Bridge Street Theatre

Through November 23

Roxanne Fay and Amy Crossman star in “Mary Jane” at Bridge Street Theater. Credit: Photo by John Sowle

Certainly one of the Hudson Valleyโ€™s most active spots for live theater, Catskillโ€™s Bridge Street Theatre has a set of five plays booked for 2025: playwright Brian Dykstraโ€™s timely comedy written in iambic pentameter, โ€œPolishing Shakespeareโ€ (through June 1); a new โ€œnautical musicalโ€ by local Carmen Borgia, โ€œSouthโ€ (July 24-August 3); Hannah Moscovitchโ€™s drama about a journalist investigating a domestic violence case, โ€œRed Like Fruitโ€ (October 2-12); and an in-house interpretation of Ernest Thompsonโ€™s award-winning โ€œOn Golden Pondโ€ (November 13-23). Also: โ€œSinatra: the Man, the Myth, and the Musicโ€ (June 29), Bridge Street Danceโ€™s โ€œReclaimingโ€ (June 21), and a Bob Dylan tribute by the Complete Unknowns (June 6-7).

Shadowland Stages

Through December 21

Shadowland Stages is currently celebrating its 40th season. The new schedule at the historic former vaudeville-era theater in Ellenville presents Judd Hirsch in โ€œIโ€™m Not Rappaportโ€ (through June 29), the poignant comedy โ€œKing Jamesโ€ (July 5-20); the musical โ€œWaitressโ€ (July 25-August 24); the new โ€œDarker the Night, Brighter the Skiesโ€ by โ€œAlmost Maineโ€ playwright John Cariani (August 29-September 14); the uproarious โ€œBecoming Dr. Ruthโ€ (September 19-October 5); the Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning drama โ€œProofโ€ (October 10-26); and the delightful holiday musical โ€œGeorgiana and Kitty: Christmas at Pemberlyโ€ (December 5-21).

Great Barrington Public Theater

June 5-August 17

Great Barringtonโ€™s nexus of โ€œnew plays with a focus on playwrights and theater artists living in and nearby the Berkshires,โ€ Great Barrington Public Theater is gearing up for another inspiring run. This season, the theater is producing three tantalizing works: โ€œHow to Not Save the World with Mr. Bezosโ€ (June 5-June 22), which has the titular billionaire giving โ€œan interview in exchange for information on the federal case against himโ€ฆ The fall of capitalism is about to get very messyโ€; โ€œMadame Mozart the Lacrimosa,โ€ about the great composerโ€™s widow, Constanze Mozart (July 10-27); and the hilarious and poignant comedy โ€œThe Best Medicineโ€ (July 31-August 17).

Hudson Valley Shakespeare

June 8-September 7

Sarin Monae West in the Hudson Valley Shakespeare production of “Medea: Re-versed” in 2024. Credit: Photo by Gabe Palacio

Presenting a repertoire that includes Shakespeareโ€™s classics as well as plays by contemporary writers in an open-air setting since 1987, Hudson Valley Shakespeare is once again bringing the good stuff to its 98-acre campus. The Bardโ€™s evergreens for 2025 are โ€œThe Comedy of Errorsโ€ (June 6-August 2) and โ€œJulius Caesarโ€ (September 9-10), with the rest of the season rounded out by Thornton Wilderโ€™s โ€œThe Matchmakerโ€ (June 8-August 3); โ€œOctetโ€ by Dave Malloy (โ€œNatasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812โ€) (August 11-September 7); HVS Cabaret with the work-in-progress โ€œFathertime: Birth, Death, and Songsโ€ (August 6-7); and HVS Cabaret with โ€œBebe and Friends – The Women of Woodsโ€ starring Bebe Nicole Simpson (August 8).

Powerhouse Theater at Vassar College

June 20-July 27

Vassar Collegeโ€™s Powerhouse Theater returns for its 39th season with a dynamic slate of plays, workshops, and readings by established and emerging voices in American theater. Highlights include the Mainstage premiere of “A Trojan Woman” by Sara Farrington (July 25-27), and the musical adaptation of “Itโ€™s Kind of a Funny Story” by Alex Brightman and Drew Gasparini (July 18-19). Other projects include “The Holes” (July 19-20) “A Simple Herstory” (July 5-6), and the devised work “The Chamber” (July 11-13). Free outdoor stagings by the Training Company include “The Comedy of Errors” (July 11-13) and “The Seagull” (July 18-20), plus a Soundpainting experiment at the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center.

