APPLAUSE

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Invictus Private Wealth is pleased to announce that its own Michael Caplan was selected as Barron’s top independent advisor in Colorado.
Michael S. Caplan
Barron’s Top 100 Independent Advisors 2024
Forbes/Shook Top RIA Firms 2024
Barron’s Top 100 Independent Advisors 2024
Forbes/Shook Top 10 Best-in-State Wealth Advisor 2024
Forbes/Shook Top RIA Firms 2024
Northwestern University - Honors in Mathematics
Adjunct Professor/International Economic Fellow Georgetown Law
Forbes/Shook Top 10 Best-in-State Wealth Advisor 2024 Northwestern University - Honors in Mathematics
Adjunct Professor/International Economic Fellow Georgetown Law










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BY JANICE SINDEN
WWelcome to the theatre!


This is one of the most engaging times of our year when we host the Colorado New Play Summit. Now in its 20th year, this festival features readings of four works in development plus full productions of two world premieres. Over February 14 and 15, theatre aficionados will enjoy:
Readings: Lemuria by Bonnie Antosh, Influent by Isaac Gómez, You Should Be So Lucky by Alyssa Haddad-Chin, and The Myth of the Two Marcos by Tony Meneses
World Premieres: Godspeed by Terence Anthony and Cowboys and East Indians by Nina McConigley and Matthew Spangler
Since its founding in 2005, the Summit has offered 95 readings, of which 47 have gone on to full production including The Book of Will, American Mariachi, and The Reservoir. These readings provide a pipeline of new works that contribute to the future of the American theatre.
Also on our stages are an all-new tour of Meredith Willson’s The Music Man, the return of Mark Twain Tonight! featuring Richard Thomas in the iconic role, and the book-turnedmovie, Water for Elephants, brought to life through stunning puppetry and stage effects.
Your presence demonstrates a commitment to sustain this incredible artform. Similarly, Denver voters gave resounding approval for the Vibrant Denver Bond, enabling us to provide a safer, more welcoming theatre experience. Thank you for your ongoing support that makes this work possible.
Vladimir Script
Warm regards,
Janice Sinden
Janice Sinden, President & CEO

The Denver Center for the Performing Arts honors and acknowledges that it resides on the traditional and unceded territories of the Ute, Cheyenne, and Arapaho Peoples. We also recognize the 48 contemporary Indigenous Tribes and Nations who have historically called Colorado home.
LEARN MORE
VOLUME XXXVI • NUMBER 3 • JAN – FEB 2026
EDITOR: Suzanne Yoe
DESIGN DIRECTOR: Kyle Malone
DESIGNER: Paul Koob
CONTRIBUTING DESIGNERS: Lucas Kreitler, Kyle Malone
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Misha Berson, Lisa Bornstein, Lisa Kennedy, Madison Stout, Collin Van Son
Applause is published six times a year by Denver Center for the Performing Arts in conjunction with The Publishing House, Westminster, CO. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Call 303.893.4000 regarding editorial content.
Angie Flachman, Publisher For advertising 303.428.9529 or sales@pub-house.com coloradoartspubs.com Applause magazine is funded in part by



Denver Center for the Performing Arts is a non-profit organization that engages and inspires through the transformative power of live theatre.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Ruth Krebs, Chair
Hassan Salem, Immediate Past Chair
Jerome Davis, Vice Chair
David Jacques Farahi, Secretary/Treasurer
Nicole Ament
Marco D. Chayet
Yosh Eisbart
Christopher Hayes
Elizabeth Hioe
Deb Kelly
Robert Kenney
Kevin Kilstrom
Lynn McDonald
Susan Fox Pinkowitz
Manny Rodriguez
Alan Salazar
Richard M. Sapkin
Martin Semple
William Dean Singleton
Sylvia Young
HONORARY TRUSTEES
Navin Dimond
Margot Gilbert Frank
Jeannie Fuller
Robert C. Newman
Cleo Parker Robinson
Robert Slosky

Nicole Ament
Marco D. Chayet
David Jacques Farahi
Ruth Krebs
Susan Fox Pinkowitz
Hassan Salem
EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT
Janice Sinden, President & CEO
Jamie Clements, Vice President, Development
Chris Coleman, Artistic Director, Theatre Company
John Ekeberg, Executive Director, Broadway & Cabaret
Angela Lakin, Vice President, Marketing & Sales
Glen Lucero, Vice President, Venue Operations
Laura Maresca, Chief People & Culture Officer
Lisa Roebuck, Vice President, Information Technology
Charles Varin, Managing Director, Theatre Company & Off-Center
Dr. Reginald L. Washington
Judi Wolf
HELEN G. BONFILS
FOUNDATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Martin Semple, President
William Dean Singleton, Vice President
Kevin Kilstrom, Secretary/Treasurer
Allison Watrous, Executive Director, Education & Community Engagement
Jane Williams, Chief Financial & Administrative Officer

The performing arts have a unique way of connecting us. They lift spirits, spark joy and remind us that feeling whole involves more than physical health. Music, movement and storytelling can ease loneliness, create moments of comfort and help people feel seen - the same kind of healing presence our teams bring to the bedside through music therapy and whole-person care. At AdventHealth, we celebrate and support the arts because they nurture the mind, strengthen the spirit and enrich the lives of the communities we’re honored to serve.

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No experience needed
Flexible scheduling

By Madison Stout
What if learning math felt like rehearsing a dance? What if science came alive through movement and storytelling? At the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, this isn’t hypothetical; it’s the foundation of Dramatic Learning, a program that integrates theatre into core subjects.









For nearly 30 years, the DCPA has partnered with Colorado educators to bring arts integration into classrooms, helping students become better learners and better humans. Whether it’s acting out the digestive system in a biology unit or using costume renderings to explore character development in literature, the program helps students connect with academic content through creativity, collaboration, and kinesthetic learning.
“All students deserve to feel seen in their learning,” says Allison Watrous, Executive Director of DCPA Education & Community Engagement. “Arts integration honors different learning styles and invites students to be agents in their own learning.”
Arts integration isn’t just about making learning fun; it’s about making it effective. In Denver classrooms, DCPA teaching artists collaborate with educators to co-teach lessons that align with state standards. From Shakespeare and stage combat to science-based improvisation, students experience learning with their minds and bodies.
And the results speak for themselves. The New Victory SPARK study, which tracked students over three years, found that performing arts education led to:
• 50% increase in creative thinking through improvisation exercises
• 55% growth in teamwork skills, with students choosing larger, more diverse teams
• 10% rise in hope for the future, compared to a 5% decline in the control group
• 20% greater interest in the performing arts, especially among students from under-resourced schools
These findings reinforce what educators at the DCPA have known for a long time: the arts don’t just enrich education, they transform it.
Together, arts integration makes core curriculums more dynamic, memorable, and meaningful while equipping students with both academic mastery and 21st-century skills. It also improves academic performance. Students involved in arts programs show enhanced memory, focus, and literacy skills.
And perhaps most importantly, they’re more engaged. “When students are doing the work — creating, performing, reflecting — they’re not just learning facts,” Watrous says. “They’re learning how to think, feel, and connect.
“If you’re a teacher, or know one, who wants to bring creativity into the classroom, reach out,” Watrous encourages. “And if you have a young person in your life, take them to the theater. Go on an artist date. Spark their imagination.”
To learn more about Dramatic Learning or bring it to your school, reach out to education@dcpa.org.
BECAUSE ARTS EDUCATION ISN’T EXTRA — IT’S ESSENTIAL.
WATCH THE VIDEO














salon owner Truvy
set up shop on the





The colorful cast of regulars and employees that frequent her establishment include a mother-daughter duo planning a wedding, a woman who’s “been in a bad mood for 40 years,” and a mysterious newcomer. Through laughter, tears, and a thick fog of hairspray, these women face trials and triumphs armed with their greatest strength: each other.







