Our 2012 Season
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Our 2012 Season Opens in April
The 2012 season brochure can be viewed here.
You can order season tickets by using this form, and mailing it with your check to: Season Tickets, Langhorne Players, PO Box 643, Newtown, PA 18940. We guarantee return seats only if your request is post marked by December 31, 2011.
Or you can buy online using Paypal. If using this option, please be sure to indicate Series Letter. Please note that the prices online reflect a $3 charge per subscription for using Paypal. (Thank you for your understanding.) Tickets will be mailed to you in January 2012. We will call you if we have any questions about your order. If you have any quesitons about purchasing season tickets, feel free to call the Box Office at 215.860.0828 and leave us a message.
Opening night special! Purchase season tickets for Series A and receive a 10% discount.
Become a Benefactor! For each $250 you donate to "Friends of Langhorne Players," you'll receive one season ticket FREE! (Tax deductible to the extent allowed by law.)
Apartment 3A By Jeff DanielsJeff Daniels, the accomplished film actor (Terms of Endearment, The Squid and the Whale) is the founder of Purple Rose Theatre Company in Michigan and the author of over ten plays. In Apartment 3A Mr. Daniels has created an intelligent, well-crafted comedy which centers on Annie, a young woman who has lost faith — in God, men and even (gasp) PBS. With the help a mysterious neighbor, she finds her way again.April 20, 21, 22, 26, 27, 28, 29 May 2, 3, 4, 5
By The Sea, By The Sea, By the Beautiful Sea By Joe Pintauro, Langford Wilson, and Terrence McNallyBy the Sea... is a rare triple play, literally. It consists of short works by three of America’s most beloved playwrights. In Dawn, Day, and Dusk, Misters Pintauro, Wilson and McNally offer an examination of family, intimate relationships, loss, longing, and love. Part comedy, part poignant exploration, spiced with an ample dose of sex, you are bound to remember your own special moments by the sea.June 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16
Our House By Theresa RebeckMs. Rebeck known to our audiences from last season’s Mauritius has said, “As a writer, I have always considered it my job to describe the world as I know it; to struggle toward whatever portion of the truth is available to me.” Our House is a deliciously scathing new comedy that takes on the media-obsessed culture intent on turning even the most sobering crisis into sexy entertainment. When a real life sociopath demands his five minutes of fame, he comes face to face with a pathology far more sophisticated and dangerous than even he could have imagined. The collision takes us on a ride we will never forget.July 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, 25, 26, 27, 28
100 Saints You Should Know By Kate FodorOriginally produced by the acclaimed Steppenwolf Theatre Company of Chicago, 100 Saints You Should Know is a riveting and truthful drama about everyday people in search of God. At its heart, it is a play about parents and children both literally and metaphorically. With her gentle pen, Ms. Fodor, who lives in Doylestown, has created refreshingly real characters and engaged them in a sometimes awkward, sometimes painful but always compelling dance.August 17, 18, 19, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30, 31 September 1
Rope By Patrick HamiltonWritten in 1929, Rope served as the basis for the 1948 Alfred Hitchcock classic film. For the mere sake of adventure, danger, and the “fun of the thing,” Wyndham Brandon persuades his weak minded friend, Charles Granillo, to assist him in the murder of a fellow undergraduate, a perfectly harmless man named Ronald Raglan. Having packed the body away in a trunk positioned in the middle of their flat, they invite Ronald’s father and a collection of friends to tea. With this all established in the first few minutes of the play, we are left to squirm in our seats as the tension gradually builds to the boiling point. Rope is a most interesting look back at manners and attitudes in the midst of the most bizarre circumstance.October 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20
