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Current Season & Tickets

Ticket Information

Tickets to productions may be purchased in advance online, over the phone, or in person at the Ross Center (Room 200). In addition, tickets are available at the theatre venue beginning one hour before each performance.

Tickets are $18 for Adults, $15 for Seniors, Students, and Children.


Special Events

In most cases, tickets for special events will be sold at the door. Please note that ticket prices may vary for special events such as student-directed works, showcases, and other productions hosted by the theatre program.

Contact Us

Ticket Sales: 503-554-3400

Box Office Location: Ross Center (Room 200)
Box Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Monday through Friday); available online (24/7); the lobby box office is open one hour prior to each production.
Group Sales (10 or more): Call Administrative Assistant Kathy Harris at 503-554-2670

Location

Wood-Mar Auditorium
414 N. Meridian St.
Newberg, OR 97132

Accessibility

The ºÚÁÏÍø Performing Arts Department strives to create a comfortable viewing experience for all guests. We want to ensure everyone can comfortably experience theater and the performing arts. 

For more information, please reach out to the box office at  503-554-2670 or email our Accessibility Coordinator, Atalia Fisher at afisher23@georgefox.edu.


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Mobility Accommodations

The Wood-Mar Auditorium has four wheelchair-accessible seats with accompanying companion seats in the front row. A wheelchair-accessible entrance is on the side south of the Edwards-Holman Science Center, closest to the Hoover Academic Building. An elevator is available near the side entrance. There are accessible parking spaces on the back side of the building.

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Open Captions

Captions are displayed on the right side of the stage for all mainstage performances.

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Large Print Program

All performances have large-print programs available at the box office.

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Sensory Friendly 

Content warnings and sensory guides are available for all performances and can be obtained by contacting the box office. A paper copy is available at the box office before the show. Earplugs and fidgets are available at the box office. Ask an usher if you need assistance.

 

 

Service Animals

Service animals that are required for a disability are welcome. Please contact the box office in advance so we can better serve your needs.

 

2024-25 Theatre Season

Pirates of Penzance

Summer 2024 Community Production

An Operetta Classic

Wednesday-Thursday, Aug. 21 and 22 at 8 p.m.

Saturday-Sunday, Aug. 24 and 25 at 8 p.m.

Thursday-Saturday, Aug. 29-31 at 8 p.m.

ºÚÁÏÍø Amphitheater

Written by: W.S. Gilbert

Music by: Arthur Sullivan

Directed by: Ben Tissell

Musical Direction By: Danielle Warner

One of the most beloved comedic musicals of all time, Pirates of Penzance is a hilarious farce of sentimental pirates, bumbling policemen, starcrossed young lovers and an eccentric Major-General. With an iconic score that includes some of the most recognizable tunes in Western music, this operetta is at once soaring, jaunty, and laugh-out-loud funny. 

Please note this performance is in our outdoor amphitheater. In the event of rain, the performance will be moved to Wood-Mar Auditorium.

If a performance is sold out, more tickets will be sold at the door for outdoor performances. 

You are welcome to bring chairs, a blanket, and your own food and drink (no alcohol permitted). Concessions will also be available. 

You are also invited to wear your best pirate ensemble (no weapons allowed).

The Hiding Place

Fall 2024 Drama

Based on the novel by Corrie ten Boom

Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 17-19 at 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 20 at 2 p.m.

Thursday-Friday, Oct. 24–25 at 7:30 p.m.

Saturday-Sunday, Oct. 26-27 at 2 p.m.

Wood-Mar Auditorium

Adapted by: A. S. Peterson

Directed by: Cycerli Ash

Based on the book by Corrie ten Boom, The Hiding Place is one of the world's bestselling memoirs of the Second World War. When the nazi occupation overruns Holland, it leaves Corrie and her family with a difficult choice: turn a blind eye to oppression or defy authority and save lives. From a clockmaker's shop in the Dutch town of Haarlem to a concentration camp to Ravensbruck concentration camp, The Hiding Place is a journey of love, hope, faith, and the power of forgiveness.

