

The Walter Gloor Mainstage Series by the Department of Theatre and Dance will return with five productions as part of the 2023-24 performing arts season at SUNY Fredonia.
The series opens with the award-winning musical 鈥淣atasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812鈥 from Oct. 20 through 28 in the Robert W. Marvel Theatre.
The production is described as 鈥渁n electropop opera ripped from a slice of Tolstoy鈥檚 鈥榃ar and Peace鈥.鈥 It was lauded during its Broadway run in 2017 for 鈥渆xpanding the possibilities for the musical genre with its daring score and bold storytelling.鈥
Main character Natasha Rostova arrives in Moscow to await the return of her fianc茅 from the front lines of the war with France. When she falls under the spell of the roguish Anatole, it is up to Pierre, a family friend in the middle of an existential crisis, to pick up the pieces of her shattered reputation.
Composed by Dave Malloy, 鈥淣atasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812鈥 has earned two Tony Awards, three Lucille Lortel Awards and the Richard Rodgers Award for Musical Theater.
The second offering of the season will be the premiere performance of a brand-new work 鈥淢ason Wright is NOT a Mother.鈥 It will run from Nov. 30 through Dec. 2 in the Alice E. Bartlett Theatre.
The first production of the spring semester will be 鈥淓dges,鈥 a contemporary song-cycle about young adults at the metaphorical edge of their lives, from Feb. 23 through March 2 in the Alice E. Bartlett Theatre.
Written by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (鈥淒ogfight,鈥 鈥淛ames and the Giant Peach鈥), 鈥淓dges鈥 is described as a 鈥渃harming, witty and honest examination of adulthood explores what happens when we are teetering on the edges of our lives.鈥
The songs cover such universal issues as love, commitment, identity and meaning. Characters deal with confronting emotions, escaping expectations and deciphering complicated relationships.
The season concludes with 鈥淭he Crucible鈥 and 鈥淎bigail/1702,鈥 which will alternate performances from April 26 through May 2 in the Robert W. Marvel Theatre.
Written by Pulitzer Prize winner Arthur Miller (鈥淒eath of A Salesman鈥), 鈥淭he Crucible鈥 is a drama that tells the story of a young farmer, his wife, and a young servant-girl who maliciously causes the wife's arrest for witchcraft. The farmer brings the girl to court to admit the lie 鈥 and it is there that the monstrous course of bigotry and deceit is terrifyingly depicted.
鈥淎bigail/1702鈥 was written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, picking up where Miller鈥檚 tale left off.
Set 10 years after witch trials in 鈥淭he Crucible,鈥 main character Abigail Williams, the accuser in the who sent 20 people to their doom, lives under an assumed name striving to atone for her sins.
When a handsome stranger arrives claiming to be a sailor in need, Abigail takes him in, and long-dormant passions awaken within her. However, the Devil also comes looking for Abigail 鈥 demanding her soul.
Tickets for the 2023-24 Walter Gloor Mainstage Series will go on sale in late August through the Fredonia Ticket Office in the Williams Center.