Minnesota Fringe Day 2: This, Death! A Musical, Clown Funeral, Hamluke (The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award winner)

Day two was another Fringetacular evening of entertainment! I’m 8 shows in now and haven’t seen a show yet that I wouldn’t recommend. Here are my quick reviews of Day two.

This is Tim Uren’s autobiographical solo show that touches on his tendency to believe almost anything, he believes in Bigfoot and that aliens built the Pyramids. Who knew we had so much in common? Tim is a member of The Mysterious Old Radio Listening Society (MORLS) and it’s pretty much a guarantee that I’m going to see anything anyone associated with the MORLS is in. I seem to vibe with all of their sensibilities, and This only deepens that belief. Uren covers a lot of ground, maybe too much. I only say that because for the first time ever I witnessed a show get cut off because their time was up. I spoke with Uren later and I missed about 3 minutes. I can’t miss another show to see it again for the last three minutes but I may try and corner him at some point and see if I can get him to finish the performance. Maybe it’s because I’m interested in how people come together and their journey’s but I loved getting a lot of Uren’s background filled in for me, and I thought his writing and performance was filled with humor and reality. To purchase tickets go to the shows page at The Minnesota Fringe Site here https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/this

Death! A Musical is sort of amazing, it’s a large scale production featuring a full orchestra some very legit equipment, and it’s all written and Directed by a seventh grader named Gabriel Shen. Is it perfect? No. There are issues not with the songs but at times with hearing the lyrics. Some performers were either mic’d better or projected better, but some of the songs were pretty darn good and the lead Vivienne Steele who plays Alana is really quite good. I generally make it a point nowadays not review the performances of young Actors unless they are in a professional production, and then really only if they are very good, but Steele, is really quite good. What makes this show worth your time, and it is worth your time, is to see what this 7th grader has accomplished. It’s really impressive, everything from the songs themselves, the script which has lots of strong moments and a few genuine laughs, which is pretty good for a show about death. Even the program contained ads and I don’t think I’ve ever seen that at a Fringe show before. Shen must be a very creative, focused, and motivated teenager, and this is an accomplishment to be very proud of. To purchase tickets go to the shows page at The Minnesota Fringe Site here https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/death-a-musical

Clown Funeral. The title kind of says it all. We the audience are mourners at the funeral for Bongo J. Sprinkles. As we file in to the theater we are encouraged to sign the guest book and next to it on the floor is a box filled with red clown noses, with a note saying take a nose, leave a nose. We are handed a program with the order of the service including congregation replies at certain points. It all seems very straightforward and then the clowns in charge enter the space and it’s the funniest funeral since Mary Richards attended the funeral of Chuckles the clown on The Mary Tyler Moore Show. The cast of clowns is played by Mark Benzel, Chris Rodriguez, Jen Scott, and Levi Weinhagen, with a special appearance by Reverand Matt Kessen as a banana version of his Monster Science Lecturer. Thank God for that as it wouldn’t feel like Fringe to me without a little Monster Science. This show is very silly, there’s lots of laughs and ingenious gags. If you enjoy laughing and/or funerals, this is the show for you! To purchase tickets go to the shows page at The Minnesota Fringe Site here https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/clown-funeral-

Hamluke reminded me a lot of what is still probably the best Fringe show I’ve ever seen since Clevername’s Who’s Afraid of Winnie the Pooh? in the way it mashes up two completely different sources, that don’t seem to belong together and surprise us by how completely compatible they are. I know Hamlet probably better than any other play and I was the perfect age when Star Wars came out in 1977 and thus know most of the original trilogy by heart. Combining them, works really well. The script is ingenious in finding where and when to supplant Shakespeares prose with Star Wars jargon, Famous lines fit into the basic story of Hamlet perfectly. I loved the script, the costumes, the music, the sound effects, the performances. I realize I could write a full review on this show, but it’s 2:36 AM so I think I say it all when I say that Hamluke is the winner of todays The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award, and it wasn’t even a close race, in a day that was filled with great shows. This is the one to beat for best of the fringe festival for me. It hits all my sweet spots and It’s the kind of show that tempts me to give up a precious show slot to see it again. To purchase tickets go to the shows page at The Minnesota Fringe Site here https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/hamluke