BY LISA KENNEDY




“I always loved westerns as a kid — the showdowns, the gunfights, all that,” playwright Terence Anthony said during a video conversation. His own contribution to the genre, Godspeed — a rousing saga about a formerly enslaved woman on a mission in post-Civil War Texas — is having its world premiere at the Denver Center Theatre Company.
In the popular imagination, the Western has made a home in the theater. The movie theater, that is.
After all, film captures the big sky we westerners dwell beneath. It depicts a vastness that humbles the heart but has also fueled ravenous ambitions. Cinema spent much of its first 100 years making manifest onscreen the designs of Manifest Destiny. Yet, in more recent decades it’s offered up revisions of those earlier stories — for good reason.
This is something the playwright gleaned over time. “At a certain point, I realized, ‘Oh wait a minute, why are all the Indians the bad guys all the time? What’s going on?’” He began paying a different sort of attention.
Anthony reels off a few of his favorite westerns, including two that fall under the revisionist rubric and feature black actors with storylines: 1985’s Silverado with Danny Glover and Lynn Whitfield as siblings and homesteaders, and John Ford’s 1960 drama Sergeant Rutledge, about the eponymous army man (portrayed by Woody Strode) being tried for the sexual assault and murder of a white woman.
“The genre of the Western is just such an amazing vehicle for talking about all the things American. All the


things that led to where we’re at today,” Anthony said, joined by the play’s director, Delicia Turner Sonnenberg. “You can really trace back to how the west was ‘won,’ and the histories that were covered up. That a quarter or more cowboys were black, but we never saw that in books or films.”
The black quasi-cowboy protagonist of Anthony’s creation is actually a formerly enslaved woman named Anna who rechristened herself Godspeed. The play is set in Texas, shortly after the Civil War’s end. But it is no Juneteenth celebration. Texas is roiling. The once enslaved are unsure of where to go, how to begin negotiating their new lives: Is there a way to reset economically their relationship to their enslavers?
As for Godspeed, she has retribution in mind. For that dark if righteous payback, she totes a gun with one bullet.
Godspeed is one of the two plays getting its world premiere having had a well-received staged reading during the 2024 Colorado New Play Summit. (The other, Cowboys and East Indians, also wrestles with the ethos of the West.) Its settling in the Kilstrom is cause for applause but also curiosity. How does a genre so doggedly cinematic yield to the intimacy of the theater? Indeed, the script seems to call for cinematic gestures, like intertitles and maps charting Godspeed’s journey from Mexico up through Texas toward a reckoning. It’s easy to imagine the creative team defaulting to visual projections to nudge the storytelling. Cue Sonnenberg.
“Some of the vocabulary of the western — or just the West — is land and sky,” the director said. “I’ve been think-

ing a lot about that. Because we’re in the round instead of a proscenium. All of our theatricality is old school theatricality because it’s just a floor and an audience all around. So, the things that are strong in the play have to be strong in the production, and that is the relationships between the people.”
Sonnenberg is the founder and former artistic director of MOXIE Theatre, a San Diego-based company focused on presenting works by Women+ creatives. “Delicia has told me she usually doesn’t do ‘boy plays,’ so I was very honored that she was interested,” Anthony recalled, smiling.
But then how many plays have a protagonist as ferocious and mysterious as Godspeed? “A person shows up, then we find out it’s a woman, then we find out that she’s changed her name from Anna to Godspeed, and she’s on a journey,” said Sonnenberg. “It grabbed me from the very first scene. And then there’s the dream sequence, right? And then we get a two-person scene and half of it’s in Spanish!” Sonnenberg said that last bit with a hint of marvel.
Because Anthony has paired his thorny hero with — well, in a different era, Peklai Cobos, might have been called “sidekick.” The play’s not having any of that. A Mexican woman of Coahuiltecan descent, she often gives Godspeed as good as she gets — answering, arguing, advising, always in untranslated Spanish. It’s a gesture that will please some and fluster others.
“I think theater is at its best when it’s subversive,” Sonnenberg said about the playwright’s choices. Not just his refusal to translate Peklai’s dialog but his interest in a period of American history in which post-Civil War opportunity was met with the rise of Jim Crow suppression and violence.
At a certain point, I realized,
“Oh wait a minute, why are all the Indians the bad guys all the time? What’s going on?”
—
TERENCE ANTHONY, PLAYWRIGHT
In navigating the facts and context of the era, the duo found a partner in dramaturg Arminda Thomas. “I am drawn to stories about Reconstruction, and this one is a Reconstruction story in an underexplored setting (South Texas), and with a larger scope than most of those stories, that looks back to the Middle Passage, the annexation of Texas, the Spanish conquest...there’s a lot to dig into!” she wrote in an email.
“Part of what drew me to the play is the ballsiness,” Sonnenberg says. “I like swagger and it has it. There’s real muscularity in the writing. Like, ‘I’m gonna tell you a story and it’s gonna be good, and here we go!’”
Or, to borrow a phrase, “Giddy up!”



Best known for playing John-Boy Walton in “The Waltons,” Richard Thomas has enjoyed an award-winning career in TV, film, and stage appearing across the nation in Twelve Angry Men and To Kill a Mockingbird. Now — as the only actor authorized to perform Mark Twain Tonight! — he takes on the role of Samuel Clemens made famous by Hal Holbrook. “When the estate reached out and told me they wanted to run this again and they thought Hal would probably be happy if I did it, I immediately said I would love to,” explained Thomas.

Mark Twain Tonight! offers more than one reflection of public life that will resonate with audiences today. While Holbrook performed the show for more than 50 years, assembling the play from a large cache of Twain’s writings, the material was made available to Thomas to develop his own spin on the piece.
“Actors are intrepid researchers, and Twain is just a bottomless well,” concluded Thomas. “You can just keep drawing good water from it without running dry. I’ve always loved him before in a more general-audience way, but this is giving me a great opportunity to go deep. And he’s a wonderful companion. He has insights, he makes you laugh, and he makes you think.”
GODSPEED
JAN 30 – FEB 22 • KILSTROM THEATRE
ASL Interpreted and Audio Described performance: Feb 8 at 1:30pm
Stay for a post-show discussion: Feb 10 & 17
Includes ASL Interpretation, Audio Description & Open Captioning READ THE FULL ARTICLE
MARK TWAIN TONIGHT!
JAN 31 • BUELL THEATRE







































































































































































































































































