What You Need for the Posters
Here is everything that you'll need to complete the informational aspect of each poster. While we leave the artistic interpretation up to you, this is the info that your creation must convey. Think about fonts, sizes, and layout as you design your poster and how the words work with the art.

Posters may be entered for the shows listed below. The 2009 Playwrights Festival is not part of the contest at this time. If you have any questions about the Poster Contest, please e-mail posters@curtainplayers.com

The 2008–2009 Season, at a glance:

The Guys by Anne Nelson
Still Life with Iris by Steven Dietz
The Rainmaker by Richard Nash
Burn This by Landford Wilson
Twilight of the Golds by Jonathan Tolins
Barefoot in the Park by Neil Simon
Camelot by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe



Important information on the 2008–2009 Season:
The Guys
by Anne Nelson
Sept. 5, 6, 12, 13, 19 & 20 at 8:00 p.m.
Sept. 14 & 21 at 2:00 p.m.
Publister: Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
Recommended for ages 13 and above.
Less than two weeks after the September 11th attacks, New Yorkers are still in shock. One of them, an editor named Joan, receives an unexpected phone call on behalf of Nick, a fire captain who has lost most of his men in the attack. He's looking for a writer to help him with the eulogies he must present at their memorial services. Nick and Joan spend a long afternoon together, recalling the fallen men through recounting their virtues and their foibles, and fashioning the stories into memorials of words. In the process, Nick and Joan discover the possibilities of friendship in each other and their shared love for the unconquerable spirit of the city. As they make their way through the emotional landscape of grief, they draw on humor, tango, the appreciation of craft in all its forms—and the enduring bonds of common humanity. The Guys is based on a true story.



Still Life with Iris
by Steven Dietz
October 17, 18, 24, 25, 31,
and November 1 at 8:00 p.m.
October 26 & November 2 at 2:00 p.m.
Publisher: Dramatic Publishing .
Recommended for All Ages.
Still Life with Iris is a fantastical adventure which centers on a little girl's search for the simplest of things: home. Iris lives with her mom in the land of Nocturno—a magical place in which the workers make, by night, all of the things we see in the world by day. Also, in Nocturno, memories do not reside in people's minds but instead are kept in their coats (called 'Past Coats'). The rulers of Nocturno, the Great Goods, are determined to have the "best" of everything on their island—and therefore take Iris away from her home and bring her to Great Island to be their daughter. To ease the pain of this separation, they remove her Past Coat, leaving her with no memory of her home or her family. All that remains of Iris' past is a single button from her coat. Using the button as a clue, Iris joins with friends she meets on her journey—Annabel Lee (a young woman from the sea) and Mozart (the composer, age 11)—and frees herself from the Great Goods. She returns to Nocturno, having found her past, and her home.



The Rainmaker
by Richard Nash
November 28, 29, and
December 5, 6, 11, & 12 at 8:00 p.m.
|and December 2 & 9 at 2:00 p.m.
Publisher: Samuel French, Inc.
Suitable for All Ages.
At the time of a paralyzing drought in the West we discover a girl whose father and two brothers are worried as much about her becoming an old maid as they are about their dying cattle. For the truth is, she is indeed a plain girl. The brothers try every possible scheme to marry her off, but without success. Nor is there any sign of relief from the dry heat. When suddenly from out of nowhere appears a picaresque character with a mellifluous tongue and the most grandiose notions a man could imagine. He claims to be a rainmaker. And he promises to bring rain, for $100. It's a silly idea, but the rainmaker is so refreshing and ingratiating that the family finally consent. Forthwith they begin banging on big brass drums to rattle the sky; while the rainmaker turns his magic on the girl, and persuades her that she has a very real beauty of her own. And she believes it, just as her father believes the fellow can actually bring rain. And rain does come, and so does love.



Burn This
by Lanford Wilson
January 16, 17, 23, 24, 30, & 31 at 8:00 p.m.
Publisher: Dramatists Play Services, Inc.
For Mature Audiences Only—strong adult language and situations.
The place is a Manhattan loft shared by Anna, a lithe young dancer-choreographer, and her two gay roommates—her collaborator, Robby, who has just been killed in a freak boating accident, and Larry, a world-weary, caustically funny young advertising executive. As the play begins Anna is recovering from attending Robby's funeral, comforted by her wealthy, well-meaning boyfriend, Burton, a sci-fi screenwriter whose persistent proposals of marriage Anna finds herself unable to accept. Then, with sudden, unexpected explosiveness, Robby's older brother, Pale, bursts on the scene. He has come to collect his brother's belongings—but stays on to transform the action of the play and the lives of those in it. Menacing, profane, dangerous and yet oddly sensitive, Pale is both terrifying and fascinating and, in the end, the one who brings to Anna the unsettling but compelling love that, despite her fears and doubts, she cannot turn away.



Twilight of the Golds
by Jonathan Tolis
February 27 & 28 and March 6, 7,
13 & 14 at 8:00 p.m.
March 8 & 15 at 2:00 p.m.
Publisher: Samuel French, Inc.
Suitable for Ages 13 & Up; Mature themes.
If your parents knew everything about you before you were born, would you be here? That is the question posed in this entertaining drama. All is well when Suzanne Gold and her close New York family discover that she is pregnant, until a prenatal test reveals that the baby will most likely be homosexual. The news forces the entire Gold family to confront issues of bigotry, evolution and the limits of love.



Barefoot in the Park
by Neil Simon
April 10, 11, 17, 18, 24, & 25 at 8:00 p.m.
April 19 & 26 at 2:00 p.m.
Publisher: Samuel French, Inc.
Suitable for Ages 13 and up.
After a six day honeymoon a spanking new lawyer, who has just won his first case 6 cents in damages, and his young bride, who is as pretty and addled as they come, move into the new, high rent apartment that she has chosen for them. But the difficulty is, in order to enjoy the charming character of this apartment, one has to climb six wheezing flights. And the apartment is absolutely bare of furniture, the paint job came out all wrong, the skylight leaks snow, there isn't room for a double bed, and an outlandish gourmet who lives in a loft on the roof uses it and the window ledge as the only access to his padlocked premises. The situation is enough to break the heart and burst the lungs of any stylish young lawyer; and indeed it does, on the night he flatly refuses to join his wife in a barefoot walk through the snow in the park. She kicks him out, but he comes back not for reconciliation, but because he figures that since he's paying the rent she should be the one to go.



Camelot
Book & Lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner
Music by Frederick Loewe

May 22, 23, 29, 30 and June 5 & 6 at 8:00 p.m.
May 31 & June 7 at 2:00 p.m.
Publisher: Tams-Witmark Music Library, Inc.
Suitable for All Ages.
A nervous King Arthur tries to cajole Merlyn, his teacher, to tell him about Guenevere the future Queen. Merlyn knows the future, as he lives from the future into the present. He grows younger instead of aging. Upon her arrival Guenevere dodges the awaiting crowds and hides as she sings The Simple Joys of Maidenhood. Arthur and Guenevere accidentally meet in the forest and are delighted to find they are charmed with each other. The wonderfully placid Camelot, where royal decree sets the tone, becomes the set for a story of love and chivalry.