Showing posts with label Atlantis Productions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlantis Productions. Show all posts

Monday, September 23, 2013

Review: Atlantis turns 'Carrie' from flop to hit

By Vladimir Bunoan, ABS-CBNnews.com
Original Article can be found HERE


Mikkie Bradshaw as Carrie in the bloody prom scene of the stage musical "Carrie." Photo from the Facebook page of Atlantis Productions

MANILA -- Atlantis Productions' stage musical version of Stephen King's "Carrie" opened to a prolonged standing ovation on Friday despite its notorious reputation as one of Broadway's biggest flops when it first opened in New York in 1988.

The ecstatic audience response in Manila was a vindication for book writer Lawrence D. Cohen, who was the special guest on opening night at the RCBC Plaza in Makati, where "Carrie" will run for three weekends until October 6.
During curtain call, an obviously emotional Cohen thanked "the gifted and fearless" director Bobby Garcia and the entire production team "who have done justice and credit to 'Carrie' anywhere in the world."

Cohen, who also wrote the screenplay for the 1976 movie directed by Brian de Palma, noted that "Carrie," based on King's debut novel, "has become more resonant now than when it was written 40 years ago and when the movie came out. It's found some astonishing way, I think, to touch us and move us and, most of all, hold the mirror up and remind us what it is to be human."

"We are so lucky to have Bobby and this incredible company to remind us that 'Carrie' speaks a really important truth that we all need to stand in other people's shoes, that we need to have empathy for each other and, most of all, whoever we are and wherever we live, we are all connected," Cohen said in his speech.

The stage musical "Carrie" didn't get this kind of acceptance from either audiences or critics when it premiered in 1988 and ran for only five performances. A 2012 revival of the show, a massive reworking of the original with some entirely new songs, got a better response but its reputation has been so soaked in hatred -- Time magazine at that time even made a poll of theater critics to see if "Carrie" was indeed the worst musical of all time (it wasn't) -- such that The Hollywood Reporter advised its creators "to just embrace their battered creature for the freak that she is."

As such, it was surprising when Atlantis Productions announced that it was including "Carrie" in this year's lineup. But Garcia apparently was among those who saw something admirable about the much-maligned musical.

In a Facebook post before Friday's opening night, Garcia wrote: "25 years ago, I fell in love with this musical. And here we are opening the first international production with an amazing group of people on stage and off. Feeling like that 18-year-old who saw the show in 1988. Blessed, grateful and inspired."

"Inspired" is an apt description for Garcia's reworking of the musical. With Otto Hernandez's creepy set design of a decaying barn house, with high windows that suggests an old church and prison bars at the same time, moodily lit by Martin Esteva, "Carrie" opens silently as the cast enters the stage one by one.

Old discarded black-and-white TVs then run a home-made video of the prom a la "The Blair Witch Project" capturing the mayhem that ensued before cutting to a video of a police interrogation of a student, Sue Snell (Yannah Laurel), as she recounts the tragedy.

This interrogation frames the entire musical, which is composed of flashbacks leading to the movie's famous prom scene with Carrie drenched in pig's blood, the culmination of a series of cruel jokes played on her by her classmates at high school, which unleashes horror on her tormentors.

The real horror on display here isn't so much a teen freak with special telekinetic powers but the bullying that occurs to kids who don't fit into the popular teen mindset. Indeed, with news rife with tragic tales of bullied kids who are led to suicide, "Carrie" resonates to a modern audience who were too young -- or perhaps they were not even born yet -- when the movie spooked audiences in 1976.

Carrie (played by young actress Mikkie Bradshaw) isn't scary per se (although Bradshaw gives her a mean stare) but more of an un-cool outsider with her extreme religiosity, frumpy clothes and sullen posture. She has been raised by a righteous, religious fundamentalist mother (Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo), who in shielding Carrie from sin also deprived her of a sense of normalcy.

These characterizations helped lift "Carrie" from being just a tale of paranormal revenge as it highlights more the psychodrama that has forced this tormented teen to use her psychic abilities with disastrous results. The result is a moving, engrossing dark musical that is intimately emotional yet grandly theatrical at the same time.