BY COLLIN VAN SON
MMost musicals are two-dimensional. That’s not a put-down; it’s a spatial reality. Stages are two-dimensional surfaces, and the actors who travel them are typically limited to two degrees of freedom: they can move upstage or downstage, stage right or stage left. A notable exception is if the show in question also happens to be a circus. Then the actors are welcome to fly.
From the trapeze to the tightrope, Water for Elephants is emphatically three-dimensional. But accessing what circus designer and co-choreographer Shana Carroll calls “real estate in the air” isn’t just an artistic challenge — it’s also an engineering one.
“It’s a lot of geometry,” says Carroll, describing the network of pulleys, wires, and slings whose sheer complexity occasionally brought rehearsal to a screeching halt. Countless hours were spent troubleshooting and reconfiguring. “We did not make our lives easy,” Carroll admits. “We do things on the stage that are kind of crazy to do, rigging-wise.”
In addition to behind-the-scenes headaches, this complexity delivers some remarkable feats of showmanship. Carroll points to the moment when the cast raises the center pole of the Benzini Brothers’ circus tent; what would normally take 30 minutes of pre-show preparation, the cast accomplishes with real-time choreography.
Much like pitching a big top, choreographing Water for Elephants was a team effort. When Jesse Robb joined the project as a co-choreographer, it marked the start of a collaboration that he and Carroll fondly refer to as their “arranged marriage.” The two soon found that their experiences working for Cirque du Soleil allowed them to develop a common movement language, one that evolves over the course of the show.
Robb describes the show’s early choreography as “very utilitarian,” a reflection of the intense physical labor that a circus requires of all its members. But as protagonist Jacob Jankowski begins to acclimate to life on the road, the choreography gradually takes on the unabashed spectacle of Depression-era circus. “You get a little bit further into act one,” says Robb, “and you’re looking at very Broadway-esque moments in [‘The Lion Has Got No Teeth’]. And then ‘The Grand Spec’ at the end of act one, the language is very much old-school presentational circus. So the choreographic language changes dramatically throughout the show.”
For Carroll, a former trapeze artist, this combination of 1930s old-school circus and modern-day artistry is a major part of the show’s appeal. As a veteran of several traditional circuses, she enjoys recalling her horseback entrances and the onstage poker games she played against an elephant.
“I love the artsy theatrical circus that I now do,” she says, “but I really have so much reverence for the roots... And marrying them — doing in a traditional context some of the newer contemporary language — is really satisfying for me, because I actually don’t like when it’s so delineated.”
The importance of unspoken physical language is a theme that Carroll and Robb return to frequently. And when building out such a language, it helps to have what Carroll calls “that little glossary in your head,” a way to find the right pairings of physical movement with an emotional moment.
Through the risks they entail and the images they create, different circus techniques lend themselves to different metaphors. Aerial taps into freedom and liberation. Ground acrobatics calls to mind community and interdependence. Three-high stacking evokes a sense of victory — or at least it always has to Carroll, who at one point in the process found herself needing to revise her personal glossary.
During the show’s development, director Jessica Stone wanted to employ three-high stacking to depict the practice of red-lighting, in which Benzini employees are hurled from a moving train when their services are no longer required. But to Carroll, the violence of red-lighting clashed with her understanding of the three-high stack as a victorious, uplifting image. Eventually, however, she came to realize that, “oh no, if we make it about danger and about the risk and the stakes, we can change that imagery.”
It’s a lot of geometry. We did not make our lives easy. We do things on the stage that are kind of crazy to do, rigging-wise.
— SHANA CARROLL, CO-CHOREOGRAPHER
This kind of collaboration, cross-pollination, and flexibility is nowhere more evident than in the show’s cast. Most circus performers are specialists in a particular discipline such as tumbling or juggling. But in the case of Water for Elephants, the show’s relatively small cast — there are only seven dedicated circus performers — means that versatility is at a premium. As a result, the artistic team was constantly on the lookout for what Carroll calls “unicorns,” performers who could not only soar on a trapeze but could juggle a knife and tumble as well.
While the Benzini Brothers are fictional, the most successful real-life circus of the 1930s — Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey — is still around today, preparing to kick off a new tour in 2026. For Robb, the enduring appeal of the circus has a simple and personal explanation: “I know my impetus [in becoming an artist] was wanting to run away to Cirque du Soleil when I was 20 years old, and it was the idea of finding a community of like-minded people.”
The way Carroll sees it, the power of circus comes back to mechanics. “If five people are doing a trick and two people are throwing and one person’s catching, [you can’t ignore] the trust and the fact if one person doesn’t do their job, someone dies. It really is just the most profound way of showing interconnectivity and interdependence.”
FEB 11 – 22 • BUELL THEATRE
ASL Interpreted, Audio Described, and Open Captioned performance: Feb 22 at 1pm
Alicia Keys’ Hell’s Kitchen (April 14-26) is not just a musical — it’s a love letter to New York City, adolescence, and the power of finding your voice. Loosely based on Keys’ own teenage years in Manhattan Plaza, the show pulses with the energy of 1990s Hell’s Kitchen, blending R&B, soul, and hip-hop into a theatrical experience that feels both personal and universal.
Critics have called the musical “a rousing delight” (Entertainment Weekly), “a glorious tapestry” (Variety), and “easily the best new musical at the Public since Hamilton” (TheaterMania). But Hell’s Kitchen isn’t just about accolades — it’s about connection. The story of a young woman navigating family, ambition, and identity resonates far beyond the streets of New York. Keys reimagines some of her most iconic songs — “Fallin’,” “Perfect Way to Die,” and “Girl on Fire” among many others — to serve as emotional anchors, offering audiences a fresh lens on familiar hits.
As the show travels the country, it brings with it a message that’s both timely and timeless: that music can be a lifeline, and that every city has its own rhythm worth listening to. Hell’s Kitchen is poised to inspire a new generation of theatergoers — one soulful note at a time.

















NETworks Presentations LLC presents

Scenic Design BRIAN PRATHER
Wig Design
Creative Consultant MICHAEL WILSON
Costume Design SAM FLEMING
LUC VERSCHUEREN/ CAMPBELL YOUNG ASSOCIATES
Lighting Design ANTHONY PEARSON
Tour Booking Agency THE BOOKING GROUP BRIAN BROOKS & RICH RUNDLE
Production Supervisor BRIAN J. L’ECUYER
General Manager GENTRY & ASSOCIATES MADELINE McCLUSKEY
Executive Producer HANNAH ROSENTHAL
Sound Design SHANNON SLATON
Tour Press & Marketing KENT McINGVALE & COMPANY
Company Manager RYAN PARLIMENT
Production Manager NETWORKS PRESENTATIONS ALEX WILLIAMS

