Archive for the ‘Minnesota Theatre’ Category

Record Year for Commonweal Theatre in Lanesboro, Minnesota

Friday, January 13th, 2012

2011 Record Breaking Year ToastAt the end of Commonweal Theatre’s 2011 season, the company is celebrating the most successful year in its twenty-three year history. “It sounds like a broken record,” says Commonweal Theatre’s Executive Director Hal Cropp, “but for the fourth year in a row, we can say that more people than ever before came to see our shows this year. If we could bottle that kind of success, we would, but in the meantime, all we can do is say ‘Thank You’ from the bottom of our hearts.”

More than 21,000 theatregoers attended Commonweal’s mainstage shows, from the riveting drama An Enemy of the People to the romantic-comedy Parfumerie. In between, audiences howled at the antics of a stray dog in Sylvia, laughed (and screamed) as man-eating plants threatened the Earth in Little Shop of Horrors, and took a hard look at prejudice through the eyes of an innocent child in To Kill a Mockingbird. Overall, some 3,000 households visited the Commonweal for the first time in 2011 – the company’s largest ever single-season increase in first-timer attendance.

Two shows this year – Sylvia and To Kill a Mockingbird – also ranked in the top three for best-attended productions in Commonweal’s history in terms of average per-performance attendance. “Artistically, this has been an amazing season,” adds Cropp. “In my twenty years, I don’t know if I can think of another year when every single show hit such a high mark in terms of quality.” The Commonweal also welcomed nearly 2,200 high school students from Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and South Dakota to special student matinees of its mainstage shows and gave a special benefit performance of its holiday comedy, Parfumerie, for Habitat for Humanity Winona-Fillmore Counties. Both programs were made possible by the generous support of F&M Community Bank in Preston and Chatfield.

The theatre’s success onstage has also been supported by generous giving from individuals and public and private foundations. In the final quarter of 2011, the Commonweal Theatre Company was awarded $10,000 from the Southeast Minnesota Art Council through the Arts and Cultural Heritage program, and $38,250 from the Minnesota State Arts Board for programming support in 2012. Funds from the MSAB are made available through an appropriation by the Minnesota State Legislature, a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and private funders.

“We’re excited to hit 2012 running,” says Cropp, “with a slate of shows that includes some titles we’ve wanted to produce for a long time.” The Commonweal’s twenty-fourth mainstage season begins in April with a world premiere adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s drama, Pillars of Society, then followed by the fast-paced comedy The 39 Steps, the romantic-comedy The Philadelphia Story, the heartwarming drama The Drawer Boy, and ends with Commonweal Theatre’s own distinct imagining of Charles Dickens’ immortal classic, A Christmas Carol.

For more details, including information about schedules, tickets, and other Commonweal programs, visit www.commonwealtheatre.org or call the Box Office at (800) 657-7025.

Commonweal Theatre presents Parfumerie

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

The original romantic comedy that inspired the hit movies The Shop Around the Corner and You’ve Got Mail and the musical She Loves Me. Amidst the bustle of the Christmas season, two clerks at Hammerschmidt’s Parfumerie engage in a tense rivalry, unaware they have actually fallen in love with each other through a year’s worth of anonymous, romantic letters.

Commonweal Theatre: Parfumerie by Miklos Laszlo running through December 20, 208 Parkway Avenue North, Lanesboro www.commonwealtheatre.org (507)467-2525 , (800)657-7025.  The original romantic comeparfumeriedy that inspired the hit movies The Shop Around the Corner and You’ve Got Mail.

Watch the Parfumerie Trailer Video

Plan Ahead: Lanesboro for the Holidays

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

BY ELLIE M. BAYRDPlan Ahead: Lanesboro for the Holidays

Minnesota Monthly.com

There’s something delightfully charming about Lanesboro, which prides itself on being “The bed and breakfast capital of Minnesota”—seriously, there are more than 14 in the area. The town, nestled in the bluffs of the Root River Valley, is a beautiful place to explore and relax no matter the season. Forbes even named Lanesboro one ofAmerica’s Prettiest Towns in 2010.

