• Family STEM Day, presented by Brian S. McCarthy Memorial Foundation, will showcase more than 25 local science, technology, engineering and math programs and organizations on Saturday, May 17, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at World Academy, 138 Spit Brook Road in Nashua, according to a press release. The day will feature hands-on exhibits, interactive demonstrations and more, the release said. The event is free to attend and also will also feature food trucks, the release said.
Fish fun
• The Amoskeag Fishways Learning & Visitor Center (4 Fletcher St. in Manchester; find them on Facebook) was slated to open for the season on May 12. See fish on the move Mondays through Fridays, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission is free.
Theater fun
• The Mo Willems book comes alive when Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus hits the stage at Stockbridge Theatre in Derry on Friday, May 16, at 10 a.m. Tickets cost $12. See stockbridgetheatre.showare.com
• The Emperor’s New Clothes is presented by the Majestic Academy Youth/Teens at the Majestic Theatre, 880 Page St., Manchester, majestictheatre.net, on Friday, May 16, at 7 p.m.; Saturday, May 17, at 2 and 7 p.m., and Sunday, May 18, at 2 p.m. at the Majestic Theatre (880 Page St. in Manchester; majestictheatre.net). Tickets cost $10 to $15.
• Disney’s Moana Jr. is presented by Bedford Youth Performing Company at the Goffstown High School Theatre on Saturday, May 17, at 7 p.m. and Sunday, May 18, at 1 p.m. Find the link to purchase tickets via BYPC’s Facebook page.
• The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical will be presented by Kids Coop Theatre (kctnh.org) at Derry Opera House (29 W. Broadway in Derry) on Friday, May 16, at 7 p.m.; Saturday, May 17, at 7 p.m., and Sunday, May 18, at 2 p.m. See derryoperahouse.org for links to tickets.
Book fun
• Calista Brill will discuss her new graphic novel Creaky Acres(written with and illustrated by Nilah Magruder)at the Barnes & Noble in Manchester (1741 S. Willow St., bn.com) on Saturday, May 17, from noon to 3 p.m. An excerpt of the novel was one of the books you might have picked up on Free Comic Book Day a few weeks ago. On to the Barnes & Noble website Creaky Acres is described as “[a] heartwarming graphic novel about being the new kid in middle school, making new friends, and learning to trust yourself through the power of horseback riding.”
• Children’s authors Kari Allen (whose latest book is Maddie and Mabel Make a Friend) and Carrie Kruck (whose latest book is Alfred Blooms) will attend a storytime on Sunday, May 18, at 1 p.m. at Gibson’s Bookstore (45 S. Main St. in Concord; gibsonsbookstore.com). They will sign copies of their books after storytime.
I believe this set of fruit knives and forks may have been a wedding present for my parents in 1939. I have done a little research on the company that produced them; it existed until 1994. Would you be able to determine a value for them? Is there a market for such items? Thank you.
Chris
Dear Chris,
Nice dessert set!
Your Sheffield six-piece dessert serving set falls right into your date frame. They had earlier and later sets; some weren’t stainless steel but were silver-plated. Some even in sterling silver. The set appears to be in really good clean condition with the mother of pearl handles.
Chris, the value is in the $100 range but to find a home is tough. Most of this generation wants simplicity. I might try a local antique shop near you first. Expect less than full value. They have to then find a home. Or possibly online if you have that option.
Whatever you choose , I think the buyer would be getting a nice set!
Thanks, Chris, for sharing and I hope this helped.
It’s April, and spring has sprung. Or will soon. Winter always is a sneaky devil, coming back with hard frosts and even a foot of snow on occasion. There is much to do, but start slowly, not just for your back, which has been resting all winter, but because a week of warm sunny days doesn’t mean your soil is warm enough to plant. A soil thermometer pushed 3 inches into the soil should read 50 degrees before planting anything, even spinach and so-called cold-weather crops.
As you move around your garden you will probably notice that the soil is moist. If you are leaving footprints in the lawn or garden soil, stay off it until it dries out more. Otherwise you can ruin soil structure by compacting it.
You can put down 6-inch planks as walkways in flower beds if you are determined to weed or to remove leaves and debris while the soil is still a bit wet. But even then, be careful. There may be little green noses of perennials or bulbs lurking under the leaves and you won’t want to damage them by putting a plank on them.
I’ve had snowdrops up and blooming since March, as I do every year. By April I have lots of bulbs blooming: crocus, glory-of-the-snow, scilla or squill (a deep purple early bloomer), winter aconite (a bright yellow, short-stemmed beauty) and early daffodils. If you don’t have enough bulbs blooming, imagine where they might go, and put plant labels there for fall planting. A south-facing hillside bed will produce blossoms up to three weeks before a north-facing bed.
I plant 100 tulips as cut flowers every year. If you planted some last fall and have deer in the neighborhood, you may be disappointed to see them eaten just as they are starting to bloom. I prevent this by surrounding and covering my tulip bed with chicken wire before that happens. I plant my tulips in the vegetable garden each fall, and treat them as annuals.
