Due to inclement weather TONIGHT'S (6/26) production of HAMLET has been moved INDOORS to the Tatem Black Box Theater on Hood College campus.
See https://t.co/GpjrFzxYdu for more details
#FrederickShakespeareFestival’s teen show opens tonight for a 4-night run!
Come support next-gen artists w/ this new comedy that spoofs Shakespeare in a way everyone will enjoy! https://t.co/HG98zEL1ox
July 28-31 at 7:30pm.
Rain location: 5 E. 2nd St., Frederick
Fri 7/16--join us for an Opening Celebration & Sneak Peeks of Frederick Shakespeare Festival 2021! Exciting & accessible takes on classics.
7pm, all ages, beer/wine w/ID, pay-what-you-can donation at door. Produced by @ESPtheatre#FSF21#Shakespeare
https://t.co/U0fNHHNST4
Know a teen who loves to act? We're now holding auditions for our Frederick Shakespeare Festival Teen Show!
Sign-ups and more info here:
https://t.co/vNp3heLMBr
You can also visit our audition page here:
https://t.co/epIZsn5dB9
Hey Actors! We are holding auditions for Romeo & Juliet - performing outdoors this August as part of the Frederick Shakespeare Festival- Audition info can be found under the “Auditions” tab on our website: https://t.co/5JciMYzLPK
#RomeoAndJuliet
Hey Actors! We are holding auditions for Romeo & Juliet - performing outdoors this August as part of the Frederick Shakespeare Festival- Audition info can be found under the “Auditions” tab on our website:
https://t.co/5JciMYzLPK
#RomeoAndJuliet
NOW STREAMING: "Which" by Evelyn Glover. A radio play from 1914 about a nurse, an offer, and a difficult decision. Get your ticket here:
https://t.co/EpySsUMt1Y
In honor of International Women’s Day, we bring you the first Black woman in North America to publish a newspaper (Canada's "The Provincial Freeman.") And so may more incredible things! To learn more about this amazing woman see our Facebook or Instagram!
Johnson refused to change her endings (as requested) because she believed they represented the struggles of African Americans at the time. You can learn more about her on her website- https://t.co/D8AkXHnfT2 3/3
February is Black History Month, and as ESP reflects on this month and its importance, we'd like to highlight a few Black women writers who have been left out of the history books. First, we bring you Georgia Douglas Johnson, poet and playwright. 1/3
Did you know she was the most widely-read Black woman poet in America during the 1920’s-30’s? Georgia Douglas Johnson wrote dozens of plays and very few were published or produced as they "gave one the feeling that the situation was hopeless." 2/3