After Halloween this weekend, the holiday season will be right around the corner. Start feeling festive at the third annual Lanesboro Holiday Inn Tour (Nov. 19 & 20, from 2-6 p.m., tickets limited). On the tour, you’ll see 12 of Lanesboro’s much-loved inns decked out for the holidays (six each day).  Tickets run $20 for one day or $35 for both (half-price for guests at sponsoring inns) and include appetizers at the Old Village Hall Restaurant & Pub.

Lanesboro

PHOTO BY TODD BUCHANAN

Just in time for the holidays, don’t miss Parfumerie (Nov. 18-Dec. 20), a romantic comedy about the rivalry of two department store perfume clerks during the Christmas season (think: You’ve Got Mail) at the Commonweal Theatre Company.

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Lanesboro, Minnesota: The belle of bluff country

Friday, August 5th, 2011

www.midwestweekends.com

In southeast Minnesota, tiny Lanesboro pulls in the tourists.

Edge of downtown Lanesboro.

© Beth Gauper

Bluffs hem in downtown Lanesboro on two sides.

In an isolated bluff-country valley, reached only by small, winding roads, lies one of Minnesota’s favorite getaways.

There are no condo resorts here, no wine bars and  — heaven forbid — no national franchises. The aroma of manure hangs over downtown on Wednesdays and Fridays, when livestock auctions are held.

Only 750 people live here, and they can’t afford to advertise much, so most visitors come via word of mouth.

Even so, Lanesboro is the town every other small town in the region wishes it could be.

For Lanesboro is right on the proverbial street paved with gold. The beautiful Root River State Trail goes through town, following the looping river and crossing it on dozens of wooden bridges.

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MidWest Living Magazine: Ways to Play in the Root River Valley

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

MidWest Living Magazine

April 2011

Scenic byways and trail systems in southeastern Minnesota’s Root River Valley make it fun and easy for visitors to venture into charming towns and explore historic bluff country.

Explore the Root River Valley

A rare mix of activities comes together in the Root River Valley in the southeast corner of Minnesota (100 miles south of the Twin Cities). Along the 30-mile stretch between Lanesboro and Houston, the river, the paved Root River State Trail and the Historic Bluff Country National Scenic Byway (State-16) run parallel past storybook towns, bike-rental outlets, canoe outfitters, restaurants, homey cafes, shops and inns.

Trail traffic keeps Lanesboro and other towns along the way busy all year. In summer, bikes line up outside the Aroma Pie Shop in tiny Whalan (population: 64). In autumn, color splashes the bluffs, and hilltop apple trees beckon. In winter, the route becomes a cross-country skier’s dream, especially when Whalan lights a nighttime trail with candles.

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DowntownFogCROP

Lanesboro, Minnesota is More Than a Bike Trail

Friday, March 11th, 2011
AAA Home & AwayMarch/April issueKayakMore Than a Bike Trail
Minnesota’s Root River Valley is all-seasons territory for enthusiasts of all kinds.
By Sher Jasperse

When I first visited southeastern Minnesota’s Root River Valley in the early 1990s with a group of bicycling friends, I was surprised to discover a place of such striking natural beauty fewer than three hours from home. That was before I had even set my skinny tires on the miles of paved bike trail hugging the river along the valley floor—a place blessed with the recreational biker’s twin delights: a picturesque route, broken up every few miles by towns rich in character and amenities.