Once your lawn has dried out, it will need a good raking to clean up the winter debris. I like to wait until the lawn has greened up a bit before raking. I don’t want to rake a dormant lawn as it would be easy to damage it with a brisk raking. Think of your lawn as individual plants growing very close together, not as one big green plant. They compete with each other and with crabgrass and weeds. A sprinkling of good compost will improve your soil, giving the lawn a better place to thrive.
I recommend reducing the size of most lawns. Think of a lawn as an area rug, not wall-to-wall carpeting. That will allow you to have a bigger vegetable garden and more places for native trees, shrubs and perennials that will support pollinators and birds. Do you know that caterpillars are essential food for baby birds? We need to provide flowers and trees that the butterflies and moths recognize and use — our natives.
I recommend raised beds for the vegetable garden, but you don’t have to build or buy wooden boxes for raised beds. When the soil has dried out, loosen it with a garden fork, and then use a short-tined rake to drag soil from walkways onto your designated beds to raise them up 6 inches or so. A 30-inch-wide bed is ideal — it’s wide enough for roots to spread far and wide, yet you will be able to reach all parts for weeding.
Adding compost to your soil every year will improve it greatly over time. An inch of compost works wonders if you do it every year. Buy it in bulk if you have access to a pickup truck, or buy bags if you don’t. And for my tomatoes? I always add a shovel of compost in every planting hole and stir it in well with my favorite weeding tool, the CobraHead weeder (cobrahead.com). Compost not only provides essential minerals in small quantities; it greatly improves soil texture and its ability to hold water in dry times.
Some people hate weeding, some love it. Either way, it has to be done. Start before the weeds get big. Perennial weeds like dandelions or thistles will already have deep roots. Annual weeds will be tiny but numerous. I believe the best tool for either is the CobraHead weeder. Its curved metal digging tip can loosen the soil around deep roots and help you pull from below with the tool while your other hand tugs on the top. Pull gently, slowly. You don’t want to snap off the root, as it will just start growing as soon as you walk away. Annual weeds you can loosen by scuffing the soil lightly.
As you plan your garden, think about buying organically certified starter plants and seeds. Why? Ordinary seed growers feed their plants with liquid fertilizer every day. That means that the plants don’t have to work as hard as organically raised plants to get the minerals they need. Organic practices promote longer roots to get the nutrition needed by the plants. If you are going to grow organic food, you will do best with organic starter plants.
Organic seed producers have to deliver seeds for plants that will not be protected from diseases and pests with chemicals. They have to be tough. Lastly, buying organic seeds and plants supports organic farmers. They are working hard to protect the environment by avoiding chemicals. Pay a little bit more if you can, and buy organic.
And remember: Gardening is supposed to be fun. Don’t work so hard you get blisters and a sore back. Garden a little every day.
Henry can be reached at [email protected] or PO Box 364, Cornish Flat, NH 03746.
Featured photo: Lisianthus comes in several colors and lasts forever in a vase. Photo by Henry Homeyer.
Among the many hard-luck stories to come out of the pandemic, the story of Nashua Artists Association’s ArtHub Gallery stands out. NAAA opened it in February 2020, only to have the world shut it down a month later. The place remained a memory until now, but the rebirth is even better than the original.
To start with, the new location on Main Street has twice the room of the ill-fated Pearl Street space, and it’s in the heart of downtown. More room makes it easier to display larger objects, like the interesting work from sculptor George Eross, a T. Rex with duck feet and stubby arms made from dinner forks that serves as a de facto gallery mascot.
The addition of 3D art is a big part of ArtHub’s goal of including more artists.
“There is an amazing amount of talent in this area,” ArtHub co-manager Jacqueline Barry said in press release. “To bring that talent to our new downtown location will not only give the community the opportunity to see the local talent but inspire them to do their own work.”
A members-only quiet opening on May 8 also drew the curious, gallery co-manager Sonia Lee said recently, a marked difference from the light foot traffic at the old place.
“We had about 40 members come,” Lee said by phone. “And, there were two couples, not related to us, having dinner next door. They stopped in to see what we were doing.”
On May 14 the gallery will do a soft opening, followed by a grand reopening on Saturday, May 17. A wide range of work will be on display and available for purchase, from paintings and textile arts to ceramics made by artists like Nancy Barkman.
“One of the missions that we have is to give a place for the craftsmen, not just people who do wall art,” Lee said. “She’s a good example of that. Her work is artistic. You can say, well, it’s just a pot. Well, yeah. But it’s also artistic in that not just anybody can do that work. And there are a limited number of places where people who are craftsmen can show their work other than arts and crafts shows.”
Other artists displayed in the spring opening include Steve Goldstein, a Massachusetts photographer who works in black and white. Goldstein said, “creative image … serves as an antidote to all the screen time I encountered in my career as an electrical engineer.” Teresa Moller’s paintings are both colorful and whimsical. The Nashua artist will also present a puppet show during the grand opening.
