'Steel Magnolias' to open at Sharon Playhouse Aug. 30

"Steel Magnolias,” “a beautiful homage to women and female relationships,” will start at the Sharon Playhouse Aug. 30.

The play, written by Robert Harling, is loosely based on his sister who died from complications of Type 1 diabetes after giving birth to a son.

“Steel Magnolias” centers around six friends in a small southern town who meet weekly at a beauty parlor owned by Truvy, played by Jen Cody. Cody previously acted at the Playhouse in Something Rotten last summer. “I have just been dying to come back,” she said, and to “brush up on her Southern dialect.”

Emma Simon who plays Truvy’s assistant, Annelle, said of the play, “I have wanted to work on this play for so long. It is such a beautiful, complex, devastating, hilarious story of female friendships and relationships.”

“Steel Magnolias” deals with “family, illness and personal loss” as the friends support each other through conflicts, relationships and tragedy.

Under the direction of Jackson Gay, Cody, Simon and actresses Susan Cella as “Clairee,” Etta Grover as “Shelby,” Marinell Crippen as “M’Lynn,” and Sharon resident Liza Vann as “Ouiser,” present a play that Sharon Playhouse’s Artistic Director Carl Andress says “perfectly balances laugh-out-loud humor and heartfelt emotions.”

The play will run from Friday, Aug. 30 to Sunday, Sept. 8. For more information or to purchase tickets visit https://www.sharonplayhouse.org/steelmagnolias.

Latest News

Thomas Francis Cahill

MILLERTON­ — Thomas Francis Cahill, Jr., 79, a twenty-five year resident of Millerton, formerly of Carmel, New York, died peacefully on Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024, at Noble Horizons in Salisbury. Mr. Cahill was a retired audio engineer having worked for a number of well-known recording studios and professional audio facilities throughout his long career in the music industry.

Born Sept. 30, 1945, in Bronx, New York, he was the son of the late Thomas F., Sr., and Virginia (McQueston) Cahill. Following his graduation from high school, he attended Bronx Community College where he received an A.A.S in Electrical Engineering. On Sept. 26, 1970, in Immaculate Conception Church in the Bronx, he married the love of his life, Sarah Bellantoni. Mrs. Cahill survives in Millerton. Tom was a passionate record collector and loved listening to music; he was also an avid Lionel model train enthusiast in his spare time. He will be deeply missed by his loving family and many dear friends.

Keep ReadingShow less
Carmen Patricia Petty

DOVER PLAINS — Carmen Patricia Petty, 63, a lifelong area resident, died Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024, at Sharon Hospital. Carmen was a beloved school bus driver for nearly two decades, finishing her career with First Student Transportation in Millbrook, New York.

Her dedication and professionalism, along with an excellent safety record while driving, allowed her the opportunity to transport children with very special needs everyday throughout her career. Her “kids” loved her and she loved each and every one of them.

Keep ReadingShow less
Searching for Bigfoot

Mike Familant of Sussex, New Jersey, has collected casts of suspected Bigfoot prints from dozens of sights since he began researching the cryptid in 2011.

Nathan Miller

A group of nearly 30 squatchers and skeptics gathered at David M. Hunt Library in Falls Village Thursday evening, Nov. 7, for a presentation from Bigfoot researcher Mike Familant.

Familant is the Bigfoot fanatic behind “In the Shadow of Big Red Eye,” a weekly show he produces to document his hunt for Bigfoot in the Eastern U.S.

Keep ReadingShow less
Transforming collective healing

Rebecca Churt

Provided

Rebecca Churt, a grief and death doula based in the Berkshires of Western Massachusetts, got her MBA at The MIT Sloan School of Management during Covid and immediately joined a Buddhist monastery.

“I think getting my master’s degree was an exercise in highlighting just how much of the current way of doing things isn’t working, is not meant for what needs to be happening going forward,” Churt explained.

Keep ReadingShow less