That’s it for day two of the Minnesota Fringe Festival you can click on the Fringe website here to get details on all of the shows https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025. Don’t forget to tune into The Stages of MN YouTube channel for mini episodes all week long from The MN Fringe Festival https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN

Subscribe to the channel so you’ll always know when a new episode has dropped. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to ensure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Minnesota Fringe Day 1: A Sad Carousel 2: The Timely Death of Herschel Douscheburg, Fangs and Bangs (and Sangs), The Kendra Plant Variety Hour, In the Garden of American Heroes (The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award winner)

The Minnesota Fringe Festival began with a bang this year. That may be partially my fault, I deliberately stacked the first night so that Micky would get to see these four shows. The unforeseen problem was that any of these four shows could easily have garnered the highly unknown and mostly uncoveted (which spellcheck assures me is not a word, but you know what I mean and therefore I’m laying claim to inventing it!) The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award. Only one show made me get a little teary eyed and that was The Kendra Plant Variety Hour, but if I pick that will you all say I’m giving it to that show because she’s a fellow Theater Blogger? What about Sam Landman and Nissa Nordland’s shows? They are both very funny “currently” a couple, what if awarding one of them the Award over the other drives a wedge of jealousy between them and causes their status to change to “formerly”? That’s a lot of imaginary power for one Theater Blogger. And so I decided to go with Andrew Erskine Wheeler’s In the Garden of American Heroes, because I was too afraid to pick any of the others. No that’s not true, but it was a tough call on this first night of the 2025 Minnesota Fringe Festival. Here are my quick reviews of the first four shows I saw.

A Sad Carousel 2: The Timely Death of Herschel Douscheburg is apparently a sequel to a show Sam Landman did 15 years ago. That was well before my time on the Fringe beat, so I never saw the original. I can tell you with all confidence that this is one sequel, unlike the latest marvel movies, that you can enjoy without ever having seen the previous show. The humor comes from Landman’s character, an insult comic who is considered toxic by todays comedians, dealing with a world that has moved on since he went into a coma. It takes shots at the toothless comedy of the younger generation. I’m old enough to find a lot of it funny and to recognize Douscheburg as an exaggeration of my generation’s sometimes eye rolling at how far the pendulum has swung in terms of what can be joked about. I’m not saying Douscheburg speaks for me, but I understand where he’s coming from. Featuring a totally committed performance from Landman, including a hair and costume that perfectly complete the picture. We are treated to a fun supporting cast which includes Director Shanan Custer’s husband Eric Custer (for those who were at the show, you’ll know that now they are even), Eric Webster does a great job changing hats and in doing so changing from Eric Webster wearing one hat, to Eric Webster wearing a different hat. An Actor of his calibre is only limited by the number of hats available to him. I’m not criticizing Webster, it’s a play on a joke in the show. Webster is a favorite and a lot of fun here. To learn more about the show which performs in the Rarig Thrust stage and to purchase tickets go to the shows page at The Minnesota Fringe Site here https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/a-sad-carousel-2-the-timely-death-of-herschel-douscheburg

Fangs and Bangs (and Sangs) is equal parts funny and endearing. Nordland has been a Stages of MN favorite along with her “current” Plus one since I saw them both in Nordland’s Twin Cities Horror Festival show, Incarnate. This is one of those shows that will be different every night and makes me wish there were only 40 shows in the festival so I could see them all and this one for all five performances. The format is that Nordland shares her journal entries and poems she wrote in Junior High and High School. A lot of us did those things, but how many would have the guts to share them now with an audience of strangers. She also wrote vampire romantic fiction which she has a rotating crew of guest actors perform from cold readings. Peppered throughout are songs that mattered to her during those years, but they are not played via the sound system they are performed as well by a rotating group of guest musicians, of which Nordland is one and also sings some of the songs. I had the honor of being present at Executive Director of the Minnesota Fringe Festival made her Fringe performance debut on Violin! This is really an especially sweet and funny show that is led by that little pixie with the twinkle in her eye who shares her teenage soul with the audience, understanding that we love her and are laughing with her, not at her. I’ve looked at the page and guarantee that the rotating artists pool doesn’t have a weak link, so it’s going to be great whenever your slot it into your schedule. For more info and to get tickets go to this shows page here https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/fangs-and-bangs-and-sangs-