Brenda Noiseux is a Granite State artist “encouraging conversations through artistic activism” who’s exhibited around the country including in Chicago and New York City, Kansas and Oregon. One of her pieces is a delicate heart-shaped bouquet surrounding the words, “Asylum was granted.” Another shows a faded student visa with “REVOKED” stamped on it, laid under a spray of flowers. Both are part of a series called “Awaiting Justice.”
The downtown gallery sits in what was formerly the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen’s gallery. Its centrality allows NAAA to take part in citywide efforts in a way they couldn’t previously, like the annual Holiday Stroll. “If you’re way off the main street, people aren’t going to come that way when you do the downtown events,” Lee said.
For nearly 75 years, the NAAA has served to advance art in Nashua and its surrounding communities. Their membership is composed of visual artists working in a variety of media as well as patrons of the arts. The organization welcomes all levels of experience, from students to established artists.
A few years after the organization formed, it launched Art in the Park, an effort that continues to this day. Through these combined efforts, they aim to foster collaborative efforts, Lee said. “Part of what I’m doing is reaching out to those other groups and recruiting, if for no other reason than just passing the word around. Because our mission is to encourage the arts, and it isn’t just our members that we’re talking about.”
Nashua Area Artists Association’s ArtHub Gallery – Grand Reopening
When: Saturdays, May 17, 2-7 p.m. with reception 5-7 p.m. Where: 98 Main St., Nashua More: On Facebook, search for “ArtHub – Downtown Gallery, Nashua Area Artists Association”
Featured photo: Work by George Eross & Work by Brenda Noiseux. Courtesy photo.
Cooperation, collaboration and interdependence are all hallmarks of New Hampshire’s theater scene, and the upcoming summer schedule exemplifies. For the second year in a row Symphony NH, the state’s biggest orchestra, will share the stage for a production at New London Barn. An independent theater company again will direct this year’s Shakespeare on the Green show Saint Anselm College, with Ballet Misha providing the choreography.
Area venues are in on the act, so to speak. Derry’s Opera House hosts multiple youth theater groups, and the Capitol Center in Concord supports an area performing arts company. Nashua’s Janice B. Streeter Theatre also opens its doors to multiple troupes.
Youngsters are a big reason for the theater season, and a good number of the listings here are performances done as part of summer camps, workshops and other efforts to get kids interested in showbiz, or get them to come out of their shells through singing and acting.
All this comes at a challenging time for the arts, as a threat to many organizations of losing longtime funding from the State of New Hampshire and the federal government is ever present.
Actorsingers
Janice B. Streeter Theatre, 14 Court St., Nashua, actorsingers.org
Teen Actorsingers performs Teen Anastasia on July 11 through July 13 (tickets, showtimes TBA). The musical takes its cues from the Disney movie. With actors ages 13-19, the group’s most recent production was Frozen Jr., which ran in April. The mainstage company recently wrapped the Legally Blonde. Actorsingers also has a Second Stage & Fringe company; its last show was 2024’s Monstersongs.
Bedford Off Broadway
Bedford Town Hall, 3 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford, bedfordoffbroadway.com
This community theater company stages three plays a year. The second of 2025 is a drama, 12 Angry Jurors, adapted by Sherman L. Sergel from Reginald Rose’s 1954 teleplay 12 Angry Men. It runs June 6 through June 15, with 7:30 p.m. shows on Friday and Saturday, and 2 p.m. Sunday matinees. Their final production, the northern small-town comedy Icehouse, is scheduled for November.
Bedford Youth Performing Company
155 Route 101, Bedford, bypc.org
Actors ranging in age from kindergarten through sixth grade perform Moana Jr. on May 17 and 18 at 1 p.m. at Goffstown High School (27 Wallace Road, Goffstown). The show is a musical adaptation of the Disney movie about a spirited island girl who teams up with a demigod. Together, they encounter all manner of adventure. BYPC offers arts instruction and experience for youths in Bedford and the surrounding communities.
The summer Children’s Theatre Project Summer Camp, booked since mid-April, commences Aug. 3 and runs through Aug. 8, ending with a performance of Moana Jr. for family and friends and Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St., Concord.
Cue Zero Theatre Company
Arts Academy of New Hampshire, 19 Keewaydin Drive, No. 4, Salem, cztheatre.com
An arts world early adopter, Cue Zero boasts that every one of their shows “features an element of ‘new’ or ‘first time’ to it,” so it’s fitting they’re doing a musical based on the movie Amelie, its New Hampshire debut and, director Heidi Krantz believes, the initial New England production. It plays June 20 and June 21 at 7:30 p.m., and June 22 at 2 p.m.
Debrah Hernandez as Jane Seymour in Six. Courtesy photo.
