We need to raise money for our next production! Come out Saturday to our amazing yard sale.  This is an entire neighborhood sale, so you don’t want to miss it!
Saturday Sept 25
Where: 9532 Morgan Creek Drive
(in Avery Ranch)

Vintage Clothes
Haloween Costumes!

Stylish Dining Set
Stage Lighting
Beveled Mirror Vanity
Bikes
Black & White Darkroom Set
Books!
Shoes!

Cowboy Boots!

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Jul

08

2010

Christa French

Christa French co-founded the Weird Sisters in 2004, inspired by women struggling for more equal and powerful roles in contemporary theater and in Shakespeare productions in particular.

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Jul

07

2010

Alyson Curtis

Alyson Curtis is a mild mannered graphic and web designer by day and a coveter of the stage by night. She is quite content (for now) taking on the smaller roles and bit parts, as long as they don’t involve singing.

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And maybe Austin’s too! Just thinking back to 2006 when I played Pistol to Courtney Glenn’s Fallstaf, I couldn’t agree more. The Weird Sisters set the Merry Wives of Windsor in the 1950’s, Falstaff taking on an unmistakable bad-boy Elvis persona (sideburns and all). We had screaming audience members, groupies, possibly even fainting. We all had character envy that season, Falstaff was a deliciously fun, even complicated character to play. It was hard not to be enamored. I think we all carry a little bit of Shakespeare’s favorite foil inside us.

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The following is excerpted from www.TheExaminer.com, in a review dated June 22, 2010 penned by Ryan E. Johnson, Austin Theater Examiner. Read the full review here

The Tempest has been hailed as one of William Shakespeare’s greatest plays, and has delighted audiences and readers for centuries, but there’s always one character that puzzles most of those [...]

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The following is excerpted from www.theAustinist.com, in a review dated June 24, 2010 penned by Georgia Young. Read the full review here >
Woe to the women of Shakespeare! It seems so many of them can be filed into two neat categories: fools who sacrifice their lives for love, and evil hags. However, contemporary theatermakers often [...]

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Jun

24

2010

Courtney Glenn

Courtney Glenn is one of the founding members of the Weird Sisters. She was introduced to Shakespeare in high school under the direction of her then teacher, Susan Todd, who later approached her with the crazy idea of an all women’s theater collective.

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Feliz Dia is very excited to working with the WSWTC. She is very active in the theatre, film and dance community having performed in Pro-Arts Collective/ACC, Funnyhouse of a Negro, for which received a B. Iden Payne Nomination for Lead Actress(Drama).

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Born and raised in Alabama the Beautiful, I attended the Alabama School of Fine Arts for Creative Writing.  It didn’t even occur to me to apply to the theater program at ASFA (even though I had itched to act in the 8th grade play all through junior high…and, frankly, acted out all of my daydreams when [...]

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The following is excerpted from www.AustinLiveTheater.com, in a review dated June 23, 2010 penned by Michael Meigs. Read the full review here >
Susan Gayle Todd, a founding member of the six-year-old Weird Sisters Theater Collective, rolled Shakespeare’s canvas back, locating a wide, almost blank panel.  It was barely touched with the outline of Sycorax, a [...]

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