The prom climax was thrillingly staged with collapsing set pieces, effective visual projections and red lighting, but it was the scene after that with a blood-drenched Carrie seeking refuge with her mother that was more chilling.

Apart from the affectionate directorial handling, the performances of Bradshaw and Lauchengco-Yulo proved to be a key winning element to this staging's success. Bradshaw, in her first lead role, shows precision in her singing, making her duets with the vastly experienced Lauchengco-Yulo very powerful. Bradshaw also makes Carrie less of a weirdo to make the audience root for her.

Lauchengco-Yulo has the more difficult task with her role as the strict, nearly mad mother. It's easy to make Margaret into a monster mom, a tyrannical Christian, but the veteran actress managed to make the audience understand her character. Margaret, like Fosca in Stephen Sondheim's "Passion," which Lauchengco-Yulo also played, isn't at all likable but if handled well, can evoke some sort of pity despite her flaws.

This is what Lauchengco-Yulo achieved in "Carrie." Moreover, she is also given the play's most dramatic songs -- the terrifying "And Eve Was Weak" and the sad "When There's No One" -- which Lauchengco-Yulo turns into show-stopping numbers.

The songs, made by the tandem of Michael Gore and Dean Pitchford ("Fame," "Footloose"), are actually uneven with some overly dramatic and bombastic ensemble numbers but there are some melodic ballads here which are radio-friendly enough, like the duet "You Shine" sung with pop polish by Laurel and Markki Stroem, who also gave "Dreamer in Disguise" a laidback singer-songwriter feel.

But "Carrie" is definitely a group effort and despite some minor scenes with pops of unnecessary humor, the ensemble was, on the whole, realistic, sticking with the play's dark theme without overplaying it.

Atlantis' success with "Carrie" proves that even a musical that's been butchered on Broadway can have some sort of redemption.

   
Catch CARRIE on its closing weekend run! 
OCTOBER 5, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC 
Ticket Prices: 1700, 1600, 1300, 800 and 700

 Contact:   
RC Marzan 0922.888.5348 
Onay Sales 0917.908.0565

View Available Seats Here: 
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Au4HQl0TAAC_dC1RLVVKbmZXNzViSXVLeWJKakIxNEE#gid=0



SHE Rocks: Menchu Lauchengco still enjoying theater after 15 years







Photo courtesy of Atlantis Productions.


What else can you do after you’ve earned the title “First Lady of Philippine Musical Theatre,” and you’ve wowed critics by playing practically all the challenging roles available to stage artists?

You don’t rest on your laurels. Not when you’re Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo.
Voice coaches Jai Sabas in the Philippines and another one in New York, among others help Menchu keep her voice pitch-perfect for musicals.

“You could do things that could hurt your voice, especially in this country where you end up singing songs not necessarily in your vocal range. So you have to go back to your voice coach, ” she explains.

Menchu also makes sure she rests her voice to prepare it for all the singing and even screaming she does on stage.

“You need discipline. You don’t party after rehearsals and just go home and rest. You have to take care of your body.”

Menchu needs all the energy she can get in the upcoming production of “Carrie” the musical where she plays deranged mom Margaret White who cries and shouts – in song – all at the same time.

“It’s fifth gear in every scene. I get mad and I’m screaming. It’s one of the hardest roles I’ve ever done. This is another level of difficulty. It’s such an intense role.”

It’s so intense it even requires her to slap Mikkie Bradshaw – who plays Carrie, the teenage girl equipped with telekinetic powers that frightens her mom so.
The role can sap the energy of the most hyper actor, and Menchu is no exception.


Cartoons to relax
What does she do?

“I watch cartoons,” she smiles.

Cartoons – and the love for her craft – keep Menchu going.

“I like to accept roles that stretch and challenge me. I have no time to relax. I’m on my toes. I want to do justice to every role. You wanna push yourself constantly.”

Menchu has been pushing herself constantly since age 15, or 35 years ago, when she started in theater.

Theater has been her “happy place,” and Menchu feels blessed she can go back to her comfort zone anytime she wants. The good roles just land on her lap, and for that she feels “lucky and honored.”

“I’ve been very blessed. It would be wrong to complain.”

Menchu’s followers – who have seen her grow up in theater – are enjoying the journey along with her.

