TBC

Recurring

Sonnets for an Old Century

Riverside Theatre

In a land of unimaginable distance, can stories forge connection? Can a life be encompassed in the space of a sonnet? A cast of twenty-three attempts to give voice to the meaning of their existence in José Rivera’s riveting quiltwork drama, inescapably modern with echoes of Spoon River Anthology.

Sonnets for an Old Century

Riverside Theatre

In a land of unimaginable distance, can stories forge connection? Can a life be encompassed in the space of a sonnet? A cast of twenty-three attempts to give voice to the meaning of their existence in José Rivera’s riveting quiltwork drama, inescapably modern with echoes of Spoon River Anthology.

Recurring

The Winter’s Tale

Iowa City’s Lower City Park 200 Park Rd, Iowa City, IA, United States

Considered one of Shakespeare's greatest plays, The Winter’s Tale is a story of rebirth and redemption. Pivoting from comedy to tragedy and back again, it tells of two kingdoms bonded in friendship, riven by jealousy. King Leontes rules the cold halls of Sicilia with an increasingly tyrannical bent. Can the whitsuntide feasts of Bohemia and the promise of a new generation bring about the healing so desperately needed? Time will tell.

FREE

Recurring

The Comedy of Errors

Iowa City’s Lower City Park 200 Park Rd, Iowa City, IA, United States

FREE TO ATTEND Directed by Angie Toomsen August 13-22, 2021 “How many fond fools serve mad jealousy!” Travel bans, families unable to visit, and a world gone topsy turvy. Sound familiar? Welcome to Ephesus! (Which feels strangely like Nashville in the 1970s.) Shakespeare’s madcap farce tells the story of two sets of twins in the

FREE

The Comedy of Errors

Iowa City’s Lower City Park 200 Park Rd, Iowa City, IA, United States

FREE TO ATTEND Directed by Angie Toomsen August 13-22, 2021 “How many fond fools serve mad jealousy!” Travel bans, families unable to visit, and a world gone topsy turvy. Sound familiar? Welcome to Ephesus! (Which feels strangely like Nashville in the 1970s.) Shakespeare’s madcap farce tells the story of two sets of twins in the

FREE