It’s the French Revolution and four prominent women — playwright Olympe de Gouges, assassin Charlotte Corday, Haitian spy Marianne Angelle and Queen Marie Antoinette — find themselves holed up ...
Left to Right: Arika Thames (Marianne Angelle), Anna DiGiovanni (Olympe de Gouges), Fabiolla Da Silva (Marie-Antoinette), and Danielle Gallo (Charlotte Corday) in Prologue Theatre’s production of The ...
Theatre UAB will present “The Revolutionists,” an irreverent comedy about four beautiful, badass women who lose their heads in 1790s Paris, from Feb. 26-March 2. This girl-powered play’s central ...
Theatre22 presents THE REVOLUTIONISTS by Lauren Gunderson, Directed by Julie BeckmanTHE REVOLUTIONISTS is a story about four badass women who lose their heads ...
“This is not the way to start a comedy,” quips 18th-century playwright Olympe de Gouges, staring at the guillotine looming upstage. Or is it? In “The Revolutionists,” now onstage at CNY Playhouse, ...
Olympe de Gouges (1748 –1793) was a French playwright and political activist. She is best known for her writings on women’s rights and the abolition of slavery. Macy’s connection to De Gouges goes far ...
“I did not say that bit about the cake,” says Queen Marie Antoinette in Lauren Gunderson’s new play, “The Revolutionists,” which opens Thursday, Feb. 11, at the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.
There’s a moment in Lauren Gunderson’s play “The Revolutionists” when a character remarks that it’s not exactly inspiring to hear a work of art described as – pause – “interesting.” Gunderson’s 2018 ...
Pictured, left to right, The assassin Charlotte Corday (Katherine Hamilton), the playwright Olympe de Gouges (Gabriella Goldstein) and the spy Marianne Angelle (Kimberly Ridgeway) search for just the ...
Harlequin Productions’ ”The Revolutionists,” a feminist comedy set during the Reign of Terror in France, stars, from left, Amanda Kemp as Marianne Angelle ...
PaperHouse Theatre christens Goodyear Arts’ space with a comedy about a feminist response to tyranny
In Lauren Gunderson’s new play, “The Revolutionists,” three women — including Marie Antoinette — lose their heads to the guillotine. Yet director Nicia Carla says the comedy — yes, it’s a comedy — has ...
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