The Kendra Plant Variety Hour: Good Things Edition! -with special guests- full disclosure this is a show put on my my friend and fellow Twin Cities Theater Blogger Kendra Plant. I think it’s great! It’s the one show that got my eyes watering a little bit. Kendra is pushing herself to try something new and that’s a general theme throughout her show. There are three guests the first is the TAM Edo Bayashi Ensemble which performs traditional Japanese arts, and in this case accompanied by flute and drums a performer in a giant lion puppet performs an enchanting traditional Lion Dance. The Puppet alone is worth the price of admission as it’s quite exquisite. The second Act is Emily Boyajian a composer who absolutely thrilled me last year with her Opera Transition. It is I believe the only Fringe show I’ve ever seen twice. Last year the Opera about two Transgender people transitioning together was basically a staged performance of the piece, with two fabulous singers and an 11 piece orchestra backing them. Here we get Boyajian playing a keyboard and singing the songs herself. And while we don’t get the full Opera or the full effect of an orchestra what we do get is something that feels even more personal. Boyajian is such a talented human and I hope I get to see Transition performed again in full someday. The final act is Jolie Meshbesher who performs dance routines to two songs. the second of which ends with a nearly nude Meshbesher on stage. Which makes it the second most graphic display of nudity I saw on day one of the Fringe Festival. For more about the show and to purchase tickets go to https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/the-kendra-plant-variety-hour-good-things-edition-with-special-guests#tickets

In The Garden Of American Heroes Andrew Erskine Wheeler gives what I believe is referred to as a brave performance. Translation: this is the most graphic display of nudity I saw on day one of the festival. But it’s more than brave, it’s a reminder of what a captivating Actor Wheeler is. My first exposure (I’m sorry I couldn’t help it) to Wheeler was his Fringe show Whoosh! which I later saw a remount of at Mill Stone Museum the next summer and will be getting a run this coming winter in early 2026 at History Theater in St. Paul. That was a favorite show of that festival and Wheeler again dives into history and comes up with the story of General Custer who we exam in all his glory (honestly you try and do this without saying things like that). What makes this show the winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award is Wheeler’s penis, I mean performance. No seriously, it’s the way he digs into a character and gives such a focused and intense penis, Goddammit! performance! Man this is hard (now stop it!) It’s a great performance, a fascinating look at history and the perfect show to bring your Grandmother to. For more information and purchase tickets here’s the link to the show page https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/in-the-garden-of-american-heroes

That’s it for day one of the Minnesota Fringe Festival you can click on the Fringe website here to get details on all of the shows https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025. That’s it for day one of the Minnesota Fringe Festival you can click on the Fringe website here to get details on all of the shows https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025 don’t forget to tune into The Stages of MN YouTube channel for mini episodes all week long from The MN Fringe Festival https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN

Subscribe to the channel so you’ll always know when a new episode has dropped. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to ensure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Episode 6: The Stages of MN “Good Things Edition” With Special Guest Kendra Plant

Faithful readers, if you aren’t already faithful viewers, what are you waiting for? click here for the latest episode https://bit.ly/TSOMNEpisode6YT. Or listen to the podcast version here https://bit.ly/TSOMNEpisode6Podcast. On which The Stages of MN chats with fellow Twin Cities Theater Blogger Kendra Plant of Artfully Engaging https://www.kendraplant.com/blog-artfully-engaging about her upcoming https://minnesotafringe.org/ Show. https://minnesotafringe.org/shows/2025/the-kendra-plant-variety-hour-good-things-edition-with-special-guests

My MN Honest Reviews are Love and Baseball running through 7/28 at Artistry in Bloomington click here for tickets https://artistrymn.org/loveandbaseball and the 10th Anniversary production of Glensheen running through 7/27 at History Theatre, click here for those tickets https://www.historytheatre.com/2024-2025/glensheen