1835 Born in Florida, Missouri (November 30).
1839 Moved to Hannibal, Missouri.
1853 Left home to become itinerant printer.
1857 Became apprentice pilot on the Mississippi River.
1861 After two weeks in the Confederate Army, resigned commission and went to the Nevada territory with brother Orion.
1862 Prospected unsuccessfully, then joined Virginia City Enterprise as a reporter — first used pen name “Mark Twain”.
1864 Joined the San Francisco Morning Call
1866 Visited Sandwich Islands (Hawaii), became lecturer. Wrote travel letters to the Sacramento Union and the San Francisco Alta California
1867 The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calavaras County published. Joined excursion to Mediterranean.
1870 Married Olivia Langdon of Elmira, New York (February 2). Settled in Buffalo as editor of The Buffalo Express
1871 Moved to Hartford, Connecticut.
1872 Susy Clemens born. Roughing It published.
1873 Collaborated with Charles Dudley Warner on The Gilded Age
1874 Clara Clemens born.
1876 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer published.
RICHARD THOMAS (Mark Twain) won an Emmy Award and received multiple Golden Globe Award nominations for his starring role as “John-Boy Walton” in the television drama The Waltons. He is most recognizable to contemporary television audiences for his roles in the hit series Ozark, The Americans, Billions and the original Stephen King mini-series It. His feature film performances include The Unforgivable, Wonder Boys, Last Summer, Red Sky at Morning, and Taking Woodstock. He has been seen in acclaimed performances on stage including the
1878 Family lived in Europe.
1880 Jean Clemens born. A Tramp Abroad published.
1882 The Prince and the Pauper published.
1883 Life on the Mississippi published.
1884 Published U.S. Grant’s Personal Memoirs. Began investment in Paige Typesetter.
1885 The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn published.
1889 A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court published.
1891 Family moved to Europe.
1894 The Tragedy of Pudd’n Head Wilson published.
1896 Lecture tour around the world. Susy Clemens died in Hartford (August 18). Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc published.
1897 Following the Equator published.
1900 Lived in New York.
1904 Olivia Langdon Clemens died in Florence, Italy (June 5).
1907 Received LLD from Oxford University.
1908 Moved to “Stormfield”, the house he built in Redding, Connecticut.
1909 Jean Clemens died (December 24).
1910 Mark Twain died in Redding, Connecticut (April 21).
revival of The Little Foxes, for which he received a Tony Award nomination, Our Town, You Can’t Take it With You, The Great Society, Race, Democracy, Incident at Vichy (Drama Desk Award nomination), The Stendhal Syndrome (Lucille Lortel Award nomination, Outer Critics Circle Award nomination), A Naked Girl on the Appian Way, An Enemy of the People, Tiny Alice, The Front Page, The Fifth of July, innumerable Shakespeare productions, and his professional debut at 8 years old in Sunrise at Campobello. Across the country he has starred in the national tours
of The Humans (Elliot Norton Award), Twelve Angry Men, and for three years as “Atticus Finch” in Aaron Sorkin’s To Kill a Mockingbird. Richard previously served as the Honorary Chair of the National Corporate Theatre Fund, a position also held by his predecessor Hal Holbrook. MARK TWAIN TONIGHT TRUST. After 63 consecutive years and over 2300 performances of Mark Twain Tonight!, it could be said that the late actor Hal Holbrook came as close to the early American touring actor as anyone on the modern-day stage. In fact, his onstage
portrayal of author and humorist Mark Twain may be the longest running show in theatre history. It was developed in a Greenwich Village nightclub in 1956 before landing on “The Ed Sullivan Show.” From there, Holbrook opened the show offBroadway in 1959 to rave review followed by a State Department-sponsored tour of Europe in 1960. In 1966, Holbrook’s performance garnered a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play, which was followed in 1967 by a 90-minute television special on CBS, which was seen by 30 million people. When Holbrook decided to retire the show in 2017, his first instinct was to thank the people who came to see him throughout the years. They kept him going. The Mark Twain Tonight! Trust was set up to continue Hal’s legacy with Mark Twain. We want to thank especially The Booking Group who represented him in the early days, first by Klaus Kolmar, then under Meredith Blair and Richard Rundle who will continue to represent the show. And finally, his production stage managers Bennett Thomson and, when he retired, Richard Costabile who toured with Hal for decades.
MICHAEL WILSON (Creative Consultant) collaborations with Richard Thomas span more than 20 years, from Danton’s Death which he produced for the Alley in 1992 with Thomas in the title role, to the 2015 Off-Broadway revival he directed Thomas in of Arthur Miller’s Incident at Vichy (available on Broadway HD). The two share Hartford Stage as an artistic home; there Wilson saw Thomas in his title role performances — Peer Gynt, Hamlet and Richard III, directed by Mark Lamos — and later, as Artistic Director (1998-2011), he produced Thomas in Edward Albee’s Tiny Alice (1998) and as Tennessee Williams in A Distant Country Called Youth (2002). Wilson also produced the late Hal Holbrook at Hartford Stage in Our Town (2007) and Mark Twain Tonight! (2012). A Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle award-winning director, Wilson’s Broadway productions include Gore Vidal’s The Best Man, Old Acquaintance, Enchanted April, and Horton Foote’s Dividing the Estate and The Trip to Bountiful, which garnered a TONY Award for star Cicely Tyson. Off-Broadway, Wilson has directed premieres by Eve Ensler, Marcus Gardley, Rebecca Gilman, David Grimm, John Guare, Beth Henley, and Christopher Shinn, as well as revivals by Tennessee Williams and Lanford Wilson. He commissioned, developed and directed Horton Foote’s 3-part, 9-hour play The Orphans’ Home Cycle, winning Lortel and NY Drama and Outer Critics Circle Best Play awards. Wilson made his screen directing debut with the Lifetime-Ostar Productions television movie adaptation of The Trip to Bountiful, earning DGA and NAACP Image Award nominations for Outstanding Director. A Morehead-Scholar graduate in Dramatic Art from UNC-Chapel Hill, Wilson holds a Honorary Doctorate from the University of Hartford and is the recipient of the Princess Grace Statue, Daryl Roth Creative Spirit, SDC President’s, and National
Association of Governor’s Awards for Distinguished Service to the Arts.
BRIAN PRATHER (Scenic Design). OffBroadway work includes Daniel’s Husband (Primary Stages), Mrs. Warren’s Profession (Gingold Theatre Group), Becoming Dr. Ruth (Westside Theatre), Freud’s Last Session (New World Stages), and many other productions. Brian has worked internationally at the Chung-mu Hall (South Korea). Regionally at TheaterWorks Hartford, Asolo Rep., Alley Theatre, Goodspeed Musicals, Barrington Stage Co., Virginia Rep., Broad Stage, Mercury Theatre, Delaware Theatre Co., Penguin Rep., among many others. Received the Joseph Jefferson Award (Chicago), two Berkshire Theatre Critics Assoc. Awards, and nominated for an Emmy (New England) for the design of “The Kate” concert series on Public Television. Brian is Asst. Professor of Scene Design at Central Connecticut State University and an Associate Artist at Barrington Stage Co. www.brianprather.com.
ANTHONY PEARSON (Lighting Design) is a New York-based Lighting Designer whose projects include: Tarzan (Germany), Revolution, A Celebration of Prince (NCL Aqua), Distant Thunder (New York), Red Bucket Follies (Broadway), Jekyll & Hyde (Australia), Disney on Broadway (Broadway, Buffalo NY), Apollo 11 50th Anniversary at Washington Monument, Freer Sackler Gallery Re-Opening, Boeing 100th Anniversary at Boeing Field (59 Productions), Tug of War: Foreign Fire (Chicago Shakespeare), Ah Wilderness!, Other Desert Cities, My Brilliant Divorce, Hamlet; Prince of Cuba (Asolo Rep), Anything Goes (US Tour), Fiends the Freaquel & Celtic Fyre (Busch Gardens Williamsburg). In addition to his own work, Anthony has collaborated extensively with Broadway Designers to provided Associate Lighting Design services, Credits include: Once Upon A One More Time, New York New York, Some Like It Hot (Broadway), Beetlejuice (Broadway, Australia), Diana (Broadway, Netflix), Frozen (Broadway, US Tour, Netherlands, Japan, Australia), Hello Dolly (Broadway), Kinky Boots (Broadway, US Tour, Australia), Tuck Everlasting (Broadway), Chicago (US Tour, Spain, Argentina, Netherlands), On Your Feet (Broadway), An American in Paris (Broadway, Paris), Pippin (Broadway, US Tour, Japan), Porgy & Bess, We Will Rock You (US Tour), Finian’s Rainbow, Boeing Boeing (Broadway), The Drowsy Chaperone (US Tour, West End) and Rent (Asia Tour). Other projects include New Year’s Eve Celebrations from Times Square NY (2007–2015) and his hometown of Sydney, Australia (2004).
SAM FLEMING (Costume Design). Her costume designs have been seen at theatres across the country including the Los Angeles Opera, San Francisco Opera (world premiere of Dead Man Walking), Alley Theatre in Houston, Arizona Theatre Co., Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre Company, Playmaker’s Repertory Company, Hartford Stage Company, Denver Center Theatre
Company, Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival Peterborough Players, Center Stage in Baltimore, Skylight Opera Theatre, Texas Opera Theatre, ACT Seattle, and Berkeley Repertory Theatre (Craig Lucas’ award-winning Reckless). She designed over 50 productions for Milwaukee Repertory Theater during her 14 years with the company. Off-Broadway, she has worked with the Mint Theatre Co, Pearl Theatre, Manhattan Class Company and The Womens’ Project. Sam has designed for both Juilliard Opera and Queens College. She served as US Associate Costume Designer for The Phantom of the Opera on Broadway and tours. Currently serving as US Associate for Beauty and the Beast, Les Misérables and A Beautiful Noise tours.
SHANNON SLATON (Sound Design) on Broadway has designed The Illusionists and My Window: Melissa Etheridge He has designed many national tours including Elf; Shrek; Once on this Island; The Producers; Kiss Me, Kate; Noise/Funk; The Full Monty; Contact; A Chorus Line; Tap Dogs; Sweeney Todd; The Wizard of Oz; The Drowsy Chaperone; and The Wedding Singer. Shows he has mixed on Broadway include Springsteen on Broadway, Man of La Mancha, Bombay Dreams, A Christmas Carol, Sweet Charity, Jersey Boys, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, The Drowsy Chaperone, Spring Awakening, Fela!, Anything Goes, Annie, Legally Blonde, and Cabaret
LUC VERSCHUEREN (Wig Design). Broadway/West End: Water for Elephants; Back to the Future; A Beautiful Noise; Stranger Things: The First Shadow; Funny Girl; Tina–The Tina Turner Musical (Drama Desk); The Hills of California; Leopoldstadt; To Kill A Mockingbird; The Music Man; Hello, Dolly!; Girl From The North Country; Les Misérables; Matilda; Billy Elliot. Film/TV: “Only Murders in the Building,” “The Gilded Age,” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”
BRIAN J. L’ECUYER (Production Supervisor). Happy to again be touring with Mr. Thomas (“3rd time is a charm”), he began his touring career with John Astin’s one man show, Edgar Allan Poe— Once Upon a Midnight. Brian has toured throughout the U.S, Japan, Ireland and Australia.
RYAN PARLIAMENT (Company Manager) is excited to be part of Mark Twain Tonight! National tours include Les Misérables, The Sound of Music, Dirty Dancing, The Bridges of Madison County, NETworks presents Disney’s Beauty and the Beast and Riverdance. He earned his M.B.A from the University of North Florida, completed undergraduate studies at the University of Central Florida.
THE BOOKING GROUP (Tour Booking Agency) has represented 28 Tony Award® winning Best Musicals and Plays. Current tours include The Book of Mormon, Boop! Buena Vista Social Club, Chicago, Funny Girl, Hadestown, Hamilton, Harry Potter & the Cursed Child, Just In Time, Mamma Mia!, Richard Thomas in Mark Twain Tonight!, MJ The Musical, Mrs. Doubtfire,
The Notebook, Oh Mary!, Operation Mincemeat, Parade, Real Woman Have Curves, Six, Some Like It Hot, Suffs, Tina — The Tina Turner Musical, Waitress and The Wiz
GENTRY & ASSOCIATES (General Manager) has managed nearly 250 national and international touring theatrical productions over the past 25 years. Current and upcoming productions include A Beautiful Noise, Beetlejuice, The Book of Mormon, Boop! The Musical, Buena Vista Social Club, The Great Gatsby, Les Misérables, Mark Twain Tonight!, Cameron Mackintosh presents Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera, The Sound of Music, Water for Elephants and The Wiz
KENT McINGVALE & COMPANY (Tour Press and Marketing) currently leads the marketing and press campaigns for the national tours of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music, Mark Twain Tonight!, A Magical Cirque Christmas, Mannheim Steamroller Christmas, and Dog Man: The Musical!. Recent projects include marketing and press campaigns for the national tours of Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, Hairspray, Jersey Boys (14 seasons on tour), Beautiful – the Carole King Musical (6 seasons on tour), and Summer: The Donna Summer Musical. www.kentmco.com
HANNAH ROSENTHAL (Executive Producer). has worked with NETworks Presentations since 2018. Current tours: Book of Mormon and Life of Pi. Broadway: Buena Vista Social Club. Upcoming: Purple Rain. She is the Co-Founder of CreateHER and proud graduate of the University of Michigan. Love to Alex and her family.
NETWORKS PRESENTATIONS (Producer). Current and upcoming productions include A Beautiful Noise, Beetlejuice, The Book of Mormon, Boop! The Musical, Buena Vista Social Club, The Great Gatsby, Les Misérables, Mark Twain Tonight!, Cameron Mackintosh presents Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera, The Sound of Music, Water for Elephants and The Wiz. networkstours.com
OPENING NIGHT AUGUST 20, 2025
STAFF FOR Mark Twain Tonight!
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
Hannah Rosenthal
GENERAL MANAGEMENT
Gentry & Associates
Gregory Vander Ploeg
Madeline McCluskey Shira Wolf
PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT
NETworks Presentations
Jason Juenker
Hector Guivas Alex Williams
TOUR MARKETING & PUBLICITY
Kent McIngvale & Company
www.kentmco.com
TOUR BOOKING AGENCY
THE BOOKING GROUP
Meredith Blair
Rich Rundle, Brian Brooks, Jonathan Pearson & Maryruth Grabez thebookinggroup.com
Production Supervisor
Company Manager
Hair and Wig
Designer
Brian J. L’Ecuyer
Ryan Parliment
Campbell Young Associates/ Luc Verschueren
Print Design Ma2La,Kelly Anne Hanrahan
Print Design
Photography Julieta Cervantes, T. Charles Erickson
Video Production
Website
Social Media Manager
Harry McFann
Peter Halverson
Andy Drachenberg
National PR Polk & Co, Matt Polk, Alana Karpoff
Safety Consultant
Accounting
Bryan Huneycutt
NETworks Presentations LLC
Legal Services F. Richard Pappas, Esq.,
HR Support K+K Reset, LLC
Housing
Road Concierge
Travel Agency Kessler & Co. / Direct Travel
FOR NETWORKS PRESENTATIONS
Chief Executive Officer Orin Wolf
President/Chief Production Officer Seth Wenig
Chief Operating Officer
Chief Financial Officer
Business Affairs
Executive Producers
Sr. Director/Finance
Controller
Director of Tour Accounting
Margaret Daniel
Scott Levine
Scott W. Jackson
Mimi Intagliata, Hannah Rosenthal,Trinity Wheeler
John Kinna
Jennifer Gifford
Laura S. Carey
Tax Director Pat Guerieri
Sr. Tax Accountant
Tax Assistant
Matthew Peerbolte
Deborah Brown
Accounts Payables & Receivables Clerk Lisa Loveless
Sr. Director, Booking & Engagements
Directors, Booking & Engagements
Amanda Laird
Stacey Burns, Colin Byrne
Booking Assistant Lily Flippen
Director of Sales
Director of Marketing
Zach Stevenson
Heather Hess
Sr. Director/General Management Gregory Vander Ploeg
General Managers Madeline McCluskey, Rebecca Shubart, Steven Varon-Moore
Associate General Manager Amanda Lenti, Shira Wolf
Sr. Director/Production Management
Sr. Production Manager
Production Managers
Jason Juenker
Hector Guivas
Matthew Reardon, Alex Williams
Associate Production Manager Aimeé Mangual Pagán
Technical Director pesci
Production Coordinator Gina Boccolucci
NETworks Asset Manager
Richard Haug
Director of Operations Pearce Landry-Wegener
Workers Compensation Coordinator Kayla Rooplal
People Operations/Payroll Manager
Sara Clayton
Executive Assistant Isabella Schiavon
Office Manager
Adminstrative Assistant
Music Coordinator
Michelle Adye
Aidan Herman
John Mezzio
Audio Equipment provided by Masque. Costume prep provided by Eric Winterling Inc.
Rehearsed at Gibney Dance Rehearsal Studios in New York
SPECIAL THANKS TO
TheaterWorks, Hatford, CT and Jeff Griffin, Managing Director
Mark Twain House and Museum, Hartford, CT; Christielites; Klaus Kolmar, Richard Rundle, Meredith Blair, Brian Brooks and Richard Costabile.
Permission granted by The Mark Twain Tonight! Trust
Insurance Broker Services
EPIC Entertainment & Sports
Financial Services and banking arrangements by Customers Bank twainplay.com Facebook, Instagram: @TwainPlay