Heidi Krantz, Cue Zero Theatre Company
Heidi is directing Amelie, a musical version of the movie favorite
First of all, why Amelie?
This is one of my all-time favorite shows, and I realized that the rights were available.
This is Amelie’s first New England production. What’s the background on it?
I believe it hit the Broadway stage in New York 2016 or 2017 and only had about a month of a run there. When it came to the U.K. in 2020 they did kind of an updated version of it that is more similar to the production that we’re doing. The U.S. version sounds a lot more clean-cut. I think the U.K. version brought more of a whimsical vibe, like the movie is just so whimsical. It’s crazy. It’s all over the place. And the music really captures that.
What’s your impression of the southern New Hampshire theater scene?
I really enjoy the theater community in southern New Hampshire. I do feel like there’s a lot of room for it to expand. I find that it’s a lot easier to just frequently work with the same companies, and I have had a lot of experiences with multiple companies. I’ve had that perspective, and I would just encourage people to try to branch out more. I think we’re all in it for the same purposes, the same passions, and I feel like just getting to network more is just so important, too.
With performers from Epping Middle School, Brothers Grimm Spectaculathon has two narrators and several actors in a race to combine all 209 Grimm stories, from familiar ones like Rapunzel, Rumpelstiltskin and Sleeping Beauty to stranger, less well-known tales like Lean Lisa and The Devil’s Grandmother. Plays May 16 at 7 p.m. and May 17 and May 18 at 2 p.m. July 18 through July 20, it’s Seussical the Musical from Epping’s Main Stage company.
Kids Coop Theatre
232 N. Broadway, Salem, kctnh.org
Founded in the late ’90s by a group of parents looking to engage their kids in the performing arts, KCT offers workshops, classes and performances that revolve around the ideas “that every child has something valuable to contribute, and the experience of being part of a production can be transformative.” A cast ranging in age from 12 to 19 performs Hadestown Teen Edition Aug, 1 through Aug. 3 at Derry Opera House (25 Broadway, Derry).
Majestic Theatre
880 Page St., Manchester, majestictheatre.net
The busy company has The Emperor’s New Clothes, a musical with an eclectic score including Celtic songs, Roaring Twenties jazz and 1950s rock, May 16 through May 18. The Hart & Kaufman play George Washington Slept Here, about a couple that moves to the country with their daughter to find life more chaotic than bucolic, opens June 20. With a new Pope picked, Joseph & the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Webber & Rice’s follow-up to Jesus Christ Superstar; it opens July 11 at Derry Opera House. Living Together is a sophisticated comedy that won a Best Revival Tony in 2009. All shows are performed four times: Friday at 7 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m.
Photo above and top photo on page 10 are of a previous production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream by Theatre Kapow at Saint Anselm College. Photo by Matthew Lomanno.
Robert Dionne, Majestic Theatre
Robert co-founded The Majestic with Matt Morin in 1991.
What he likes about the upcoming season…
Each show brings its own benefits by coming to see it. George Washington Slept Here is a classic comedy … a big cast show. We have a lot of really great actors that have appeared on a stage over the years, and it’s very funny. Joseph is a big, flashy musical with a cast of all ages at this big opera house. Then we end the season with a smaller show at the studio theater, Living Together, another comedy, but a little more sophisticated than maybe what they saw with the previous two shows.
Why they’re able to maintain such a busy schedule.
For the most part, we have separate teams working on each show … other than myself as the through-piece, as the producer, and our Technical Director, Matt Morin, as the technical guy, all the other teams and actors on those shows are different. So that allows us to kind of, at any given time here, we might be rehearsing four or five shows that are getting ready to go up.
Living Together is a new show, while the others have been done by Majestic before. Here’s why it was chosen.
That was brought, Greg Parker, who’s directing…. A lot of times I’ll go to directors and say, hey, what are some shows that you’re interested in or passionate about? Because obviously if it’s something they want to do, it tends to be a better process of production, because they’re very well-known and within the show.
On The Majestic’s longevity, and the New Hampshire theater community.
We have a very faithful following, not only with actors but also with audience members. We have audience members that are with us all 35 years. If you don’t have that support, then, as a head of a theater, you get to the point where you kind of get sick of spinning your wheels and maybe putting your own money into all the shows. But when you get that community buy-in — we’ve been very lucky in Manchester and southern New Hampshire, the audience members, the donors and the actors and everybody helps keep our day-to-day stuff going, [and] that kind of makes it all worth it. We build off of that every single season.
After successfully staging The Bridges of Madison County in late April and early May, MCTP is preparing for the fall season. Shrek the Musical will open on Oct. 17 and run for six performances. Auditions happen June 30 and July 1.
Nashua Theatre Guild
Janice B. Streeter Theater, 14 Court St., Nashua, nashuatheatreguild.org
An outdoor performance of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night in Greeley Park, directed by Katie Sibley, happens July 26, July 27, Aug. 2 and Aug. 3 at 2 p.m. In September, The Tin Woman, written by Sean Grennan and directed by Stephen Post, will be performed daily Sept. 19 through Sept. 21.