Ancram Center for the Arts

June 28-October 19

Martina Deignan and Glenn Barrett in “Summer,” presented as part of Plein Air Plays by Ancram Center for the Arts. Credit: Photo by B. Docktor

In rural Columbia County, the Ancram Center for the Arts is headquartered at the Ancram Opera House, originally built in 1927 as a Grange Hall. For its 10th season, the center is featuring the storytelling night โ€œReal People Real Storiesโ€ at Hillsdaleโ€™s Hilltop Barn (June 28); the folk musical โ€œWhere the Mountain Meets the Seaโ€ (July 11-20); โ€œPlein Air Plays,โ€ an outdoor play series at various locations in Ancram (August 7-10); the drama โ€œBlue Cowboyโ€ (August 16-17); the musical โ€œPenelopeโ€ (September 19-28); and a show of music and words by local playwright Mary Murfitt, โ€œFramedโ€ (October 19).

Voice Theater

July 10-27

Launched in Paris with funding from the French government, Voice Theater moved to New York City in 1989 before finally landing in Kingston. To date, the company has produced more than 45 full-scale productions that range from original plays to American classics, festivals, and numerous other stagings. This summer itโ€™s putting on Michael Fraynโ€™s โ€œNoises Offโ€ย (July 10-27), which the producers describe as โ€œa bedroom farce, a hilarious comedy revolving around mistaken identities, physical gags, sexual liaisons, and sardines. An under-rehearsed group of English actors tour tiny UK towns whilst vengeful vendettas, jealousy, and passion erupt on and off stage.โ€

Catskill Public Theater

July 10-August 17

Now in its second season, this Sullivan County upstart is making noiseโ€”literallyโ€”with a state-of-the-art mobile stage and a pay-what-you-wish model that brings free outdoor theater to breweries, barbecues, and backyards across the Catskills. This summerโ€™s lineup includes โ€œWoodstock Ripples,โ€ a multimedia swirl of original plays, live music, and rarely seen photos from the 1969 festival; โ€œRenegade,โ€ a revival of the companyโ€™s gripping interactive courtroom drama; and โ€œThe Gin Game,โ€ a bittersweet Broadway classic about cards, aging, and regret. With performances scattered across beloved local venues like Catskill Brewery and Kauneonga Lake Fire Pavilion, Catskill Public Theater is doubling down on its mission: community-powered art under the open sky.

New York Stage and Film

July 11-August 3

Now celebrating its 40th anniversary, the Marist University-based New York Stage and Film was founded in 1985 and was the incubator for such hits as โ€œHamilton,โ€ โ€œHadestown,โ€ and โ€œAmerican Idiot,โ€ among several other acclaimed shows. This year brings Noel Cowardโ€™s โ€œVivas Privadasโ€ (July 11), โ€œTee Tee and La La Showโ€ (July 12), โ€œGertrudeโ€ (July 12), โ€œBackyard Boysโ€ (July 13), โ€œShelterโ€ (July 19-20), โ€œStokelyโ€ (July 25), โ€œManakinโ€ (July 26), โ€œI Said Evolutionโ€ (July 26), โ€œSearching for Mr. Moonโ€ (July 27), โ€œNoneโ€ (July 31-August 2), and โ€œThe Pushoverโ€ (August 3).

Woodstock Shakespeare Festival

July 25-August 31

This year marks the 35th season of Woodstockโ€™s Bird-on-a-Cliff Theatre Company, which was founded by Elli Michaels and David Aston-Reese in 1990. The organization began under another name, the Byrdcliffe Theatre Festival, and during its debut season put on the first all-female production ofย Beckettโ€™s โ€œWaiting for Godot.โ€ This summer Bird-on-a-Cliff is presenting the 30th year of its Woodstock Shakespeare Festival, with a staging of the perennial farce โ€œThe Merry Wives of Windsor,โ€ which was first published in 1602 and supposedly written at the request of Queen Elizabeth I. The performances will take place on the companyโ€™s outdoor Elizabethan Soundstage at the Comeau Property in Woodstock.

Peter Aaron is the arts editor for Chronogram.

Brian is the editorial director for the Chronogram Media family of publications. He lives in Kingston with his partner Lee Anne and the rapscallion mutt Clancy.

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