The use of any recording device, either audio or video, and the taking of photographs, either with or without flash, is strictly prohibited. Please turn off all electronic devices such as cellular phones, beepers and watches.
UNITED SCENIC ARTISTS represents the designers and scenic painters for the American Theatre. The Director are members of the Stage Directors and Society, an independent national labor union.
DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGES THE FOLLOWING SUPPORT IN ITS 2025/26 BROADWAY SEASON
• LATECOMERS and those exiting the theatre are seated at predetermined breaks in designated areas.
• PHOTOS, RECORDING & CELL PHONE USE are prohibited.
• CHILDREN 6+ are welcome in our theatres and must be ticketed.
• DRINKS are allowed in provided containers.
• ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES, LARGE PRINT PROGRAMS & BOOSTER SEATS are available in most theatres. Ask an usher to direct you.
• BRAILLE PROGRAMS are available with 2 weeks’ notice to amcmullen@dcpa.org or 303.446.4836
Members of Denver Theatrical Wardrobe, Wigs, Hair and Make-up, IATSE Local 719 Appleton, Robin Asselin, Lauren Bassignani, Julie Clough, Vonnie Cory, Craig Cory, Cyndie Davies, Steve Davis, Anne Dore, Carolyn Elwood, Liz Guess, Deborah Gunter, AnnSue Holabird, Judy Holabird, William Knabb, Amoreena Krimbel, Amber LaCasse, Lauren Lambert, Kelsey
Lambert, Leslie Lambert, Sarah Martin, Loren Millikan-Hale, Sharon Morrow, Callie Nelson, Timothy Parsons Wagner, Lisa Payne, Laura Poole, Dave Richards, Alan Sorce, Marisa Spadi, Elisa Tepel, Amy Vlasova, Eliza Watts, Nicole Williams, Kami Wilson, Barbara
DPAC House Crew
Mark Anthony Perry Elliott Kiko Marra Allen Olmstead
Albert Sainz Sr. Josh Thurman Derek Tovar David A. Wilson

The Denver Performing Arts Complex is owned and operated by Denver Arts & Venues for the City and County of Denver. City and County of Denver
Mike Johnston, Mayor Denver Arts & Venues
Gretchen Hollrah, Executive Director
Jen Morris, Deputy Executive Director
Tariana Navas-Nievas, Deputy Executive Director
Denver Arts & Venues, Arts Complex Operations
Jody Grossman, Venue Director
Todd Medley, Facilities Superintendent
Kelly Graham, Safety, Security and Garage Operations Manager
Carol Krueger, Patron Services Manager artscomplex.com | (720) 865-4220
For immediate assistance & security (720) 865-4200

BY LISA BORNSTEIN


WWhat makes something obsolete – and conversely, what makes it a classic? The very premise of Seven Brides for Seven Brothers – the abduction of young women to care for the brothers – keeps it off most stages these days. The King and I requires heavy alterations to overcome its condescension toward the culture of Southeast Asia.
One might guess The Music Man, nearly 70 years old, would fall into that category. Meredith Willson’s 1957 musical was drawn from his own childhood, as well as his days playing the piccolo for John Philip Sousa’s legendary band. In tiny, fictional River City, Iowa, con man Prof. Harold Hill rolls into town, promising to fix an entire town’s problem by teaching its youth to play band instruments.
But director Matt Lenz sees much relevance in it to our present day.
“I do think there is something to be heard differently today in terms of what’s happening in society,” Lenz says. ”It’s a little bit stuck in its ways, and a little fractured, and a little cynical,” he says of River City. “And I love that the arts can come in and get them to harmonize, literally, and to change their minds”
The Denver tour is an entirely new production, a partnership between director Lenz and choreographer Josh Bergasse who previously collaborated on the 2017 production of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
“It’s chockfull of those amazing songs,” Lenz says. “The first thing I thought was I need somebody like Josh to do this with me because there are these huge, athletic, fantastic dances in it.”
With a 34-member cast and 10 who are dancers first, the show is bringing back the full choreography that used to be a hallmark of musical theatre.
“We’ve got to make sure we have a crew of real dancers in this, in kind of the old-fashioned way they did musicals,” Lenz says. “I don’t think there are tons of shows on the road these days that surprise people with that full-on dance.”
While little had to be eliminated from the show for today’s audiences, the designers met with an eye toward how today’s audiences would see, hear, and feel, and what they could do to celebrate the musical’s core while reaching those theatergoers.


