LVLT 2020-2021 Season
March 12 - 28, 2021 - Love Letters (Limited Seating Live Performances)
A unique and imaginative theatre piece which, in the words of the author, “needs no theatre, no lengthy rehearsal, no special set, no memorization of lines, and no commitment from its two actors beyond the night of performance.” The piece is comprised of letters exchanged over a lifetime between two people who grew up together, went their separate ways, but continued to share confidences. As the actors read the letters aloud, what is created is an evocative, touching, frequently funny but always telling pair of character studies in which what is implied is as revealing and meaningful as what is actually written down.
Feb 20 - March 31, 2021 - Shakespeare and Love (Online On Demand Performances)
Shakespeare and Love is a collection of Shakespearian monologues and scenes about love from Romeo & Juliet, The Taming of the Shrew, and Much Ado About Nothing.
March 1 - 31, 2021 - Quarantine Monologues (Online On Demand Performances)
One year since the beginning of the pandemic, LVLT presents an encore of The Quarantine Monologues. This looks at the challenges and humor of living under lockdown.
March 28 - April 30 2021 - Julius Caesar (Online On Demand Performances)
The show will be set in modern day with the roles of Caesar and Mark Antony played by women. Script adapted by Jacob Moore.
April 9 - 11, 2021 - Erma Bombeck: At Wit's End (Limited Seating Live Performances)
Legendary syndicated columnist and author Erma Bombeck shares an evening of her own special humor with us in this hilarious One Woman show that looks at how Erma Bombeck took our established notions of a "Perfect Housewife" and gave us the hilarious truth.
April 16 - 25, 2021 - Musical Theatre Therapy (Limited Seating Live Performances)
MUSICAL THEATRE THERAPY is a cabaret performance structured like patchwork of conversations with a counselor.
May 2021 - Much Ado About Nothing (Online On Demand Performances)
This classic comedy of Love, Despite, and Wit will be staged in a modern setting. Script adapted by Jacob Moore.