 
Catch CARRIE on its closing weekend run!  
OCTOBER 5, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC  
Ticket Prices: 1700, 1600, 1300, 800 and 700 
 
 Contact:   
RC Marzan 0922.888.5348  
Onay Sales 0917.908.0565 
 
View Available Seats Here: 
   


Friday, September 20, 2013

‘Carrie’–a musical prelude to Halloween

By Walter Ang
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Original Article can be found HERE



Atlantis Productions will stage the suspense-horror musical “Carrie” in the weeks leading up to Halloween. 

The musical is based on Stephen King’s best-selling novel (first published in 1974) about a girl who is bullied in school and suffers under a cruel mother. She soon discovers a special power that she wields over her tormentors. 

Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo headlines the show as the titular character’s mother Margaret White, while Mikkie Bradshaw (“Rock of Ages,” “Nine,” “Disney’s Aladdin,”) will play Carrie. 

An upcoming film adaptation has Julianne Moore as Carrie’s mother and Chloe Grace Moretz (“Hugo,” “Kick-Ass,” “(500) Days of Summer”) as Carrie. Prior to this version, there was a 1976 film adaptation directed by Brian De Palma, starring Sissy Spacek in the title role. 

The musical version debuted on Broadway in 1988 with book by the film’s screenwriter Lawrence Cohen, music by Michael Gore (“Fame,” “Terms of Endearment”), and lyrics by Dean Pitchford (“Fame,” “Footloose”). 

The 1988 version was critically panned and closed after only five performances. The incident was notorious enough to be immortalized in the title of Ken Mandelbaum’s book “Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops.” 

Last year, a reworked version by the original collaborators was staged on a limited engagement Off-Broadway, earning numerous nominations from different award-giving bodies. 

Atlantis is staging the 2012 version. “It is a beautifully tragic retelling of the Cinderella story with an amazing Broadway pop score,” says Atlantis’ artistic director Bobby Garcia, who is directing the show with Jamie Wilson as assistant director and Ceejay Javier as musical director. 

Choreography is by Cecile Martinez, with set design by Otto Hernandez, lighting design by Martin Esteva, sound design by Bobbit Jacinto and costume design by Raven Ong. 

   
Catch CARRIE on its closing weekend run! 
OCTOBER 5, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC 
Ticket Prices: 1700, 1600, 1300, 800 and 700

 Contact:  
RC Marzan 0922.888.5348 
Onay Sales 0917.908.0565

View Available Seats Here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Au4HQl0TAAC_dC1RLVVKbmZXNzViSXVLeWJKakIxNEE#gid=0 
   

Thursday, August 15, 2013

'Carrie' is coming to Philippine stage

By Miguel Dumaual, ABS-CBNnews.com 
Posted at 08/08/2013 11:32 PM | Updated as of 08/09/2013 3:18 PM
ORIGINAL ARTICLE CAN BE FOUND HERE

Theater actress Mikkie Bradshaw as Carrie in Atlantis Productions' locol staging of the Broadway musical. -- Photo from the theater company's official Facebook page

MANILA -- Carrie, the bullied high school teenager who goes on a rampage of revenge with her telekinetic powers, is coming to the Philippine stage via Atlantis Productions' staging of the 1988 Broadway musical.


Based on the modern classic by Stephen King, "Carrie: The Musical" will be staged for the first time in the Philippines starting September 20 at the Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Makati.

The play features music by Michael Gore ("Fame," "Terms of Endearment"), lyrics by Dean Pitchford ("Fame," "Footloose") and a book by Lawrence D. Cohen, who also wrote the screenplay of the Brian de Palma film released in 1976.

Revived in 2012 with revisions by the musical's original authors -- it hasn't been shown on Broadway since its debut 1988 run -- "Carrie: The Musical" is now set in the present, in the small town of Chamberlain, Maine.

The story remains intact: Carrie White, a misunderstood teen terrorized by her religious fanatic mother and bullied by her classmates, goes berserk with her supernatural abilities after being pushed to her limits.

Taking on the iconic role in the Bobby Garcia-directed local staging is Mikkie Bradshaw, whose turn as the oppressed Carrie marks her first lead role on stage.

