

This celebration of the mating game takes on the truths and myths behind that contemporary conundrum known as "the relationship". This hilarious revuew pays tribute to those who have loved and lost, to those who have falled on their face at the portal of romance, to those who have dared to ask, "Say, what are you doing Saturday night?"

One of the most beloved British musicals, vividly bringing to life Dicken's timeless characters with its ever-popular story of the boy who asked for more.

Neil Simon's second play, Barefoot in the Park, is the classic romantic comedy about a conservative young lawyer Paul Bratter and his free-spirited newlywed bride Corie. The comedy follows the young couple as they move from the giddy joy of the honeymoon at The Plaza into the crazy reality of starting married life in a fifth-floor walkup in New York City.

The latest in a string of mega-musicals based on the song catalog of popular acts from the past - the songs of the King are hitched to a very serviceable story based on the plot of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, set in a small town deep in the Heartland.

Jack worthing and Algernon Moncrieff both pretend to be called Ernest in order to secure the affections of Gwendolen Fairfax and Cecily Cardew. The girls are led to think first that they are engaged to the same man and then that neither is really Ernest. The ensuing confusions are resolved when it is discovered that Jack was indeed so named. The play derives force from a brilliant fabric of epigram and paradox.

Wacky, irreverent and as entertaining today as it was when it first opened in 1879, The Pirates of Penzance spins an hilarious farce of sentimental pirates, bumbling policemen, dim-witted young lovers, dewy-eyed daughters and an eccentric Major-General, all morally bound to the often-ridiculous dictates of Honor and Duty.
