from tip to tap. It zings and soars with a crackerjack toe-tapping cast, colorful sets and costumes, and a fast-moving fairy tale about a chorus girl who comes to the Big Apple to break into show business and is unexpectedly thrust into the starring role on opening night. This high-stepping salute to the allure of Broadway is guaranteed to put a smile on your face, a song on your lips and a spring in your step.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
6:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

 
A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
Weaving three stories of love, magic and perception in a moonlit forest on a midsummer night, Shakespeare's fantastical play remains an audience favorite. Add a sexy music beat to the mix, and you've got a truly unforgettable night when anything can happen.
The Guthrie Theater (comedy)
7:00 pm; GUT; 612-225-6238; $11 - $53
 
April 30 -
Rabbit Hole by David Lindsay-Abaire
Becca and Howard Corbett have everything a family could want until the accidental death of their four-year-old son leaves the couple drifting perilously apart.
The Jungle Theatre (drama)
7:30 pm; JGL; 612-822-7063; $21 - $36
 
Blues in The Night by Sheldon Epps, Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer
A compilation of twenty-six hot and torchy blues songs frame and comment on three women's relationships with one snake of a guy. The interweaving stories are defined through music alone - and what music! The evening's music is raunchily forthright, infectiously good-humored and always classically blues.
Ordway Center for the Performing Arts (musical)
8:00 pm; ORD; 651-224-4222; $44 - $65
 

Respect
This show is a musical journey of women. A joyful jaunt down memory lane told through more than 60 top-forty hits. It will have you dancing in the ailes.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
6:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

The Wonder Bread Years by Pat Hazell
A hilarious 90 minutes of genuinely funny observations of our collective youth: Toughskin jeans, Jiffy Pop popcorn, Kool-aid stands and more! This one-man 'Show & Tell' promises to "feed the belly as well as the spirit." It’s an infectiously charming, fast-paced, hilarious production that takes you back to a simpler time in life - when candy was currency and the most dangerous kid in school carried a "switch-comb." THE WONDER BREAD YEARS offers you a chance to return to your childhood; it's an evening of pure escapism, where you have permission to think and act like a kid. Green army men rule, Etch-A Sketch is king and things that don't go your way are a "gyp." This classic material makes you crave the taste of space food sticks and revisit the faint scar from a lawn dart injury.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
6:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

42nd Street by Michael Stewert and Mark Bramble
A musical extravaganza that's polished to sparkle, 42nd Street is the stuff Broadway dreams are made of that's a hit from tip to tap. It zings and soars with a crackerjack toe-tapping cast, colorful sets and costumes, and a fast-moving fairy tale about a chorus girl who comes to the Big Apple to break into show business and is unexpectedly thrust into the starring role on opening night. This high-stepping salute to the allure of Broadway is guaranteed to put a smile on your face, a song on your lips and a spring in your step.
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres (musical)
6:00 pm; CDT; 952-934-1525; $26-$59

 
A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
Weaving three stories of love, magic and perception in a moonlit forest on a midsummer night, Shakespeare's fantastical play remains an audience favorite. Add a sexy music beat to the mix, and you've got a truly unforgettable night when anything can happen.
The Guthrie Theater (comedy)
7:00 pm; GUT; 612-225-6238; $11 - $53
 
Honk! By Anthony Drewe
The zany musical, based on the Hans Christian Andersen's tale, "The Ugly Duckling", has quacking ducks, a scheming gourmet cat, and a host of wacky farmyard characters who will keep you honking for days. It's fun, sassy and a heartwarming tale about finding your own place in the world.
Youth Performance Company (children's)
10:00 am, 12:30 and 7:30 pm; HCF; 612-623-9080; $6 - $12

 

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The following, in alphabetical order, are the actual locations of the codes referred to earlier. You can also look at our map locations for an easy guide, by cicking on the links of each coded site.

Company by Name | Calendar Listings | Particular Performance Genre | Homepage | Other Art Organizations