Bradshaw, who has appeared in local versions of "Rock of Ages," "Nine," and "Disney's Alladin," considers her latest role her most challenging yet.

Speaking with ABS-CBN News, Bradshaw nonetheless said she is thrilled to take on the vocal and emotional challenge.

"I haven't done much, but I guess this will be my most challenging role yet, because it's very emotional. Vocally, it's very challenging as well. Bascially we're singing throughout the entire show.


"Apart from that, it takes you back to a place where it isn't particularly a pleasant feeling, but it should be fun and I'm excited!" she said.

Carrie's tormentors

Along with Bradshaw, headlining the cast of "Carrie" are Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo as Margaret White, Markki Stroem as Tommy Ross, Yanah Laurel as Sue Snell, and Sheila Valderrama-Martinez as Miss Gardner.

"I'm so excited because I've only heard good things about them," Bradshaw said of her co-actors. "Markki, I've seen him in his other works, and of course he's amazing."


Stroem, who started in local showbiz as a "Pilipinas Got Talent" finalist in 2010, is taking on his third role on stage as the high school star athlete and valedictorian who befriends Carrie.


"This is my first horror musical, so I'm very excited, tapos ang ganda ng role, ang galing ng cast," Stroem said.
 

He added he is particularly thrilled to work anew with Lauchengco-Yulo, calling her "the ultimate theater actress in the Philippines."


The actor's previous theater credits are Atlantis Productions' "Next to Normal" and Repertory Philippines' "Camp Rock: The Musical," where he played the lead roles.

Another theater newcomer joining the cast of "Carrie" is singer Garie Concepcion, the daughter of showbiz veteran Gabby Concepcion with his former partner.

Concepcion related she had already auditioned last year to be part of the musical, but didn't land a role. "I auditioned again this year, and now I feel blessed and lucky na finally I was able to get in," she said.

She added: "Try and try again. Sabi ko nga, 'Pag hindi ako nakakuha ng role this year, next year I'll try again.' I'm very happy na this year nabigyan po ako ng chance. So this is my first musical."

As Helen in "Carrie," Concepcion will be seen as one of the title character's tormentors in school.

According to Concepcion, rehearsals for the play has yet to start. But preparations have long been underway for Garcia, who said he had been "working closely" with the writers of the original production.

"They have been so generous and supportive of our production. It is a beautifully tragic retelling of the Cinderella story with an amazing Broadway pop score.

"We have assembled a fantastic cast and I can’t wait to start creating the show with all of them in the room," Garcia said.

Coinciding with the debut run of "Carrie: The Musical" in the Philippines, Atlantis Productions will also release a four-track EP of the play featuring the local cast.



Catch it on its closing weekend run!
 

OCTOBER 5, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC 
Ticket Prices: 1700, 1600, 1300, 800 and 700

 Contact:  
RC Marzan 0922.888.5348 
Onay Sales 0917.908.0565

View Available Seats Here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Au4HQl0TAAC_dC1RLVVKbmZXNzViSXVLeWJKakIxNEE#gid=0


Monday, July 1, 2013

CARRIE: Tickets Now Available!

CARRIE
Based on Stephen King's Novel
OCTOBER 5, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8 PM / RCBC
Closing Weekend Run

CARRIE White is a misfit. At school, she’s an outcast who’s bullied by popular crowd, and virtually invisible to everyone else. At home, she’s at the mercy of her loving but cruelly over – protective mother. But CARRIE’s just discovered she’s got special power, and if pushed too far, she’s not afraid to use it…

RESERVE YOUR SEATS NOW!
Ticket Prices: 1700, 1600, 1300, 800 and 700 

View Seat Plan HERE:


 
Catch it on its closing weekend run!
OCTOBER 5, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC
Ticket Prices: 1700, 1600, 1300, 800 and 700 
 
Contact:
  Onay Sales (0917.908.0565)
email: ronaleans@yahoo.com
    

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Theater review: The 'Rock Of Ages' principle
ORIGINAL ARTICLE CAN BE FOUND HERE


Is rock ‘n’ roll. The kind that’s in your bloodstream, the kind that you cannot fake. You see it the moment Nyoy Volante entered that stage, you see it in Aiza Seguerra and Jinky Llamanzares and Jett Pangan, of course. You can smell it on Migs Ayesa a mile away. 
 