“The first thing we talked about was the rhythm of the show, which starts right off the bat with the train,” Lenz explains. Its rhythm serves to underlie the heart of the show — a small town that doesn’t want to be thrown off its rhythm.
I love that the arts can come in and get [the residents of River City] to harmonize, literally, and to change their minds. — MATT LENZ, DIRECTOR
“‘Rock Island’ is dialogue that…becomes musicalized when the train starts up and you start to hear the rhythm of the train,” Lenz says of the opening number. “I want to find a way to carry that through even more. Is there something to keep them in a kind of rhythmic lockstep? There’s something about that town just clicking along, and everything being the way it is, and then that relaxing, and then that scaring some people to death.”
And that’s a sensation that never falls into obsolescence.
MEREDITH WILLSON’S THE MUSIC MAN
FEB 27 – MAR 1
BUELL THEATRE
ASL Interpreted, Audio Described, and Open Captioned performance: Feb 28 at 2pm
READ THE FULL ARTICLE

BY JOANNE OSTROW




When her play, Cowboys and East Indians, has its world premiere, playwright Nina McConigley thinks it’s going to be mind-blowing for her mother, who was born in India and lives in Wyoming, to see actors wearing saris onstage at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts.
Growing up in Casper, as “the other kind of Indian in Wyoming,” McConigley said, there wasn’t another sari in sight. Nor an Indian grocery store or restaurant. Her Indian/Irish-American family moved to Wyoming when she was a baby. Her mother found it difficult to adjust to the emptiness and new culture, while Nina grew up feeling confused and isolated.
“The play isn’t so much about race; it’s about not seeing a version of yourself and what that does,” McConigley said. “Wyoming is one of the least racially diverse states, and it is a different kind of growing up.”
She hopes the play, co-adapted by Matthew Spangler from her semi-biographical short story collection of the same name, reinterprets the American West for audiences. “I hope it gives people a different look at Wyoming and the idea of rural immigration.”
Like her main character, “I did live back home with my family when my mom had cancer. When I wrote the short story, it was about anxiety for me. So much of my sense of Indian-ness was through my mom and I did think, if I lose her, I don’t know what’s going to happen.”
Now a professor at Colorado State University, her new novel, How to Commit A Postcolonial Murder, will be published simultaneously with the world premiere of Cowboys and East Indians, which was a hit at the Denver Center Theatre Company’s 2024 Colorado New Play Summit, delivering a smart mix of culture-clash comedy and pathos that sparked tears and laughter in a staged reading.
McConigley and Spangler met in their hometown of




Casper and followed each other through middle and high school, each harboring a love of the West, the sparse landscape and the people. DCPA Director of Literary Programs Leean Kim Torske, the show’s dramaturg, is also from Wyoming and co-commissioned McConigley and Spangler to adapt the short stories for the Denver Center Theatre Company.
Best known for his stage adaptation of The Kite Runner, Spangler is a playwright and professor of performance studies at San José State University where he teaches courses in how refugees and asylum-seekers are represented through the performing arts. One of his other plays, The Beekeeper of Aleppo, co-written with Nesrin Alrefaai and based on the bestselling novel by Christy Lefteri, will receive its second UK tour this spring.
When she wrote Cowboys and East Indians, McConigley said, she never thought of the story as a play.
Spangler recalled the pair participated in a 2022 panel discussion in Casper and hypothetically talked about how they might approach adapting Nina’s collection of short stories for the stage. Eventually, this hypothetical discussion would lead to a real commission and collaboration.
Although popular culture is full of Irish, Italian, Chinese, Jewish, and other New York City immigration stories, McConigley notes a lack of stories about rural immigrants. “While it is difficult being an immigrant anywhere,” she said, “unlike cities with diverse ethnic populations, Casper is very monocultural. I just wanted to write about my experience of growing up, brown in Wyoming, really.”
When there is no reflection of yourself in the world around you, your identity is in question. “There was a brief moment as a kid when I [described myself as] ‘Arapaho,’” McConigley said. “Easier than explaining…”
For Spangler, who has generations of Wyoming fami-




ly history, “the play essentially is about loneliness, how we deal with loneliness, and how we try to create senses of belonging to mitigate loneliness. Sometimes those spaces of belonging are risky.”
“There’s something about [the Wyoming] landscape that’s beautiful, striking, and also its own metaphor for loneliness,” Spangler said.
McConigley recalls visiting numerous book clubs around Wyoming when Cowboys and East Indians came out, “and having many people say to me, ‘I’ve never thought about race in Wyoming.’ And I just thought, ‘What a privilege, you never had to. You just aren’t in the minority.’”

The play isn’t so much about race; it’s about not seeing a version of yourself and what that does.







— NINA MCCONIGLEY, AUTHOR OF “COWBOYS AND EAST INDIANS”
For his part, Spangler said, “to be able to write a play set in our hometown and work with people I’ve known for decades is something I never thought I’d be able to do.”
Cowboys and East Indians is ultimately a hopeful play that’s packed with wide-ranging emotions and that subverts expectations in multiple ways. “I was surprised people cried during the New Play Summit,” McConigley said. “The play is hopeful. It asks you to look at those around you, and you don’t know the story within them. You just don’t know. I think the play surprises a lot of people. Watching the audience was so interesting, you can visibly see the audience stressed, then relieved, then a little bit confused….”
Both express gratitude to the Colorado New Play Summit and Denver Center Theatre Company. “We learned so much from that workshop,” McConigley said. “The fact that they financially supported us to write this play….” As a mother of young children and a full-time professor, she said, there’s no way she could have done it otherwise. “I’m definitely wearing a sari on opening night. My mom, too.”
JAN 16 – MAR 1 • SINGLETON THEATRE
ASL Interpreted and Audio Described performance: Feb 1 at 1:30pm Stay for a Post-Show Discussion: Jan 28, Feb 12, Feb 24
We build a respectful and empathetic culture through our active commitment to equity, diversity, inclusion and accessibility.
2.
We produce our best possible work together by engaging people with diverse perspectives, lived experiences and talents around our shared goals.
3.
We cultivate open, responsive, affirming relationships and partnerships for a greater collective impact.
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We embrace innovation and imagination in our daily work to advance our mission.
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We act responsibly, with honesty, accountability and transparency.
We prioritize the wellbeing of our team, our finances and the environment to ensure our thriving future.
Learn more about what drives the DCPA, and where we’re going, at denvercenter.org/plan





EXCERPTED FROM A 2023 APPLAUSE ARTICLE BY
MISHA BERSON
Need a refresher course on who the “six” wives of King Henry VIII were? Here’s a quick rundown:



Henry’s first and longest union (two decades) was with a smart, assertive Spanish princess, Catherine of Aragon, who despite many pregnancies only produced one viable child with the monarch, christened Mary. Assuming Catherine would never produce a male heir to his throne, Henry divorced her.
Wife No. 2 was lovely Anne Boleyn, who also gave birth to a daughter (the future Queen Elizabeth I), but alas, no son. To be rid of her, Henry accused Anne of adultery and though historians now doubt her guilt, she was tried and executed.


Next up? Jane Seymour. She produced a male heir, who became King Edward VI — but she died 12 days after his birth.
This condensed version omits a lot of political and personal rivalry among Henry, his wives, and their relations and courtiers. But what you get from SIX is its own unique take on the women’s experiences and a big jolt of pizazz: sparkly royal mini-dresses and teeny crowns, catchy tunes and punchy lyrics as the wives (or ex-wives, they remind you) belt out solos, boogie and are each other’s backup singers.

