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</b><font color="#6600cc"><big><big><big><b> </b></big></big></big></font></u><font
color="#6600cc"><big><big><big><b><u><font size="4"><big><big><big>--
LAST WEEKEND</big></big></big></font></u></b><b><u><big>
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !-- </big></u></b><b><u><br>
</u></b><b> </b></big></big></big></font>
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<p><b><br>
<font color="#ff0000"> <big><big><big>AT SCHENECTADY
CIVIC PLAYERS . . .</big></big></big></font><br>
<br>
Paul Osborn’s charming love letter to just plain
folks . . .<br>
<font color="#ff0066" size="5">MORNING'S
AT SEVEN</font><br>
Directed by Joseph Fava<br>
</b></p>
<p><b> </b><br>
<b><small><font color="#3333ff"><i>Director </i><i><a
href="http://www.timesunion.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=entertainment&search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Joseph+Fava%22">Joseph
Fava</a></i><i>, a veteran of decades of community
theater, has an acute eye for telling detail, and
he's attuned to revealing lines and moments in
Osborn's dialogue. He also controls the action and
pacing well, as when one of the sisters snatches an
important document from the pocket of another, and a
chasing tizzy ensues. . . . . . . . . the stage
picture is beautifully realized and an apt and
evocative playground for the unfolding comedy. <big>Steve
Barnes - TIMES UNION</big></i></font><big><i><br>
</i><i> </i></big></small><br>
<img
alt="" src="cid:part2.03010102.07050503@nycap.rr.com"
moz-do-not-send="false" height="454" width="364"> <br>
<i><small> The Four Sisters (clockwise
from left) Paula Ginder, Carol Charnaga, Rita Russell,
and Joanne Westervelt</small></i></b></p>
<p><b> Morning's at Seven has been called Paul Osborn’s love
letter to just plain folks (specifically four sisters in a
small Midwestern town), a heart-warming, funny, and
emotionally satisfying play that will not only make you
feel great about yourself, it will let you finally forgive
every member of your family who has ever wronged you.<br>
<br>
This perennially charming portrait of small town America
fifty plus years ago was revived on Broadway in 1980 and
in 2002 to critical acclaim. New York Daily News called it
“An absolute charmer… Four sisters, Chekhov would have
smiled. So will you, and laugh out loud, too.”<br>
<br>
<font color="#0000ff"><i>Playing the four sisters of the
cast are Carol Charniga (as Cora Swanson), Paula
Ginder (Aaronetta Gibbs), Rita Russell (Ida Bolton),
and Joanne Westervelt (Esther Crampton ). The nine
member cast also features Phil Sheehan (as Theodore
Swanson), Richard Cross (Carl Bolton), Robert L.
Hegeman (Homer Bolton) , Amy M. Lane (Myrtle Brown),
and Bill Hickman (David Crampton).</i></font><br>
<br>
<font color="#ff3333" size="5">--
<font size="5">FINAL PERFORMANCES: </font>October 25
thru 27 -- </font></b> </p>
<p> <b>(Friday &
Saturday at 8 pm, Sunday at 2:30 pm)<br>
<font
color="#ff0000"><big> at the Schenectady Civic Playhouse</big></font></b><b><br>
12 South Church St. in Schenectady’s
historic Stockade District </b> </p>
<b><br>
<i>TICKETS ($17). Purchase in person at Proctors Box Office,
432 State Street, Schenectady.<br>
Or order and charge by phone through Proctor’s Box Office
at (518) 346-6204.<br>
Or order on-line at <a moz-do-not-send="true"
class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated"
href="http://www.civicplayers.org">www.civicplayers.org</a></i></b><br>
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