Spamalot by Ovation Theatre Company. Courtesy photo.
New London Barn Playhouse
84 Main St., New London, nlbarn.org
With almost a century’s worth of history, this venerable venue helped launch the career of Stephen Schwartz, who worked on Godspell there while doing summer stock. Over the years, Laura Linney, Taye Diggs and Tony winner Judy Kuhn also spent time treading its boards. Recently the Barn has branched out, with live music and collaborations like Annie Get Your Gun with Symphony NH Collaboration, which opens the new season on May 30, running through June 1. The traditional Straw Hat Revue introduces this summer cast June 4 through June 8. The first musical is one of three inspired by a movie: The Bridges of Madison County, June 11 through June 22, followed by Sister Act June 25 through July 13, then Mary Poppins July 16 through Aug. 3. Perennial favorite Hairspray runs Aug. 6 through Aug. 17, then it’s The Cottage, a stage comedy, Aug. 20 through Aug. 31. The Sea & The Stars, a romantic comedy that’s part of the Barn’s Nest new works collaboration with Transport Group, runs Sept. 4 through Sept. 7.
New London Barn plus Symphony NH
Keith Coughlin, Executive Artistic Director atNew London Barn and Deanna Hoying, Executive Director of Symphony NH, talk about their organizations collaborating for the second year. A production of Annie Get Your Gun in late May and early June will again bring together 25 Symphony NH musicians and nine singers from New London Barn.
The idea, Hoying and Coughlin both said in separate interviews, grew out of regular Zoom meetings held during the dark days of the pandemic, as everyone was wondering what might come next.
Hoying: I’ve worked for a lot of arts organizations in a number of different states, and this is the tightest group I’ve ever seen. I have to give credit to the New Hampshire State Arts Council and Jeanne Lupe, who was leading it at the time [of the Zoom meetings].
Coughlin: Through these Zoom meetings, we were creating relationships with arts organizations all over New Hampshire. When we started talking about this idea, my managing director, Elliot Cunningham, said, ‘Why don’t I reach out to Deanna at Symphony New Hampshire? This sounds like a great collaboration moment.’
Hoying: So, a couple of years ago, Elliot and Keith reached out and said, ‘Hey, we’ve got kind of a crazy idea. And I said, ‘I love crazy ideas, hit me with it. What you got?’ And they said, ‘We want to do a musical and concert.’ I said, ‘I love musical theater. We love doing that stuff.’
Coughlin: We did South Pacific in concert, and it went over just wonderfully. Our audiences ate it up. So we said, could we do it again? And we’ve expanded it, a couple more performances than we did last year.
Hoying: We’re going to have a wonderful young guest conductor, Britney Alcine, leading the orchestra. Our outgoing music director, Roger Kalia, has worked with her at his Lake George Festival. He felt very confident that she could take on this role, so we’re very excited to be able to work with her.
Ugly Lies the Bone, a drama about trauma and how we learn to live with it while healing, runs through May 18. Next it’s Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, directed by Kat Mail, opening June 6, with performances on Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. matinees Saturday and Sunday, through June 15.
Peacock Players’ past productions. Courtesy photo.
Ovation Theatre Company
61 Harvey Road, Londonderry, ovationtc.com
Now in its sixth year, Ovation Theatre Company offers both education and entertainment, with classes and summer camps leading up to productions like the staging of Annie Jr. on May 30 and May 31. Later this summer Ovation performs The Hunchback of Notre Dame July 24 through July 26. Both shows will be held at Derry Opera House (25 Main St., Derry).
Something for everyone at Ovation
Six years ago Meg Gore traded teaching in public schools for the private sector and started Ovation Theatre Company. She teaches young actors acting skills and organizes shows, with help from her family. Daughter Katie is an ace choreographer, son Tim keeps the company website up and running, and husband Dan takes care of the business side of things.
“I do have a lot of family support,” she said. “They’re all involved, and that’s the only way that it really works.”
Gore explained that she brings an inclusive approach to Ovation, so each of her charges can shine.
“Every year with our season, we try to offer something for everyone, at least one show for everyone. So, for example, our first show of 2025 was Mousetrap. It was a play that we actually did at our studio. And that was all adults. But then we did Spamalot, which was kind of our teen show. And so that was our 13-to-19 age range. And then Annie Jr. is our show where we’re involving more of the age range from 7 to 16. And when you do different ages like that, it just offers different opportunities for different age groups. So, for example, in Annie, your 15-, 16-year-olds can play the lead because they’re the oldest and the ones with the most experience in the cast. And normally in a teen show they might not get that opportunity because in the teen show we go up to 19, and so your 17-, 18-, 19-year-olds might have those opportunities over the younger ones. We’ll always cast the best people for the roles, irrelevant of the age. But it just a lot of times will play out that way because of experience. So Annie kind of provides that younger involvement. Then our summer camps over the summer, definitely those are 7 to 13. So that’s our youngest one having opportunities to get on stage and do some stuff with those.”