SIX JAN 7 – 11, 2026
BUELL THEATRE
The king then turned to Anne of Cleves, a sort of mail order German bride. Henry loved Thomas Holbein’s flattering portrait of her but rejected her in the flesh. Uncrowned, her marriage annulled, Anne still enjoyed a cushy life at court — and unlike poor Anne Boleyn, kept her head on.
On to Katherine Howard, a fun-loving young woman Henry called his “blushing rose without a thorn.” That is, until dalliances with two other men led to her own execution.
Catherine Parr was his final bride and reportedly a faithful nurse to the ailing monarch. (After his death she remarried, only to perish in childbirth herself soon after.)
ASL Interpreted, Audio Described and Open Captioned performance: Jan 10 at 2pm
READ THE FULL ARTICLE















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CCBS Colorado’s Dillon Thomas is known as Your Reporter in Northern Colorado, but around here, he’s better known as Colorado’s connection to the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. CBS Colorado’s team of Your Reporters covers Colorado’s vibrant arts scene like no one else and Dillon’s coverage of the DCPA is unique and far-reaching. His commitment has put him on the road with America’s top traveling productions, including MJ the musical, TINA — The Tina Turner Musical and SIX. “Telling the stories of these extraordinary performers and showing our viewers the long hours behind the scenes and the intense effort these shows require is one of my great honors,” Thomas says. “I’m very proud to represent CBS Colorado and showcase all the incredible talent that the DCPA brings to our theatres throughout the year.”
































































We are so grateful to our partners and to the thousands of donors and event participants over the years that have helped to improve and enrich the lives of those in our community.
— THE DENVER POST COMMUNITY FOUNDATION

PROUD SEASON SPONSOR OF THE DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
TThe Denver Post is proud to support the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, both through sponsorship of its acclaimed theatre productions as well as with grant funding through The Denver Post Community Foundation. The longstanding partnership with DCPA has given countless individuals of all ages, the opportunity to experience and develop a lifelong appreciation for the arts.
The Denver Post Community Foundation believes in giving back to the communities in which it serves and proudly supports hundreds of nonprofits’ programs and events. Support is given in many ways: through The Denver Post Community Foundation, employee volunteering, and inkind advertising.
The Denver Post Community Foundation, a recognized 501 (c)(3) nonprofit agency, raises funds through individual and corporate donations, through its unique Signature Events and Programs and through the annual holiday Season To Share campaign. The overall mission is to improve and enrich the lives of those in the Denver community through support of programs that benefit arts and culture; children and youth; education and literacy; and the provision of basic human services. To date, more than $13,250,000 has been raised and distributed.
• Signature Events and Programs
These well-established events and programs have become staples in the community. They offer partners, participants and volunteers something unique each year. They include: Pen & Podium Literary Lecture Series, Passport To The Arts, and the Colorado State Spelling Bee
• The Denver Post Season To Share
The Denver Post Season To Share holiday fundraising campaign supports metro Denver nonprofit organizations that help low-income children, families, and individuals move out of poverty toward stability and self-sufficiency. Each year, grants are awarded to more than 50 deserving nonprofits with programs focused on children and youth, health and wellness, homelessness, and hunger. These grants are made possible through the generosity of Denver Post readers, the broader community, corporate donors, and our valued partners. Donations are matched and accepted year-round. To learn more, visit seasontoshare.com .
Together We Can Make A Difference denverpostcommunity.com






From intimate vows to grand celebrations, our theatrically trained designers will set the stage for your perfect day. With personalized care every step of the way, we’re here to ensure your “I do” gets the standing ovation it deserves.


[The arts] inform, inspire, and uplift while bringing the community together.
— ANDY AYE, CO/AZ/NV/NM MARKET LEADER, GIS
TThe arts are a significant part of making Denver an amazing place to live and work. U.S. Bank believes in the power of play, which includes the arts, because it brings joy, encourages creativity, teaches problem-solving skills, and builds emotional learning. That is why U.S. Bank is a long-time supporter of the magnificent programs and spectacular performances at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA).
The arts educate, promote understanding, broaden our perspectives, and enable communities to share rich cultural experiences. Denver is fortunate to have a thriving arts community, which is home to some of the nation’s finest theatres, museums, and artists.
“We’re proud to serve the DCPA because it provides the best in live entertainment, in addition to education for all ages through the art of theatre,” said Andy Aye, Global Industrials and Services Market Leader for Colorado, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico. “We know the critical role that the arts play in our society. They inform, inspire and uplift while bringing the community together.”
In 2023, the U.S. Bank Foundation committed $96.4 million in corporate contributions to nonprofit organizations across the entire enterprise, $3.1 million of which was invested to Colorado nonprofits. Those contributions had an emphasis on community development diversity and inclusion, financial education, and the environment. Additionally, its employees volunteered more than 360,000 hours, demonstrating that employee engagement is a major component of its community success.
“The DCPA brings us together to appreciate our diversity of thought, perspective, and talent,” said Aye. “I am always amazed at how much we share when we all laugh or gasp during a key moment in a performance. It is a sense of participation and belonging that strengthens our community. Supporting the DCPA is making an investment in ourselves, the arts, and the place we call home.”



DCPA
Janice Sinden President & CEO
Donna Hendricks Executive Assistant, President & CEO
Julie Schumaker Manager, Board Relations
ACCOUNTING & FINANCE
Jane Williams CFAO
Sara Brandenburg Director, Accounting Services
Jennifer Jeffrey Director, Financial Planning & Analysis
Kristina Monge Associate Accountant
Rachel Rodriguez Manager, Accounting
Jennifer Siemers Director, Accounting
BROADWAY & CABARET
John Ekeberg Executive Director
Administration
Ashley Brown Business Manager
Alicia Bruce General Manager
Lisa Prater Operations Manager
Garner Galleria Theatre
Abel Becerra Technical Director
Jason Begin+, Anna Hookana+ Core Stagehands
DEVELOPMENT
Jamie Clements Vice President
Sarah Darlene Manager, Grants & Reports
Julia Dunn Manager, Donor Engagement & Legacy Giving
Kara Erickson-Stiemke Manager, Annual Giving & Stewardship
Emily Kettlewell Director, Operations
Caitie Maxwell Senior Director, Major Gifts
Marc Ravenhill Director, Donor Relations
Sarah Smith Coordinator
Megan Stewart Associate Director, Special Events
EDUCATION & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Allison Watrous Executive Director
Stuart Barr Technical Director
Leslie Channell Director, Business Operations
Lyndsay Corbett Teaching Artist & Manager, Bobby G
María Corral Director, Community Engagement
Heather Curran Teaching Artist & Manager, Playwriting
Elliot Davis Evening Registrar & Office Coordinator
Rachel Ducat Executive Assistant & Business Manager
Rya Dyes Registrar & On-Site Class Manager
Gavin Juckette Teaching Artist & Manager, TYA Engagement & Music
Timothy McCracken Head of Acting
Rick Mireles Manager, Community Engagement
David Saphier Teaching Artist & Manager, In-School Programming
Charlotte Talbert Librarian
Rachel Taylor Teaching Artist & Manager, Literary Engagement & Resiliency
Justin Walvoord Teaching Artist & Manager, Shakespeare in the Parking Lot
Samuel Wood Director, Education & Curriculum Development
EVENT SERVICES
Tara Miller Event Sales & Operations Director
Brook Nichols Event Technical Director
Aidan Gagner Video Engineer
Michael Harris Lighting Designer
Stori Heleen-O’Foley Event Technical Manager
Shane Hotle Audio Engineer
Kris Lawan,
Savannah Singleton Event Captains
Danielle Levine, Blair Quiring Senior Sales & Event Managers
Jacob Noon, Phil Rohrbach Sales & Event Managers
Benjamin Peitzer Event Technical Lead
Kaden Richter Audio Engineer
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Lisa Roebuck Vice President For security purposes, the IT team has been omitted.
MARKETING & SALES
Angela Lakin Vice President
Whitney Testa Executive Assistant, Marketing & Broadway
Communications
Suzanne Yoe Director
Heidi Bosk, Brittany Gutierrez Associate Directors
Todd Metcalf Media Producer
Creative Services
Kyle Malone Director
Sofia Contreras,
Lucas Kreitler Graphic Designers
Paul Koob Senior Graphic Designer
Noelle Norris Traffic Coordinator
Digital
Michael Ryan Leuthner Director
Erin Bunyard Senior Strategist
Harper Anne Finch Manager, Social Media
Hannah Selwyn Manager, Email
Sergio von Kretschmann Manager, Web
Insight & Strategy
Emily Kent Director
Dan McNulty Analyst
Marketing
Claire Graves Director
Emily Lozow Associate Director
Maddie Lamb, Emmy VanLangevelde, Julie Whelan, Managers
Mikayla Woods Coordinator
Ticketing & Audience Services
Jennifer Lopez Director
Jessica Alverson*, Zeah Edmonds*,
Lauren Estes*, Amanda Foust, Jen Gray*,
Noah Jungferman*, Oliver Knight*, Reagan
Luchte, Brett O’Neill*, Claudia Ruiz*,
Holly Stigen*, Asheala Tasker*,
Rob Warner* Ticket Agents
Kirsten Anderson*, Scott Lix*,
Liz Sieroslawski*, Greg Swan* Subscription Agents
Jon Collins Manager, Subscription
D.J. Dennis*, Edmund Gurule*,
Hayley Solano*, Andrew Sullivan*, Bronwen VanOrdstrand*, Alfonso Vazquez*, Max McCord* Counter/Show Leads
Billy Dutton Associate Director, Operations
Katie Davis, Claire Hayes, Ella Mann,
Lane Randall Managers, Box Office
Chris Leech VIP Ticketing Associate
Katie Spanos Associate Director, Subscriber Services
Group Sales
Jessica Bergin Associate Director
Elias Lopez,
Valery Owen Associates, Group Sales & Education

