God's Ear by Jenny Schwartz
Directed by Eleni Papaleonardos.

Featuring Acacia Duncan, Kate Watts, Richard Furlong, Kim Hopcraft, Nick Lingnofski, Michelle Schroeder, and Ian Short.

Lighting Design by Ryan Osborn.
Stage Management by Michelle Whited.

PAY WHAT YOU WANT.
Every seat, every show, for everyone.

Or pay CASH ONLY at the Box Office.

Thursday, June 11 @ 8pm
- Join us for the Talkback and afterparty!
Friday, June 12 @ 12pm
- with boxed lunch from Tip-Top more info
Friday, June 12 @ 8pm - Please join us for the Talkback.
Saturday, June 13 @ 8pm
- Pre-show talk with Jeni's Ice Cream sandwiches @ 7pm.
Sunday, June 14 @ 2pm

Friday, June 19 @ 8pm - Please join us for the Talkback.
Saturday, June 20 @ 8pm

All performances @
Columbus Dance Theatre
.
592 East Main Street

CLICK HERE for a map and to get directions.

Call 614-558-7408 for more info or to make reservations.

NEW TO AVAILABLE LIGHT?
CLICK HERE for our VISITORS GUIDE.

FROM the BLOG
ABOUT GOD'S EAR
In this beautiful and bizarre new play, a family is both torn apart and drawn together by the accidental death of a child. They are aided in their search for connection and solace by flights of fantasy involving a singing Tooth Fairy and a life-size G.I. Joe. In the space between what is said and what is unspeakable they find a heartrending collage of truth and cliché.

Playwright Jenny Schwartz is well-known for pushing the envelope with theater that blends the commonplace and the surreal. God's Ear is exactly that sort of challenging escape.

As the New York Times declared, "words gush forth in torrents, spewing up like geysers on a ghostly plain" in this "arrestingly odd ... ode to love, loss and the routines of life."


Feb. 6: Welcome to the Saudi Arabia of Coal

Posted by Slay on Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Available Light Theatre presents
"Welcome to the Saudi Arabia of Coal"
an original play by Jeff Biggers
created by The Coal Free Future Project

@ The Columbus Performing Arts Center
549 Franklin Ave.

Saturday, February 6th, 8PM

TIX: http://www.showclix.com/event/8045

Featuring Jeff Biggers, Ben Evans and Stephanie Pistello
Directed by Stephanie Pistello
Film projection by Ben Evans
Set, Light and Sound Design by Coal Free Future Project

ABOUT THE PLAY
Inspired by Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland, written by Project member Jeff Biggers, “Welcome to the Saudi Arabia of Coal” is an original and groundbreaking multimedia production that brings a national audience into the frontlines of the coalfields and mountaintop removal issue today. The play draws from real-life experience and documentation, and seeks to recover forgotten history in our nation’s dark legacy of coal mining.

Based at the home of Marie and Hovie, a young couple living in the mountain holler of Eagle Creek, the play chronicles their attempts to come to grips with their conflicting fates, when their family’s 150-year-old homestead is threatened by a planned mountaintop removal operation.

With a backdrop of film montages and historically-based satirical faux-mercials by filmmaker/actor Ben Evans, and a sountrack of select songs by musician/songwriter Ben Sollee, “Welcome to the Saudi Arabia of Coal” is a rare journey into the lives of those on the coalfield frontlines, and an entertaining, informative and illuminating theatrical production on the true cost of mountaintop removal and coal mining to our land and citizenry.

Read more and view the trailer: www.CoalFreeFutureProject.org

ABOUT THE PROJECT
The Coal Free Future Project is theatre production company comprised of artists and activists who are dedicated to ending mountaintop removal, and inspiring Americans to begin to envision and create a roadmap for a coal free future in their communities. Current members are Jeff Biggers, Ben Evans, Heather Doyle, Christa Faulkner, Stephanie Pistello and Ben Sollee.

To inquire about joining the CFFP team, or if you are interested in bringing the show to your town, please contact us at CoalFreeFutureProject@gmail.com

*The Coal Free Future Project is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization.*