Palace Theatre
61 Hanover St., Manchester, palacetheatre.org
Though A Chorus Line, opening May 30 with four performances every weekend through June 22, will close out the main stage season at Manchester’s premiere downtown venue, The Palace’s Youth Theatre Program will barely take a breath before continuing. The Dungeons & Dragons-inspired She Kills Monsters on May 28 and May 29 and Anything Goes June 4 and June 5 will complete the current PYT season. On June 10 and June 11, the 12- to 18-year-old “JV” Palace Teen Apprentice Company does 13 Jr., followed June 17 and June 18 by the Palace Teen Company’s staging of Urinetown. PYT Camp (grades 2-12) shows start soon after, with James & the Giant Peach Jr. on July 2 and July 3 followed by A Year With Frog & Toad Kids July 11, Junie B. Jones Jr. July 25 and July 26, Annie Kids Aug. 1, Mean Girls Jr. Aug. 15 and Aug. 16, and a youth version of The Addams Family Aug. 22. Summer Series happen every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. as well as Friday at 10 a.m. starting with a show TBA July 8 through July 11, followed by Peter Pan Jr., Annie Jr., Madagascar Jr., Berenstain Bears On Stage, Willy Wonka Jr. and Shrek Jr. Tickets for these shows are just $10.
Palace productions
Megan Quinn is Director of Youth Programming at the Palace Theatre in Manchester. In that role she oversees the many programs offered over the summer, like PYT Camp, where young actors spend 10 days rehearsing and performing a show on the Palace Stage (three of six camps are sold out, but slots remain for James & the Giant Peach, A Year With Frog & Toad and Junie B. Jones). Young Stars Camp is geared to the youngest, 5 to 8 years old, while the others welcome grades 2-12. On hiatus is Palace Teen Company, focused on kids looking to get serious about acting or use the skill to help with their college search.
This is the time of year when it heats up for you.
Literally! Everyone’s like, after A Chorus Line, we have the summer off. I’m like, ha ha, that’s funny.
What’s the makeup of the Palace’s summer program?
The majority of the summer camp kids are probably entering second, third, fourth grade. We split them up into probably four groups, you know, and they all learn different things and come back together at different times. But there are kids who literally have never been in a theater before, up to our kids who we see all year round … it’s definitely a nice mix of all different kids. We do have older kids as well, sophomores and juniors who just want to come spend a week and do a show. It always blows my mind with these kids. We had 68 in our April vacation camp, which was Finding Nemo Kids, and they memorized an entire half-hour show in three days. It’s crazy.
How many kids wind up in a full Palace production?
I was in Margaritaville and I think there were about five or six teens in the ensemble, and for Jesus Christ Superstar I think there were three or four teens in that. Then we are going to have a lot of our teens featured in Chorus Line as cut dancers at the beginning of the show, and some of them will also do understudy roles. For these kids who want to do theater potentially in college and beyond, it looks great on their resume that they were in a professional show.
Ballet Misha and Theatre Kapow collaborated on A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Saint Anselm College. Photo by Matthew Lomanno.
Peacock Players
Janice B. Streeter Theatre, 14 Court St., Nashua, peacockplayers.org
For more than 40 years this nonprofit has brought and taught performing arts to the area’s youngsters. Weeklong camp sessions with themes like Getting Spooky and All About The Mouse start July 14. A current production of Chicago Teen Edition runs through May 18. A cast of 6- to 15-year-olds will do Beetlejuice Jr. for three nights starting July 27. On Aug. 15 Hadestown Teen Edition, performed by 13- to 19-year-olds, begins a three-show run.
Players’ Ring Theatre
105 Marcy St., Portsmouth, playersring.org
This Seacoast company, founded in 1992, is focused on new and original works by regional artists. End of the Rainbow, the current production, ends May 18. The Terrence McNally musical A Man of No Importance opens May 30 and runs Thursday through Sunday, with two shows Saturday, through June 15. The show is directed and choreographed by Ro Gavin, who also helms the summer musical Freaky Friday for the Prescott Park Arts Festival. That musical runs most Thursdays through Sundays at 7 p.m. from June 20 through Aug. 10.
Powerhouse Theatre Collaborative
401 Gilford Ave., Suite 30, Gilford, powerhousenh.org
After the two-day Play Fair on May 31 and June 1, there’s just one summer production from Powerhouse, who produced the much-lauded Tuck Everlasting last year. Elf the Musical Aug. 8 through Aug. 10 at the Colonial Theatre is a Christmas-in-August fundraiser for the Lakes Region Children’s Auction. In September, it’s Best of Broadway ’60s Edition (Sept. 6, BNH Stage) and Journey Through Neverland, an interactive theater adventure through the grounds of environmental education nonprofit Prescott Farm (Sept. 14, Sept. 20 and Sept. 21, 1 to 4 p.m., with 45-minute slots every 20 minutes).
