Man Of La Mancha graphic
Produced by Dale Borer

April 21st, 2006
To
May 14th, 2006

Performances

  • April 21st, 2006 7:30 pm
  • April 22nd, 2006 7:30 pm
  • April 23rd, 2006 6:00 pm
  • April 28th, 2006 7:30 pm
  • April 29th, 2006 7:30 pm
  • April 30th, 2006 6:00 pm
  • May 5th, 2006 7:30 pm
  • May 6th, 2006 7:30 pm
  • May 7th, 2006 6:00 pm
  • May 12th, 2006 7:30 pm
  • May 13th, 2006 7:30 pm
  • May 14th, 2006 6:00 pm

Director

Andrea Gonzales

Music Director

Chris Poole

Vocal Director

Christy Cook

Choreographer

Diosa Warner

Stage Manager

Bill Buhl

Production Crew

Assistant stage manager Maria Gray
Costume design Amanda Morey
Light Crew Lori Raymaker
Light Crew Jennifer Buhl
Light Crew Debbie O'Neill
Light Crew Courtney Hood
Light Crew Kristy Szymborski
Light Crew Adam Cromie
Light Crew Elizabeth Polsin
Light Crew Karen Borer
Light Crew Angela Noakes
Light Crew Rebecca Gray
Light design Adam Cromie
Prop mistress Nicole Morey
Set artist Laurel Spitzer
Set construction Adam Cromie
Set construction Dale Borer
Set design Joshua Kluth
Stage Crew Jenny Gray
Stage Crew Maria Gray

Musicians

Flute Holly Gentes
Flute Alexa Andrews
Oboe Robyn Wyatt
Clarinet Gretchen Blair
Bassoon Bill Karr
Trumpet Emileigh Kershaw
Trumpet Pat Mouwdy
Trombone Christopher Raiford
Percussion Pat English
Bass Jim Garcelon
Guitar Mark Jackson
French Horn Allison Pearl-Baine
French Horn Jullian English

"Man Of La Mancha"

This remarkable show is one of the great theatre successes of our time. This is a play-within-a-play, based on Cervantes’ “Don Quixote.” We have a poignant story of a dying old man whose impossible dream takes over his mind. It’s All the Same, Dulcinea, I’m Only Thinking of Him, The Impossible Dream, I Really Like Him and Little Bird remain in your thoughts and in your soul well after you see the show. His dream is Everyman’s dream. His tilting at windmills is Everyman’s great adventure. Somehow, the footlights disappear, time is telescoped and the “Man of La Mancha” speaks for humankind.

Miguel de Cervantes, aging and an utter failure in his varied careers as playwright, poet and tax collector, has been thrown into a dungeon in Seville to await trial by the Inquisition for an offense against the Church. There he is hailed before a kangaroo court of his fellow prisoners; thieves, cutthroats and trollops who propose to confiscate his meager possessions one of which is the uncompleted manuscript of a novel called "Don Quixote." Cervantes, seeking to save it, proposes to offer a novel defense in the form of entertainment. The "court" accedes and before their eyes, donning makeup and costume, Cervantes and his faithful manservant transform themselves into Don Quixote and Sancho Panza. They proceed to play out the story with the participation of the prisoners as other characters.

      Quixote and Sancho take to the road, on "horses" which dance a lively flamenco, singing Man of La Mancha in a campaign to restore the age of chivalry, to battle evil and right all wrongs. The famous encounter with the windmills follows, but Quixote ascribes his defeat to the machinations of his enemy, the dark Enchanter, whom one day he will meet in mortal combat. In a roadside inn-which Quixote, spying from a distance, insists to Sancho is really a castle-Aldonza, the inn's serving girl and part-time trollop, is propositioned by a gang of rough Muleteers. Quixote, arriving at the inn, sees Aldonza as the dream-ideal whom he will serve evermore, singing Dulcinea to her. Aldonza is confused and angered by Quixote's refusal to see her as she really is.

      The Padre and Dr.Carrasco arrive at the inn but on questioning Quixote, are frustrated by his lunatic logic. They are interrupted by the arrival of an itinerant Barber singing The Barber's Song. Quixote confiscates the Barber's shaving basin, convinced that it is really the "Golden Helmet" of Mambrino, and is ceremoniously crowned with the aid of the Muleteers and the incredulous Barber. Later Aldonza encounters Quixote in the courtyard where he is holding vigil, in preparation for being dubbed a knight by the Innkeeper. She questions him on his seemingly irrational ways, and is answered by Quixote in a statement of his credo, The Impossible Dream.

      Aldonza has caught the fever of Quixote's idealism but, attempting to put it into practice, is cruelly beaten and ravaged by the Muleteers in The Abduction and is carried off. On the road again, Quixote and Sancho encounter a thievish band of Moors and are robbed of all their possessions in the Moorish Dance. They return to the inn, only to encounter the disillusioned Aldonza who sings her denunciation of the Quixotic dream in the dramatic Aldonza. A fantastic figure, the Enchanter disguised as the Knight of the Mirrors, enters; challenging Quixote to combat, the Enchanter defeats him, forcing him to see himself as a pathetic clown.

      At home again, the old man who once called himself Don Quixote is dying. Aldonza, having followed, forces her way into the room, pleading poignantly with him to restore the vision of glory she held so briefly, in the song Dulcinea. Quixote, remembering, rises from his bed to reaffirm the stirring Man of La Mancha, but collapses, dying. Aldonza, having glimpsed the vision once more, refuses to acknowledge death, saying, "My name is Dulcinea."  Back in Cervantes' dungeon the prisoners, dregs of humanity though they are, have been deeply affected by his story and restore to him his precious manuscript. Cervantes is summoned to his real trial by the Inquisition. The prisoners unite to sing him on his way with The Impossible Dream.



 
Actor/Actress Character Role(s)  
Friedrich Schlott Cervantes/Don Quixote  
Rod Gray Sancho Panza/Manservant  
Trina Williamson Aldonza/Dulcinea
Dale Borer Innkeeper/Governor
Kenny James Duke/Dr. Corrasco  
David Dumpert Padre  
Robert Orzalli Barber  
Carey Batschi Antonia  
Michelle Bruski-Dumpert Housekeeper  
Rickey Delaney Pedro
Patrick Polsin Anselmo  
Michelle Abad Gypsy/Moor Girl/Prisoner
Ty Brillhart Paco  
Billy Buhl Tenorio
Woody Dumpert Maria  
Kimberly Gray Fermina
Meghan Gray Gypsy/Moor Girl/Prisoner
Justin Hartley Juan  
Mark Jackson The Guitarist
Derek Ormiston Captain of the Inquisition  
Colton Myers Jose  
Cayla Raymaker Gypsy/Moor Girl/Prisoner  
Ernie Wong Captain Of The Inquisition (Understudy)