It is glam rock that’s self-aware of its ironies, it is irony on overdrive in fact. Because watching “Rock Of Ages,” you realize that it makes fun of itself, of this particular time and space and its music, as it takes you on a ride that might be unfamiliar, but should—will—resonate. Between “Glee” and the revived Journey with Arnel Pineda after all, some of these songs can only be familiar; and if you got into some glam rock as a teenager, well “Every Rose Has Its Thorn” and “More Than Words” must remind you of some boy or other, too.
 
It’s entirely possible in fact, to watch this musicale and miss the narrative altogether, or find it to be secondary to the music. Or just, because it is a local production, secondary to the talent that’s here. I’ve said this before and I will say it again: the value of these foreign productions, other than that we have access to them finally, is the way it showcases the kind of theatrical talent that we have, full stop.

 

And so you can watch “Rock of Ages” and treat it like a rock concert instead of a piece of musical theater. This might allow us to be kinder to someone like Vina Morales (Sherrie), who could barely meld the singing and acting together, shifting too clearly between the two. Let’s not get into the lack of mastery in English pronunciation that Morales obviously didn’t have, which can only be a problem in the context of this cast.
 
Which had the accents down pat, and who all looked/felt/sounded like veterans on that stage. Even when they had to work with an audience that couldn’t separate their off-stage personas from the ones gyrating and singing in front of them. Even when we were all just screaming and cheering and stomping our feet to the music and (maybe) not much else. 
 
Case in point, Seguerra as the activist Regina held her own in the face of stronger voices such as Calvin Millado’s and Pangan’s; but when she came onstage as the dancer, the cheers from the crowd were obviously premised on what we know of Seguerra off-stage and off-cam. We know too much about her, and this works towards surprise, as it does towards comedy. That Seguerra can rakenrol it is just “Rock of Ages” Manila’s luck.
 
As they are absolutely and downright lucky to have most of this cast, not quite as jelled together as an ensemble as I’d like, but really quite competent if not downright awesome in the roles that they played. Pangan’s role as narrator was en pointe, practically making cohorts out of the audience, as he skillfully did the whole breaking of the fourth wall scenes. Jamie Wilson as Dennis, the owner of the bar within which much of this story takes place, is the perfect counterpoint to Pangan’s Lonny, their uncanny combination allowed for the funniest of and most absurd of endings for their story. 
 
Llamanzares’ portrayal of the mother figure Justice is one that takes that stage and outsings most every other presence on it. Most, because there are Ayesa (Stacee Jaxx) and Volante (Drew), central character and main protagonist respectively, who are a sight to behold onstage. Ayesa is as expected: like a man made to play that role. He looked like he had breathed life into that character, 80’s glam rock excessive and abusive as it is. Ayesa is exactly who you expect in that role, and he doesn’t disappoint. 
 
But Volante, good lord. The first time I saw him onstage it was in the repeat run of “In The Heights” in March, in a lead role that had him rapping and singing, moving and dancing on that stage like the Latino he needed to be. I couldn’t but wonder who this guy was, and why I was only seeing such talent at this point. I was floored
 
When he sang his first note on that “Rock Of Ages” stage as Drew, my jaw dropped. And as he hit note after glam rock note, from Twisted Sister’s “I Wanna Rock” to Warrant’s “Heaven,” I could only shake my head at how Volante had such command of that stage, how his voice rose above the ensemble’s and Morales,’ too. And we were only in the first part of Act I. By the time it closed with Whitesnake’s “Here We Go Again,” it was clear that Drew was the star of this story, Volante the star of this show. 
 
Of course it’s easy to think, heck, he’s got the lead role, how could he not fill that stage with his presence? But in a musicale that’s got 80’s glam rock, on a stage that has stars from Pangan to Ayesa, Llamanzares and Morales, the less than talented would disappear, if not be eaten alive. Neither happens to Volante, and that is a feat in itself.  That he doesn’t just plod through this, or just hit his notes, is astounding. As with “In The Heights,” but even more so here, Volante proves himself steady as he is quick on his feet, who sings without the uncertainty that television teaches the idiot-board-reading-performer, without the acting mannerisms that a TV or movie actor would need to unlearn for theater (uh, case in point: Morales). 
 