Festivals at Powerhouse
Fifteen plays, 15 days, 15 writers and 15 directors — that’s the idea behind Powerhouse Theatre Collaborative’s annual Play Fair, happening May 31 and June 1 at Prescott Farm in Laconia. Powerhouse co-founder Bryan Halperin said recently that the idea started as a workshop during his time at Winnipesaukee Playhouse, which he helped to launch in 2004. “I think we did it four or five times there,” he said. “This is the fourth time Powerhouse has done it.”
How are festival plays selected?
For 10 weeks, beginning in January, I have a class full of students that meets once a week on Google Meets to share work. Every week they get a homework assignment with a different sort of theme or aim to practice skills. The first five weeks, they write, the last five weeks, they work on their final projects. Anyone who completes the class gets to have their play produced in the festival.
What, if any, experience do the playwrights have?
They tend to be people who have some connection to Powerhouse and want to try something new. Some people have done it every year because they love writing and they enjoy the class and they enjoy seeing their work produced.
What motivates them?
The carrot is … a lot of times you write a play and it lives in a void on the computer; it never sees the light of day. These folks, by taking the class, have the incentive that if they do the work and complete it they will actually get to see it performed. It also provides an opportunity for people to try their hand at directing because each play is directed by a different director. So it’s an opportunity for directors and actors and playwrights to essentially create a world premiere.
Do they hope to go on to greater things in the theater world?
No, because most of these people are not playwrights who are wanting to do it for a living. They’re doing it either because they just enjoy writing or for some of them, it’s the first time, and they just want to see what it’s like. Somebody this year just said, ‘I’m going to go out of my comfort zone and try this new thing.’
RB Productions Theatre Company
PO Box 67, Concord, rb-productions.com
Founded in 2003 by 18-year-old Ryan Brown, RB Productions is the youth theater company for Concord’s Capitol Center for the Arts. The troupe also performs at Concord City Auditorium. Summer shows include The Wedding Singer (July 11 and July 12), Wizard of Oz Youth Edition (July 18 and July 19), Aladdin Kids (July 19), Alice In Wonderland Jr. (July 25 and July 26) and Beetlejuice Jr. (Aug. 1 and Aug. 2).
Riverbend Youth Company
56 Mont Vernon St., Milford, svbgc.org
Affiliated with the Boys & Girls Club of Souhegan Valley, and based at the Amato Center for the Performing Arts in Milford, this troupe has Finding Nemo Jr. on May 27 and May 28, followed by The Lightning Thief – The Percy Jackson Musical for three shows beginning June 6.
Seacoast Repertory Theatre
125 Bow St., Portsmouth, seacoastrep.org
Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella opens May 15 and runs through June 15, Hadestown: Teen Edition has a two-week run beginning May 28. Shrek The Musical runs for a month starting June 26, and Into The Woods opens on Aug. 7 for a run that closes Sept. 7.
Theatre Kapow
66 Hanover St., Manchester, tkapow.com
Wrapping up a season that began last September is The Best We Could, performed at BNH Stage in Concord at 7:30 p.m. on June 14 and June 15, and 2 p.m. on Sunday, June 15. The debut from playwright Emily Feldman is a “funny, wise” look at a road trip taken by a despondent daughter and her father to pick up a rescue dog. Feldman drew heavily from two iconic American plays, Death of a Salesman and Thornton Wilder’s Our Town. Theatre Kapow’s summer schedule has just one production, but it’s big: Romeo and Juliet, part of Shakespeare on the Green at Saint Anselm College, over the last two weekends of July.
Kapow on the green
Emma Cahoon of Theatre Kapow in Concord is directing the Shakespeare on the Green production of Romeo & Juliet at Saint Anselm College, with choreography by Manchester’s Ballet Misha. It runs the weekends of July 17 through July 19 and July 24 through July 26. Tickets will be available through Saint Anselm’s Dana Center.
How did Theatre Kapow get involved with Shakespeare on the Green?
Two summers ago we did a Weekend of Macbeth and the Weekend of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. That production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream has since had many iterations. Last summer, when we remounted Midsummer again, we connected with Amy Fortier at Ballet Misha. It was Joe’s idea [Joseph Deleault, Dana Center Director] to have Theatre Kapow and Ballet Misha combine together as we’re two Manchester-based arts organizations who both have really long existing relationships with Saint Anselm. Also we have known Amy for a very long time. There’s so much overlap in the people that we work with and the people who came up training with her or work with Ballet Misha at some point. It was a collaboration just waiting to find the right thing, and then it was like Joe who kind of pushed us together to make it happen last summer.
What prompted the switch from Midsummer to Romeo and Juliet?
