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NOW PLAYING
CHARLEY'S AUNT


Now Available, audition information for TWELFTH NIGHT.
Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm and Sundays at 3pm.
Advance individual ticket sales are available only through
BoxOfficeTickets.com or 800-494-TIXS.
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.