Volante gets on that stage with nary a self-conscious bone, turning in the most believable portrayal of the rock star wannabe Drew, who’s got his heart in the right place, but grows tongue-tied and clumsy in front of a girl he likes, yet can easily and logically turn on the confidence with some rock ‘n’ roll. 
 
It’s easy not to feel for any of the characters in “Rock Of Ages” precisely because this seems secondary to the excesses that are here. You know Volante rocks his role because you leave that theater with a very clear sense of Drew, with a voice that fits glam rock to a tee, a boyishness that stands out against the rest of ‘em in 80’s Hollywood. 
 
Volante doesn’t just give you rock ‘n’ roll here. He also proves that at the core of his acoustic singing, guitar playing, pop TV persona, is some good ol’ soul and real musicianship. Along with the rest of this cast, from the awesome ones to those who tried their best, it’s “Rock of Ages” on rakenrol overdrive. 
 
And that’s the way we do it in Manila. –KG, GMA News

 
Catch it on its closing weekend run!
JULY 27, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC
Ticket Prices: 2000, 1750, 1500, 900 and 700
 
Contact Us:
Robert Ceazar Marzan  (0922.888.5348)
Jayme del Rosario (0927.202.2017)
  Onay Sales (0917.908.0565)

Buena Elizondo (0917.888.7179)
    

Last Year, all shows were SOLD OUT.
Don't wait until it's too late!

View Seat Plan HERE:

Friday, June 14, 2013

MiG Ayesa returns to ‘Rock of Ages’
The Philippine Star
Original Article can be found HERE 


MANILA, Philippines - The homecoming of 2012 belonged to international rock star MiG Ayesa when he flew in to play Stacee Jaxx for the smash hit, sold-out run of Atlantis Productions’ Rock of Ages. The rock singer who burst into mainstream Filipino consciousness with his turn as one of the finalists in Rockstar INXS has gone to conquer the West End, Broadway and the world stage. Now in the middle of the We Will Rock You World Tour, MiG takes a short trip to the Philippines to step into Stacee’s rockstar boots once again when Rock of Ages returns to Manila for a limited run in July.

MiG says, “I am so spoiled as ‘Stacee Jaxx’ as his entrance is quite awesome and getting to sing Wanted Dead or Alive again is a personal favorite moment of mine from the show. But anything that Vina and Nyoy sing always makes me melt, and Aiza is a knockout. But then again, Jett Pangan always cracks me up...the entire cast did such beautiful work on the show its impossible to pick just one favorite moment.”

MiG who will be joined by a stellar cast which includes Nyoy Volante, Vina Morales, Aiza Seguerra, Jett Pangan, Calvin Millado, Jamie Wilson, and Bibo Reyes among others continues to speak fondly of the rest of the cast.

“I just loved working with this amazing cast and crew so much. We grew to love and respect each other and we became such a tight-knit family. I can’t wait to be re-united with them again.” Rachel Alejandro will also join the cast as Justice Charlier and sing the popular Every Rose Has Its Thorn.

Rock of Ages was the sold-out smash hit of 2012 and the run enjoyed a riotous, sizzling reception from the audiences who trooped to the theater for the show. MiG recalls, “In some ways, even from the first day of rehearsals, I knew we had something special. The chemistry between us all just worked so well. I love this show, and have seen it work on the US Tour and on Broadway. However, the response to our production was even better than I had hoped. These experiences come very rarely and are always precious.”

Rock of Ages is a face-melting joyride back to the ’80s featuring the well-loved classic rock songs of the era like We Built This City, Every Rose Has Its Thorn, I Wanna Rock, Hit Me With Your Best Shot, and Don’t Stop Believin’. It tells the story of Drew and Sherrie, two young dreamers who meet on the Sunset Strip and find that sometimes, when your dreams get dashed, you end up with a gift far more precious than that which you set out to find.  All that in a face-melting, laugh-a-minute rocking show.