In the years since, the appeal of the Root River Valley has only grown—for me and countless others—as the towns and the trail have developed a symbiotic relationship that keeps them both pulsing with life. Today, bikers and hikers share the valley with visitors who enjoy a lively arts scene, river activities ranging from trout fishing to tubing and road trips on the scenic highway that straddles Minnesota’s majestic bluff country. Read more

Two Roads Converge: Havana, Cuba, and Lanesboro, Minnesota

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

By Teresa Eyring

Executive Director of Theatre Communications Group (tcg)

From the February 2010 issue of American Theatre magazine

As the last decade was winding down, my travels ramped up and took me to a couple of artistically inspiring and gutsy locales. The first was a town of 2.1 million, the capital of a socialist Caribbean nation with crumbling, majestic mansions, food rations, late-night hangouts by the seawall, private homes with nightly room rentals, hundreds of theatres—and winter temperatures in the eighties. The second was a midwestern hamlet with a population of around 700, rocky bluffs, stately bed-and-breakfasts, a winding river, miles of bike trails, a top-notch theatre—and occasional below-zero temperatures.

Commonweal Theatre Company's Man of LaMancha

Commonweal Theatre Company's Man of LaMancha

My destinations, you may have discerned by now, were Havana, Cuba, and Lanesboro, Minnesota. When I embarked on these two journeys, I wasn’t specifically searching for common threads. But in traveling from one place to the next, important similarities of artistic passion and purpose emerged. In conversations with Lanesboro leaders Hal Cropp and Eric Bunge at Commonweal Theatre Company, I heard echoes of conversations I had weeks earlier with members of the Havana arts community, including Flora Lauten, founder and longtime artistic director of Teatro Buendía; Raúl Martin of Teatro de la Luna; the documentary filmmaker Estela Bravo; and Helmo Hernandez, president of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba. The upshot: While both these communities have important natural resources and social attributes, the artistry of each place—and how that artistry connects with people—is what expresses the true soul and character of both locales. Artistry and its dynamic connection to community is what helps distinguish Havana and Lanesboro from any other places in the world.

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Romantic Getaway Ideas

Friday, December 4th, 2009

 Romance & Relaxation in Lanesboro MN

Romance & Relaxation in Lanesboro MN

We discovered Lanesboro, Minnesota, a historic village nestled in the Bluffs of the Root River Valley. Our romance & relaxation package for two began with a horse-drawn carriage ride around the quaint town site with no stoplights or franchises. Lanesboro is beautifully adorned for the holidays.  The town has installed new Snowflake lights downtown.

Snowflake Decorations in Downtown Lanesboro

Snowflake Decorations in Downtown Lanesboro

We loved the scenic beauty of the bluffs trimmed with the recent snow.  The massage for two was relaxing and we took in the 1940’s Radio Hour holiday show at the Commonweal Theatre.  We later enjoyed dinner out and locally produced wine during our stay at the Bed & Breakfast.  We plan to return soon and give Lanesboro Lodging Gift Certificates to our family and friends back home!

Lanesboro Minnesota Commonweal Theatre

Friday, July 31st, 2009

July 31, 2009

Commonweal Theatre production Odd Couple

Commonweal Theatre production Odd Couple

We love visiting Lanesboro, Minnesota because in addition to offering invigorating outdoor activities, unique shopping, fine dining and B & Bs, we enjoy the rich artistic experiences and live professional theater at the Commonweal! Since 1989, the professional artists of the Commonweal Theatre have brought to life soulful stories told with honesty and creativity.

You must see both of these productions at the Commonweal!

May 15 through Oct 23, the Odd Couple is on stage in the theatre. Felix Ungar, neurotic fusspot news writer, and Oscar Madison, slovenly sports journalist, attempt to adapt to each other’s idiosyncrasies while trying to rekindle their social lives. In this classic comedy, Neil Simon gives us the story of a friendship that defies all odds.

June 19 through Oct 24, the Rainmaker by Richard Nash is on the theatre stage. Living on a farm stifled by drought, Lizzie has resigned herself to a solitary life —until a charismatic con-man named Starbuck comes promising rain. This 1950s American fable teaches us how love can overcome cynicism in the most tired of souls, and can bloom in the most barren of landscapes.