Cast:

Mckenzie Rescorla - Corrie
Shianna Deck-Ugelstad - Betsie
Nathaniel Rowe - Caspar
Hudson Moore - Pickwick
Daniel Beals - Otto / Prisoner Red 
Ben Edwards - Willem / Jewish Prisoner / Red Cross Worker 2
Ethan Millikan - Lt Richter / Red Cross Worker 1 / Male Prisoner Green 2
Ellise Newton - Henk / German Overseer / Ensemble
Maya Van Aken - Thea / Jeske / Jewish Woman
Sean Rubesh - Meyer / Moorman / Train Attendant
CJ Hollis - Fred Koornstra / Ensemble
Em Busch - Trudka / Female Prisoner Black
Mack Goodsel - Mary Itallie / Ensemble
Ellie Heerwagen - Gita / Ensemble
Ethan Quirie - Male Prisoner Green 1 / Soldier 1
Natalie Watson - The Beast / Ensemble
Corinna Cummings - Meta / Young Betsie / Guard 2
Clara Lind - Nurse / Prisoner 1
Olivia Holmstedt - Avien / Young Corrie
Seth Baker - Ensemble
Blakely Bresee - Ensemble
Kinsey Burke - Ensemble
April Seiler - Ensemble
Nolan Shipe - Ensemble
Jenna Miller - Ensemble
Hannah Bach - Ensemble
Maggie Sandberg - Ensemble

Footloose

Spring 2025 Musical

Featuring a Tony-Award winning score

PREVIEW NIGHT: Tuesday, March 4 at 7:30 p.m.

Thursday-Saturday, March 6-8 & 13-15 at 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, March 9 and March 16 at 2:00pm

Wood-Mar Auditorium

Stage Adaptation by: Dean Pitchford and Walter Bobbie
Based on the original screenplay by: Dean Pitchford
Music by: Tom Snow
Lyrics by: Dean Pitchford
Additional Music by: Eric Carmen, Sammy Hagar, Kenny Loggins and Jim Steinman

FOOTLOOSE is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals. www.concordtheatricals.com

Directed by: Ben Tissell
Musical Direction by: Danielle Warner

Featuring some of the best-loved hits from the 1980s, Footloose is the Broadway musical based on the film of the same name. When dance-obsessed teenager Ren finds himself as the new kid in a town where dancing has been outlawed, he struggles to know what to do. As Ren and his friends begin dreaming about a better future for themselves and their small town, their passion unearths long-buried grief and unspoken fear, ultimately proving the healing power of joy.  

An Evening with C.S. Lewis

By David Payne

Friday, Sept. 6, 2024 at 7:30 p.m.

Bauman Auditorium

The year is 1963 and C.S. Lewis, the famous British author, is hosting a group of American writers at his home near Oxford. They are about to experience a captivating evening with a man whose engaging conversation and spontaneous humor made him one of the great raconteurs of his day.

Seated in his living room, he recalls the people and events that inspired his thought and shaped his life; of his friendship with J.R.R. Tolkien; why he nearly abandoned the Narnia Chronicles; how he came to embrace Christianity; and of the American woman who turned his life upside down.

Described by critics as "Extraordinary!," "A Must See!" and "A Master Class!" An Evening with C.S. Lewis has proved again and again to be an enthralling theatrical experience and one which has led many thousands to discover (or rediscover) the continuing impact of a man who died over 50 years ago and whose collected works made him one of the literary giants of the 20th century.

Lewis & Tolkien: The Baptized Imagination

By Ben Tissell

Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024 at 2 p.m.

ºÚÁÏÍø Wood-Mar Auditorium

Nearly all that I loved I believed to be imaginary; nearly all that I believed to be real I thought grim and meaningless.” Such was the inner world of C.S. Lewis. But then, something changed. A chance encounter with a Victorian fairy tale “baptized” his imagination, setting him on a course toward Christian faith and a career as one of the greatest imaginative writers of the century.

It was this baptism of imagination which allowed J.R.R. Tolkien, the great fantasy mythmaker, to invite a skeptical Lewis to consider Christian faith afresh. Perhaps, he encouraged, myths point to truth. Perhaps Christianity itself is a “true myth”. Perhaps, not all that is worth loving is unreal. 

Lewis & Tolkien: The Baptized Imagination is an inventive, fast-paced production packed with humor and insight. Built on a foundation of deep research, this show traces the development of faith and imagination in two of the greatest friends in literary history. Watch a small cast of actors transform into dozens of characters as they lead you on a journey through Middle Earth, Narnia, and countless other landscapes of the baptized imagination. 

This show is great for families and runs approximately 70 minutes, with no intermission.