I like taking texts that people feel they really know [and] doing something different with them to see if we can encourage audiences to experience that story in a new way. That’s totally what we did with Midsummer every time. It was a cast of seven, six, seven all-female presenting people…. Once we got Ballet Misha involved, that also sort of added a new medium to exploring this text that like we have all encountered a number of times in various different capacities throughout our lives. I think people have their own assumptions of what Romeo and Juliet is. I mean, I feel like everyone refers to it as the greatest love story of all time, but it’s not.
Above: The Little Mermaid Jr. by RB Productions Theatre Company. Courtesy photos.
Village Players
51 Glendon St., Wolfeboro, village-players.com
This company began in the 1930s as a fundraising tool for the Wolfeboro Garden Club. It’s had some ups and downs, but in 1978 it became The Village Players and it has been going steadily since. This season’s show is Calendar Girls, based on the English movie inspired by a true story about a group of female friends putting together an artistic nude calendar to raise money for a friend with leukemia. It plays July 25, July 26, Aug. 1 and Aug. 2 at 7:30 p.m., and Aug. 3 at 2 p.m. The Players will perform Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd on Halloween.
Founded in 2004 by siblings Lesley Pankhurst and Bryan Halperin and their spouses Neil and Johanna (Bryan and Johanna now run Powerhouse Theatre Collaborative), the Playhouse has become a force in the state’s theater world. This summer there are productions of The Wedding Singer (June 12 through June 21), the timely POTUS (June 27 through July 5), Little Shop of Horrors (July 11 through July 19), Fully Committed (July 25 through Aug. 2) and The Woman in Black (Aug. 22 through Aug. 31).
Featured Image: A previous production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream by Theatre Kapow at Saint Anselm College. Photo by Matthew Lomanno.
The BNH Stage (16 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com) hosts a performance of “This Is My Brave – The Show” tonight at 7 p.m. benefiting NAMI New Hampshire. Performers will share personal stories of overcoming mental illness and substance use disorder. Tickets are $31.
Saturday, May 17
NH Muscle Cars will hold its Granite State Season Opener Car Show today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Deerfield Fairgrounds featuring live music, vendors, fair food and of course fields of cars competing for 35 trophies in a variety of categories. Spectator admission costs $5; see nhmusclecars.com.
Saturday, May 17
Canterbury Shaker Village (288 Shaker Road in Canterbury; shakers.org) opens today for the season and will be open daily through October from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Today, the Canterbury Shaker Village Cross Country 5K begins at 10 a.m.
Saturday, May 17
Saint Peter’s Episcopal Church (3 Peabody Row, Londonderry, 437-8333, stpeterslondonderry.org) will hold its 38th Annual Spring Artisan Craft Fair today from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday, May 17
The Manchester City Library (405 Pine St., Manchester, 624-6550, manchesterlibrary.org) holds its spring book sale today from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Library’s Winchell Room.
Saturday, May 17
The NH Philharmonic will present “Swashbucklers and Superheroes,” a celebration of “the iconic music behind some of the greatest adventure films in cinematic history,” tonight at 7:30 p.m. and tomorrow, Sunday, May 18, at 2 p.m. at Seifert Performing Arts Center in Salem. Tickets cost $35 for adults, $30 for seniors, $10 for students. See nhphil.org.
Saturday, May 17
It’s the final weekend of the New Hampshire Renaissance Faire. Tickets, which can be purchased at nhrenfaire.com, cost $20 for adults and $15 for ages 6 to 12 and for military and veterans, the website said. Kids ages 5 and under get in for free.
Sunday, May 18
The Nashua Choral Society presents Vive La France, “a choral journey celebrating French composers,” at 3 p.m. at Immaculate Conception Church (216 E. Dunstable Road, Nashua). See nashuachoralsociety.org.
Sunday, May 18
Chunky’s Cinema Pub (707 Huse Road, Manchester, 206-3888, chunkys.com) hosts the 2025 New Hampshire High School Short Film Festival at 12:30 p.m. Presented by the New Hampshire Film Bureau, this festival screens a two-hour program of selected films. This event is free to attend. Visit nhmediateachers.org.
Tuesday, May 20
“Beyond the Lawn: No Mow May’s Role in Sustainable Communities” will be the topic at tonight’s Science Cafe NH, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at SOEL Sistas Cafe, 30 Temple St. in Nashua.
Wednesday, May 21
Beaver Brook (117 Ridge Road in Hollis; beaverbrook.org) will host a Lilac Walk today from 1 to 3 p.m. Registration costs $22.
Saturday, May 17
It’s plant sale Saturday! The Goffstown Community Garden Club sale starts at 8 a.m. and runs until noon (or when they sell out, whatever is first) at the Goffstown Town Commons. Find the Milford Garden Club from 8:30 a.m. to noon at the Community House Lawn, at the corner of Union and Elm streets. The Nashua Garden Club will hold its annual plant sale from 9 a.m. to noon at the Nashua Historical Society, 5 Abbot St. The Bedford Garden Club will hold its sale at Joppa Hill Farm (174 Joppa Hill Road in Bedford) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.