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Optional accessories. Inquiry Contact. Log in. Follow Us. Stay in Touch. Partner's websites:. We are proud sponsors of:. We are member of:. I agree More about cookies. I'm not really like Sarah in that wherever my husband is, that's where I'm home though Sarah certainly learns some lessons by the end of the book.
As for why Seattle, I wanted to set the story in a large, urban environment and I'm still most familiar with Seattle. Plus, it's Seattle. By definition it's cool!
And beautiful except for those pesky zombies. JK: I'm used to your angsty historical romances, and this is ultra-contemporary, irreverent and hilarious. It sounds SO you. Or maybe you're just multi-voiced? What do you think? JP: I think they're both my real voice. I've tried writing lighter historicals and it just never worked. My natural voice in historicals is dark and sensual. But with the zombies, they just came out so funny and so irreverent. So I guess multi-voiced is the way I am.
JK: What can we expect from books 2 and 3 in this series? Same characters? The continuation of Zombiebusters Extermination, Inc? And when will are those books scheduled to be out? JP: Yup! Same characters throughout the series. In the second book Dave and Sarah have created Zombiebusters Exterminators, Inc and are working full-time as zombie exterminators. But then there's a mad scientist and a potential cure and all kinds of hijinks. And I'm writing the third now, but let's just think zombie benefits without the zombie side-effects and stalkerazzi reporters and washed up rock and roll stars.
I'm having such fun working on it. Thanks, Jesse! He writes about real, sad, silly people under the laughs, but he never apologizes for the laughs, and he happens to think that comedy is just as important as — or maybe even more important than — tragedy. I'm very happy to be privileged enough to write comedy. It doesn't mean seriousness has to go out of the window. As he looks into what might happen if an android in this case, a soap opera actor or actoid named JC-F began to exhibit a surprising sense of humor, Ayckbourn finds ways to talk about love, connection, life, death and the very nature of comedy.
But Tate is too far round the bend to have any interest in mentoring a bright-eyed newcomer like Adam. The master class part comes when Adam notices that JC-F, or Jacie Triplethree, starts laughing when a fellow actoid screws up his lines. So what in the world is wrong with Jacie Triplethree? So Adam takes Jacie on the run to save his android lady love, the movie he wants to make, and his hope for the future of comedy.
Tim Monsion is just the right degree of scruffy and cynical for Chandler Tate, the washed-up director who used to be somebody, and Carmen Roman was made for snappy roles like Carla Pepperbloom, the exec who eats underlings for breakfast.
My only quibble otherwise involves timing. Hope so. It just needs a bit more speed to reach its full Comic potential. Peninsula Players has kindly offered a video preview. The actors and the material are terrific, and the setting at Peninsula Players is pretty terrific, too.
Did she deserve it? Not in the least. I have no idea. This is not a neat or tidy show, but the lush score and romantic darkness around the edges makes it a sardonic, intoxicating experience nonetheless. He was aided by a terrific cast, featuring wonderful voices for the most part, as well as strong acting skills and good comic timing. Here, Mueller made her young and a bit giddy, but also appealing and understandable.
Peninsula Players can be proud of pulling off a complicated, delicate show with good humor, amazing music and just enough romance to tug at the heartstrings long after the elusive sun has finally set. I worry about Anne and Henrik and how they're going to survive, I don't think Charlotte gets a very happy ending, and I already miss Madame Armfeldt, but still A pleasure. It's been a year since the untimely death of Janice's father, and to deal with it all, she holds spiteful conversations with her dolls and dreams of Justin Timberlake, while her mother fantasizes about Harrison Ford and relies on her superior baking skills to hold herself together.
Throw in an apartment that starts to plot murder and you're left with a wild and crazy ride to redemption and healing. Or none of the above. Experimental, non-linear Definitely different. Fun, fizzy musical hijinks ensure. Their city lies in ruins, their husbands have been killed, and everyone left behind will be enslaved as spoils of war. Modern versions have been done I saw one set in s Eastern Europe ten or fifteen years ago, with the Trojan wives in Donna Reed dresses, beating out their sorrows on fetching little train cases instead of drums , illustrating the notion that war and its destructive power never go out of style.
The name of the town is not the only thing with religious or Biblical significance in the story. Our young ex-con is a catalyst for change in the town and its citizens in this story of human connection, sacrifice and redemption.
One more show will be added later, to be directed by Nancy Loitz in March at the E. Melba Kirkpatrick Laboratory Theatre. As part of its mission to recognize and support new plays and playwrights, Heartland Theatre Company has announced the theme and details for its "New Plays from the Heartland" playwriting competition.
Heartland is looking for short one-act plays from playwrights in eight Midwestern states Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota and Wisconsin on the theme of "I thought it would be simple. Here's how Heartland defines its theme: "It seems like a no-brainer.
Putting a bike together. Finishing your novel. Asking her to marry you. Telling him to move out. Staging a coup to take over the garden club. It should be a piece of cake to write us a one-act, on any subject you like, as long as it includes the line I thought it would be simple. At the beginning. In the middle. At the very end.
I thought it would be simple. Written on the blackboard. Carved into the side of the baby bed that was supposed to go together in three easy steps.
I asked Kevin Wickart pictured at left , someone I know from his stellar performances in ten-minute plays, to tell me a little bit about "I'll Be Seeing You," the s-style revue Kevin is appearing in with Prairie Fire Theatre. Here's what Kevin had to say Take exciting arrangements of World War II-era pop music — a lot of swing, a touch of the blues, and a dash of boogie woogie — wrap it up it up in a lighthearted story by Nancy Steele Brokaw, serve it up on some of the best voices in town, and what have you got?
Visit Prairie Fire's website, linked at left, for more information or to make reservations. I was going to start this out by suggesting that America had, indeed, learned to stop worrying and love the bomb, as "Dr. Strangelove" tells us in its subtitle. I remember the Civil Defense Shelter at the Health Department where my dad worked back in the 60s, as if we could all pile in there in case of nuclear attack.
We also had drills at school, where we were told you could hide under your tiny little desk and be safe from the Big One. I certainly hope you don't see that anymore. My friend Jesse Petersen, who has written a lot of historical romances and erotica under other names, is now doing cool zombie books under her very own name.
The first in her zombie series was supposed to come out in September, but Amazon. So here's a look at Jesse's adorable "Married with Zombies," in which Sarah and David attempt to keep their shaky marriage going at the worst possible time, a Zombie Apocalypse.
First their marriage counselor goes over to the undead side, and that seriously affects her ability to offer guidance, you know?
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