Ebert & Roeper Who?

The Newnan Source Theatre presented six short comedies by David Ives called All in the Timing. The short comedies were broken into two acts.

The first act consisted of the first three comedies. The first comedy starring Ashlee Lewis and Scears Lee was a repetitive comedy about how some things were "Sure Things."

The second comedy starring Lee White, Lindsay Graner, and Corey Thompson was a comedy about how sometimes you were in a "Philadelphia." A "Philadelphia" was a state of mind where nothing goes right. In a "Philadelphia," it was better to ask for what you did not want to get what you needed.

The third play in the first set starred Katie Hendley, Joel Mosley, Corey Thompson, and Lindsay Graner. Have you ever felt like your television was watching you instead of you watching your television? In "Captive Audience," that was exactly what happened.

The second act had the last three comedies. The fourth comedy starred Lee White, Sean Rayburn, and Monica Kotz. "Words, Words, Words," what do they really mean? Words meant absolutely nothing when you had three monkeys trying to write Shakespeare.

The fifth comedy starred Ellen Dorrell, Corey Thompson, and Sarah Beth Mosley. Have you been to a foreign land, needed a translator, and did not know if he or she was translating the right thing? That was exactly what happened to a traveler in "Arabian Nights."

The sixth and last comedy starring Scears Lee, Carlee Avery, and Joel Mosley depicted different ways Trotsky could have died--from a silent movie to a love affair.

The Newnan Source Theatre put on a great production with a group of talented actors and actresses. I give these plays four gold stars and two thumbs up. Ebert and Roeper could not touch this review.

Amber Harris, SGA Editor