2006 Season
4 Dogs & a Bone
4 Dogs & a Bone
Originally played June 16 to 25, 2006. 4 Dogs & a Bone is the satirical comedy about the movie industry by Tony, Emmy, Academy and Pulitzer prize winning playwright John Patrick Shanley.
A malicious comedic dissection of the contemporary motion picture industry without benefit of anesthetic. Set against the backdrop of a sinking film (straight to home video status) a producer, writer and two leading ladies wrestle for control of the "bone"
- "If you're going to write a satire about the movie business at this very late date, it had better be very, very funny. In the case of FOUR DOGS AND A BONE…that criterion is most abundantly met." —NY Times.
- "…FOUR DOGS AND A BONE [is] the funniest play in town, and the neatest, if kinda affectionate, evisceration of that ol' dream factory you will encounter in years." —NY Post.
THE GOAT, or Who is Sylvia?

Played may May 5 through 14, 2006. Winner of the 2002 Tony Award for Best Play.
Edward Albee's contemporary provocative dark romantic comedy about a profoundly unsettling topic, the irrational, confounding and thwarting nature of love. Directed by guest LA director, William Haugse.
- "THE GOAT is about a profoundly unsettling subject, which for the record is not bestiality but the irrational, confounding, and convention-thwarting nature of love. Powerful [and] extraordinary…Mr. Albee still asks questions that no other major American dramatist dares to ask." —NY Times.
- "…as challenging—and…as outrageously funny—as theater gets." —NY Post.
- "…as fine a piece of theatrical art as any Edward Albee has created—and perhaps boldest of them all." —Houston Chronicle.
- "The edgiest, most fervently debated Broadway play of 2002…" —Seattle Times.
Angels in America

Played March 31 through April 15, 2006. Tony Kuschner's Pulitzer Prize-winning Angels in America. A political epic about the AIDS crisis during the mid-eighties involving a group of separate but connected individuals. The drama centers on two couples, each confronting life-wrenching events. Louis, a low-level clerk in a Washington bureaucracy, discovers that his gay partner, Prior, is dying of AIDS. Joe, a rising young Mormon lawyer, admits to himself and to his wife that he is homosexual--something that Mormons just don't believe in. A third focal point of the play, sitting at its center like some poisonous spider, is the bizarre historical figure of Roy Cohn, Senator Joe McCarthy's right-hand legal man.
This play was an HBO mini-series in December 2003.
Scotland Road

Played March 3 through 12, 2006.
SCOTLAND ROAD
A GHOSTLY HITCHCOCKIAN THRILLER
A mysterious beautiful woman
A man desperate to believe
A shared obsession
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Played from January 27 to February 11, 2006. Sex, Adultery, Mendacity and Ruthless hidden agendas. This family tree is about to ignite! "IT" productions presents master playwright Tennessee Williams' steamy American masterpiece Cat On A Hot Tin Roof.
Oscar and Felix - 2005

Originally ran Spetember 9 to 24, 2005. Oscar and Felix: A new Look at the Odd Couple re-explores Neil Simon's most popular comedy about a pair of desperately mismatched roommates. Simon said that he had rewritten about 70-percent of the original material. The basic story line is the same, but includes new jokes and one-liners, and references to current aspects of pop culture such as email and cell phones.

