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COMING SOON
Romeo and Juliet


Audition Information for Six Degrees of Separation
Showtimes: Friday and Saturday at 8pm: Sunday at 2pm.
Advance individual ticket sales are available only through
The Hylton Center Box Office or 888-945-2468.
Adults are $20; Students/Seniors are $15
NEWS: Vpstart Crow Seeks Sponsors for Its Upcoming Season

For Immediate Release
September 5, 2009

Support Vpstart Crow by becoming a sponsor and get a spot in our programs!

As a sponsor of Vpstart Crow, your information in our program could range from a line to an entire page. If you're interested in joining Vpstart Crow in promoting classic theatre in Northern Virginia, please contact Darrell Poe at darrellpoe@vpstartcrow.com. We would love to have you be a part of Vpstart Crow.

ABOUT VPSTART CROW PRODUCTIONS, INC.
Founded in 1994, Vpstart Crow Productions, Inc. (pronounced “upstart”) is a non-Equity and non-profit professional theatre company dedicated to performing the works of William Shakespeare and other theatre classics. Vpstart Crow’s mission is to produce live theatre as a vital, accessible and exciting part of community life. Employing a resident company of local professional actors and artists of the highest caliber, Vpstart Crow is dedicated to breaking down the barriers between audience and actors in a performance style that is thought-provoking and altogether vpstartling.

The term “vpstart crow” comes from one of Shakespeare’s rival English playwrights, Robert Greene. In his 1592 pamphlet, Groats-Worth Of Wit Bought With A Million Of Repentance, Greene criticizes Shakespeare: “… for there is an vpstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his tigers hart wrapt in a players hyde, supposes he is as well able to bombast out a blanke verse as the best of you; and being an absolute Johannes factotum (“Johnny-do-it-all” or “Jack-of-all-trades”), is in his owne conceit the onely ‘Shake-scene’ in a countrey.” In fact, Vpstart Crow spells its name with a “v” rather than a “u” in reference to the way the English language was written in Shakespeare’s day.