OFF-CENTER
Charlie Miller Executive Director & Curator
OPERATIONS
Sarah Arzberger, Danielle Freeman Managers
Aaron Chavez Lead
Ruben Cruz, Jordan Latouche Engineers
Simone Gordon Director
Kyle Greufe Senior Analyst
Maria Herwagen Junior Analyst
Brandon LeMarr Associate Director
Alison Orthel, Tara Perticone Analysts
Joseph Reecher Senior Engineer
PEOPLE & CULTURE
Laura Maresca CPCO
Equity & Organization Culture
Seán Kroll Specialist
Human Resources
Brian Carter Senior Business Partner
Andrew Guilder Recruiter & HR Generalist
Michaela Johnson Mailroom Assistant
Paul Johnson Manager, Payroll & Compliance
Jocelyn Martinez Business Partner
Kinsey Scholl Manager, Operations
THEATRE COMPANY
Administration
Charles Varin Managing Director
Emily Diaz Business Admin./ Asst. Company Manager
Jessica Eckenrod Line Producer
Alex Koszewski Company Manager
Ann Marshall General Manager
Artistic
Chris Coleman Artistic Director
Grady Soapes Artistic Producer & Casting Director
Leean Kim Torske Director, Literary Programs
Madison Cook-Hines Literary Assistant
Costume Crafts
Kevin Copenhaver Director
Chris Campbell Assistant
Costume Shop
Janet MacLeod Director/Design Associate
Meghan Anderson Doyle Design Associate
Katarina Kosmopoulos First Hand
Ingrid Ludeke, Carolyn Plemitscher Drapers
House Crew
Douglas Taylor+ Supervisor
James Berman+, Will King, Dave Mazzeno+, Kyle Moore+, Heather
Sparling+ Matt Wagner+ Stagehands
Joseph Price+, Kelley Reznik+ Technicians
Lighting Design
Charles MacLeod Director
Connor Baker+ Production Electrician
Lily Bradford Assistant
Paint Shop
Kristin Hamer MacFarlane Charge Scenic Artist
Melanie Rentschler, Sasha Seaman Scenic Artists
Production
Jeff Gifford Director
Julie Brou
Scene Shop
Eric Moore Technical Director
Albert “Stub” Allison, Robert L. Orzolek, Josh Prues Associate Technical Directors
Jeremy Banthoff, Tyler D. Clark, Kyle Scoggins Scenic Technicians
Wynn Pastor Scenic Technician & Purchasing Agent
Louis Fernandez III Lead Scenic Technician
Brian “Marco” Markiewicz Lead Carpenter
Scenic Design
Lisa Orzolek Director
Nicholas Renaud Assistant
Sound Design & Technology
Alex Billman Supervisor
Meagan Holdeman+, Timothy Schoeberl+, Dimitri Soto+ Technicians
Stage Management
Anne Jude Supervisor
Chandra R.M. Anthenill, Wayne Breyer, Corin Davidson, Kristin Dwyer, Elizabeth Ann Goodman, Harper Hadley, Sage Hughes, Nick Mason, Melissa J. Michelson, Christine Rose Moore, Nick Nyquist, Brooke Redler, Malia Stoner Stage Managers
Sage Goetsch, Dylan Hudson, Hannah Iverson, Casey Pitts Apprentices
Wardrobe
Heidi Echtenkamp Supervisor
Robin Appleton^, Amber Krimbel^, Lauren LaCasse^, Lisa Parsons Wagner^, Nicole Watts^, Kami Williams^ Dressers
Wigs
Diana Ben-Kiki Supervisor
Abby Schmidt^, Marisa Sorce^ Hair/Wig Technicians
VENUE OPERATIONS
Glen Lucero Vice President
Kristi Horvath Director
Merry Davis Financial Manager
Jane Deegan Administrator
Samantha Egle Manager, Event Operations
Facilities
Craig Smith Director
Dwight Barela, Mark Dill, Bryan Faciane, John Howard, Iver Johnson Engineers
Saleem As-Saboor, Adriana Fuentes, Carmen Molina, Judith Primero Molina,
Juan Loya Molina, Blanca Primero Custodians
Michael Kimbrough Manager, Engineering
Oscar Fraire Manager, Custodial
Brian McClain Supervisor, Custodial
Patron Experience
Kaylyn Kriaski Manager, Patron Experience
LeiLani Lynch, Aaron McMullen, Stacy Norwood, Wendy Quintana, Kelci Rigsby, Valerie Schaefer, Ashli Townsend Managers on Duty
Kelly Breuer, Nora Caley, Robin Lander, Melanie Mason, Barbara Pooler, Ayden Smith House Managers
Safety & Security
Quentin Crump Director
Timothy Allen, Jodi Benavides Lead Security Officers
Administrative Assistant/ Office Manager
Matthew Campbell Production Manager
Peggy Carey Production Manager
Prop Shop
Meghan Markiewicz Supervisor
Sara Pugh Associate Supervisor
Bennet Goldberg, Ashley Lawler Artisans
Adena Rice.
Prop Carpenter
David Bright, Ariana Cuevas, Ethan Kemberlin, Jack Leatherwood, Ian Nelson, Ashley Skillman, Zach Stemley, Pamela Winston, Tori Witherspoon Security Specialists







PROUD CORPORATE MEMBER OF THE DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
DDenver Language School is the only Denver Public School K-8 charter school offering Spanish and Mandarin immersion (K-8) and French (6-8). DLS is committed to providing students with a diverse and globally oriented education, encouraging them to be curious, critical thinkers, and preparing them for the workforce of tomorrow. Its unique model enhances problem-solving and critical thinking; strengthens cognitive ability, flexibility, and creativity; and builds cultural understanding. The curriculum fosters empathy, adaptability, and open-mindedness, and DLS’s holistic approach combines academic rigor.
DLS is proud to be the number one charter school in Denver on the state School Performance Framework and 28th of 1,825 schools in Colorado, placing DLS in the top 1.5% of all Colorado schools.
“Choosing Denver Language School has been one of the best decisions we’ve made for our children,” said Monica W., parent of DLS students. “Not only are they becoming fluent in another language, but they are also developing a deep appreciation for different cultures. We see their confidence, curiosity, and problem-solving skills growing every day, and we know they are being prepared to thrive in a global world.”
The Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA) provides Denver with access to world-class theatrical performances and arts programming. These experiences expand creativity, encourage selfexpression, and foster cultural awareness, offering opportunities to engage with the arts in meaningful ways. As a Denver community member, DLS is highly invested in supporting the arts and the DCPA, working to nurture a diverse and interconnected world.
We see [our children’s] confidence, curiosity, and problem-solving skills growing every day, and we know they are being prepared to thrive in a global world.
— MONICA W. PARENT






