 
Catch it on its closing weekend run!
JULY 27, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC
Ticket Prices: 2000, 1750, 1500, 900 and 700
 
Contact Us:
Robert Ceazar Marzan  (0922.888.5348)
Jayme del Rosario (0927.202.2017)
  Onay Sales (0917.908.0565)

Buena Elizondo (0917.888.7179)
    

Last Year, all shows were SOLD OUT.
Don't wait until it's too late!

View Seat Plan HERE:

Monday, March 25, 2013

ROCK OF AGES: Tickets Now Available!


ROCK OF AGES (THE REPEAT)
JULY 27, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8 PM / RCBC
Closing Weekend Run

This 2013, Atlantis Productions is bringing back “Rock of Ages,” the acclaimed five-time Tony Award nominated Broadway musical. This is a hilarious, feel-good love story told thru such ’80s hits like “I Want To Know What Love Is,” “Don’t Stop Believin’,” “We Built This City,” “Hit Me With Your Best Shot,” and “Every Rose Has Its Thorn.”

With a book by Chris D' Arienzo, built around classic rock hits from the 1980's, especially from the famous glam metal bands of the decade. The musical features songs from Styx, Journey, Bon Jovi, Pat Benatar, Twisted Sister, Steve Perry, Poison and Asia, among other well-known rock bands.   

RESERVE YOUR SEATS NOW!

View Seat Plan HERE:



 
Catch it on its closing weekend run!
JULY 27, 2013 / SATURDAY / 8PM /RCBC
Ticket Prices: 2000, 1750, 1500, 900 and 700
 
Contact Us:
Robert Ceazar Marzan  (0922.888.5348)
Jayme del Rosario (0927.202.2017)
  Onay Sales (0917.908.0565)

Buena Elizondo (0917.888.7179)
   

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

ALADDIN (The New Stage Musical)


Catch ALADDIN on its closing weekend run!
December 8 / Saturday / 8PM 
Meralco Theater, Ortigas Ave., Pasig City

 
Contact Us:
Robert Ceazar Marzan  (0922.888.5348)
Jayme del Rosario (0927.202.2017)
or Onay Sales (0917.908.0565)



Ticket Prices:
Php1,500.00 – Orchestra Center
Php1,350.00 – Orchestra Side
Php900.00 – Orchestra Side Obstructed
Php1,100.00 – Loge Center
Php1,000.00 – Loge Side
Php700.00 – Balcony Center
Php600.00 – Balcony Side
Php500.00 – Balcony Back

Click HERE to view seat plan for the December 8, 8PM Schedule


ALADDIN
Music by Alan Menken
Lyrics by Howard Ashman, Tim Rice and Chad Beguelin
Book by Chad Beguelin

Based on the Disney film written by 
Ron Clements, John Musker, Ted Elliot and Terry Rosio

Starring
Tom Rodriguez as Aladdin
K-La Rivera as Princess Jasmine


Wednesday, June 20, 2012


GOD OF CARNAGE
JULY 21, 2012 / SATURDAY / 8PM/ RCBC
  Director: Bobby Garcia

God of Carnage (originally Lay Waste to England for Me) is a play by Yasmina Reza. It is about two pairs of parents, one of whose child has hurt the other at a public park, who meet to discuss the matter in a civilized manner. However, as the evening goes on, the parents become increasingly childish, resulting in the evening devolving into chaos. The play was a success in its official French language, but has been equally acclaimed in its other English-translated productions in both London and New York.



BONA
SEPTEMBER 22, 2012/ SATURDAY/ 3PM / PETA 
Director: Soxie Topacio
Writer: Lalie Bucoy ~~ Music: Teresa Barroso
Cast: Eugene Domingo, Edgar Allan Guzman

Spinster call center agent Bona upon seeing the televised pitiful background of Gino Sanchez immediately becomes a fan of the Star of Tomorrow wannabe. In her desire to help him jumpstart his showbiz career, she gives him everything she has and turns her back to everything she values. Blinded by her belief in him, she allows all his faults to freely slide as she finds herself drowning in the surreal quicksand of worship and pity where manipulation blurs the line between prey and predator, the dismissive god and the faithful worshiper.




   
RESERVE YOUR TICKETS NOW!
 
Contact Us:
Robert Ceazar Marzan  (0922.888.5348)
Jayme del Rosario (0927.202.2017)
or Onay Sales (0918.536.2116)