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Coming up for Starting Gate...


Audition Info

Starting Gate named among best of Twin Cities theatre by Mpls/St. Paul Magazine! Dec. 2004

 

 

 

 


Starting Gate Productions presents...




An unhappy game of romantic follow the leader explodes into murder one weekend at The Hollow home of Sir Henry and Lucy Angkatell. Dr. Cristow is at the center of the trouble: Henrietta, his mistress; Veronica, his ex mistress; and Gerda, his wife are all at The Hollow. Also visiting are Edward (who is in love with Henrietta) and Midge (who loves with Edward). Veronica ardently desires to marry Cristow and succeeds in reopening their affair but is unable to get him to divorce his wife. Veronica unwisely states that if she cannot have him, no one shall. Within five minutes Cristow is dead. Nearly everyone has a motive and most had the opportunity. Enter Inspector Colquhoun and Sergeant Penny to solve the crime.

May 9 - June 1, 2008

Fridays - Saturdays at 7:30pm
Sunday Matinees at 2:00pm
Pay What You Can Night - Monday, May 19, 2008 at 7:30pm

Audio Described Performance - Sunday, May 18, 2008

All Performances are at the Mounds Theatre in the Dayton's Bluff neighborhood just east of downtown Saint Paul.

Tickets are $18 general, $16 students and seniors.
$10 for high school students.
Call for tickets 651-645-3503

Featuring the Talents of: Justin Alexander, Kate Cook, Corey de Danann, Lucas Gerstner, Ann Frances Gregg, Dwight Gunderson, Robert Larsen, Bridgette McGehee, Jennifer Steiskal, Edwin Strout, Nathan Tylutki, and Angela Walberg.

Directed by: Ellen Fenster
Assistant Director: Lindsay Marcy
Stage Manager: Lydia Bolder
Set Designer: Sara Brown
Lighting Designer: Becky Bechel
Sound Designer: James Kirwin
Costume Designer: Becca Rodgers
Properties Designer: Robert Smith

Press Section

Promotional Photos


Featured: Justin Alexander, Edwin Strout, Kate Cook, and Angela Walberg


Featured: Robert Larsen, Bridgette McGehee (seated), Kate Cook, Angela Walberg, Justin Alexander, Edwin Strout


Featured: Justin Alexander (seated), Angela Walberg, Edwin Strout

Photos by John Autey

Download photos in High Res JPEG format by clicking on the picture or the links below. Right Click and select Save As:

Photo 1

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About the Playwright

Agatha Christie

Taught at home by a governess and tutors, as a child Agatha Christie never attended school. She became adept at creating games to keep herself occupied at a very young age. A shy child, unable to adequately express her feelings, she first turned to music as a means of expression and, later in life, to writing.

In 1914, at the age of 24, she married Archie Christie, a World War I fighter pilot. While he was off at war, she worked as a nurse. It was while working in a hospital during the war that Christie first came up with the idea of writing a detective novel. Although it was completed in a year, it wasn't published until 1920, five years later.

"The Mysterious Affair at Styles" gave the world the inimitable Hercule Poirot, a retired Belgian police officer who was to become one of the most enduring characters in all of fiction. With his waxed moustache and his "little grey cells," he was "meticulous, a tidy little man, always neat and orderly, with a slight flavour of absurdity about him." (The New Bedside Christie Companion...)

Christie wrote more than 30 novels featuring Poirot. Among the most popular were "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" (1926), "Murder on the Orient Express" (1934), and "Death on the Nile" (1937).

In 1926, Archie asked for a divorce, having fallen in love with another woman. Agatha, already upset by the recent death of her mother, disappeared. All of England became wrapped up in the case of the now famous missing writer. She was found three weeks later in a small hotel, explaining to police that she had lost her memory. Thereafter, it was never again mentioned or elaborated upon by Christie.

She later found happiness with her marriage in 1930 to Max Mallowan, a young archaeologist who she met on a trip to Mesopotamia.

Another of Christie's most well-known and beloved characters was introduced in "Murder at the Vicarage" in 1930. Miss Jane Marple, an elderly spinster in the quaint English village of St. Mary Mead, solved all manner of mysteries with intense concentration and intuition. Featured in 12 novels, Miss Marple exemplified the cozy style, a form of mystery fiction that became popular in, and ultimately defined, the Golden Age of fiction in England during the 1920s and '30s.

Christie ultimately became the acknowledged Queen of the Golden Age. In all, she wrote over 66 novels, numerous short stories and screenplays, and a series of romantic novels using the pen name Mary Westmacott. Several of her works were made into successful feature films, the most notable being Murder on the Orient Express (1974). Her work has been translated into more than a hundred languages. In short, she is the single most popular mystery writer of all time.

In 1971 she was awarded the high honor of becoming a Dame of the British Empire.