City of Angels


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| Staff | |
| Producer | Peter Mandel |
| Director | Myra Kaelin |
| Musical & Vocal Director | Alan Chipman |
| Choreographer | Nicole Sarich |
| Rehearsal Secretary | Joy Reynolds |
| Master Carpenter | Gerry Blanchard |
| Stage Manager | Kris Snook |
| Set Designer | Andrew Cummings |
| Costumer | Michelle Griffin |
| Lighting Designer | Peter Mandel |
| . | |
| Cast | |
| Stine | Rob Christopher |
| Stone | Aaron Weisberg |
| Gabby / Bobbi | Suzanne Guzzetta |
| Donna / Oolie | Cindy Powell |
| Buddy Fidler / Irwin S. Irving | Jon Reed |
| Carla Haywood / Alaura Kingsley | Elizabeth Calisi |
| Werner Kriegler / Luther Kingsley | Joseph “Bud” Biafore |
| Gerald Pierce / Peter Kingsley | Ken Powell |
| Avril Raines / Mallory Kingsley | Megan Griffin |
| Pancho Vargas / Lieutenant Munoz | Bruce Pember |
| Jimmy Powers / Jimmy Powers | Kel Whisner |
| Shoeshine / Officer Pasco | Ronny Misra |
| Gilbert / Dr. Mandril | Doug Doughty |
| Angel City Four | Rachelle Abbey |
| Roberta Vinkhuyzen | |
| Sven Schutz | |
| Michael Carey | |
| Studio Cop / Big Six | Chris Goller |
| Studio Cop / Sonny | Javier Garcia |
| Cinematographer / Commissioner Gaines | Michael Carey |
| Hairdresser / Anna / Margie | MaryBeth Anderson |
| Buddy’s niece / Yamato | Patrice Lynn |
| Studio Employee / Mahoney / Nurse | Christine McElroy |
| Studio Employee / Nurse / Bootsie | Tracy Van Gundy |
| Studio Employee / Margaret | Joyce Bedard |
| . | |
| Orchestra | |
| Conductor | Alan Chipman |
| Keyboard | Alan Chipman |
| Piano | Sandra Lien |
| Percussion | Kirk Berkland |
| Tenor Saxophone | William Yang |
| Saxophone / Clarinet | Steve Knapp |
| Trombone | Kevin Hartman |
| Trumpet | Ethan Curtis |
| Bass | Tanner Hallinan |
| Flute | Dede Andrus |
| Cello | Natachia Li |
Loaded with contemporary jazz, this side-splitting comedy is set in the glamorous, seductive Hollywood of the 1940’s. In a world of film studios and flimsy negligees, the show chronicles the misadventures of Stine, a young novelist, attempting to convert his novel into a screenplay for movie producer/director, Buddy Fidler. Alongside the enactment of Stine’s personal story, every scene that he writes for the screenplay is acted out onstage. So we also see a 1940’s private eye tale of decadence and homicide with a liberal sprinkling of femmes fatales. The two stories, real and reel, collide and crescendo, releasing the audience with the best of Hollywood conventions; a happy ending.

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Photos by Elizabeth Mandel