Gazing into the bathroom mirror one morning while shaving, Josh Kornbluth realizes that he looks remarkably like the guy on the $100 bill. Like any good Jewish son, he immediately calls his mother. Find out more
Holidazed November 17 – December 20, 2009 br Artists Repertory Theatre
This year, local writers Marc Acito and C.S. Whitcomb will be adding some fresh new sparks to the hilarious and heartwarming story. Find out more
A Christmas Carol November 24 to December 27, 2009 at Portland Center Stage
Already a Portland holiday tradition, this original adaptation by Mead Hunter asks the timely and reflective questions: What do you value most? And is it what’s truly important? Find out more
Based on the outlandish, and true, chronicles of David Sedaris’ experience as Crumpet the Elf in Macy’s Santaland display, this hilarious cult classic features comic encounters during the height of the holiday crunch. Find out more
There are other acts who respectfully attempt to replicate a subset of the Beatles music, but only RAIN can perform the full range of the Beatles discography live onstage. Find out more
Northwestern author David Guterson’s haunting story takes place in 1954, on a Puget Sound island so isolated that no one who lives there can afford to make enemies. >> Find out more
The Receptionist January 26 to March 21, 2010 at Portland Center Stage
Beverly the receptionist is definitely a woman in charge—she’s the first in the door, she makes the coffee, she has all the pens. Her co-workers … not so much. >> Find out more
Alfred Hitchcock?s The 39 Steps
February 23 to March 21, 2010 at Portland Center Stage
Whodunit meets hilarious in this recklessly theatrical riff on Alfred Hitchcock’s cinematic 1935 masterpiece which in turn was based on John Buchan’s spy genre classic. >> Find out more
The Chosen April 6 to May 2, 2010 at Portland Center Stage
Beverly the receptionist is definitely a woman in charge—she’s the first in the door, she makes the coffee, she has all the pens. Her co-workers … not so much. >> Find out more
A coming-of-age story of two boys growing up in two very different Jewish communities — “five blocks and a world apart” — in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in the 1940s. >> Find out more