Follow me on Facebook / thestagesofmn and Instagram / thestagesofmn The show will also be available tomorrow in podcast form at https://robdunkelberger.podbean.com/ or wherever you enjoy podcasts

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to ensure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

I’ve officially launched The Stages of MN YouTube Channel which you can view by clicking on this link. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Check out the intro videos and the weekly episodes. Subscribe to the channel so you’ll always know when a new episode has dropped. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Episode 5: The Stages of MN Hits the Road in Search of the Great River Shakespeare Festival

Faithful readers, if you aren’t already faithful viewers, what are you waiting for? click here for the latest episode https://bit.ly/TSOMNEpisode5. On which The Stages of MN traveled down to Winona, MN for The Great River Shakespeare Festival (GRSF). I talked to the people behind the scenes and those on stage to give you a complete picture of the festival. I even got a lesson in Intimacy Coordination from the Artistic Director Doug Scholz-Carlson. But I didn’t do it alone I had a little help from my friend fellow Twin Cities Theater Blogger Jil Schafer of Cherry and spoon. You can read her reviews at http://www.cherryandspoon.com/

My MN Honest Reviews are of the two shows playing in the festival Romeo & Juliet and The Comedy of Errors. For info on the GRSF, those shows and to purchase tickets go to https://www.grsf.org/. We also have our customary “At a Show With…” montage of who I saw out at the Theater this week.

Special thanks this week to Chanhassen Dinner Theaters (CDT) for Sponsoring this episode. Check out all the happening out at CDT here https://chanhassendt.com/. If you are interested in sponsoring an episode you can email me at robdunkelberger@thestagesofmn.com

Follow me on Facebook / thestagesofmn and Instagram / thestagesofmn The show will also be available tomorrow in podcast form at https://robdunkelberger.podbean.com/ or wherever you enjoy podcasts

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to ensure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

I’ve officially launched The Stages of MN YouTube Channel which you can view by clicking on this link. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Check out the intro videos and the weekly episodes. Subscribe to the channel so you’ll always know when a new episode has dropped. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

The Stages of MN Jumps Off the Page and Into Your Eyes and Ears. The Good News is, a Short Course of Antibiotics Should Clear it Right Up.

I’m thrilled to announce that after months of hard work The Stages of MN has broken out of the confines of the blog and into new formats. The blog isn’t going away, but you might notice the reviews getting a little shorter. First off is the big one, the YouTube Show! Here is a link to the first episode https://bit.ly/TheStagesofMNEpisode1 . It clocks in at about 40 minutes but I think this first episode earns the extra time. Future episodes will be targeted at a 20 to 30 minute length, which I think is a little more digestible for the average viewer. The shows in general will feature an interview of some kind, a couple of reviews, and a montage of photos taken with people, like yourselves faithful readers, that I run into out at the theater. If you see me out at a show, or anywhere really, except standing at a urinal, don’t be shy, say hi, ask for a photo and you’ll be part of the next episode! I’m hoping this will allow me to meet more of you and connect with you in a more personal way. You love theater! I love theater! You know what I think of every show, but I want to hear what you think, I want to know what you are seeing.

I interviewed Austene Van, the Executive Artistic Director of Yellow Tree Theatre as well as an accomplished Actor, Choreographer, Director, and Writer for the first episode. You’ll see from that interview that we are having some fun with this show, but we’ll also at times talk about some really important things as well. We also have two reviews for shows closing this weekend Significant Other at Lyric Arts and Mae West and the Trial of Sex from Walking Shadow Theater Company. Along with a couple of other fun little items. I’m really proud of the show, it’s not perfect, but we’ll iron out the rough edges over time. For instance the opening sequence which was filmed in the historic Orpheum Theatre for which I’m very grateful to the folks at Hennepin Arts for allowing us to do. I think it came out great, but it is too long, you don’t want to sit through that every week. So sometime in the next few weeks I’ll get that edited down. But I wanted to share the full cut with you. And, if we have an episode that runs a little short in the future, we might pull it out and pop in from time to time.

The second new format is a podcast version of the YouTube show. You can hear the first episode by clicking here https://bit.ly/TSOMNPodcastEpisode1 or searching for The Stages of MN wherever you listen to podcasts. What’s the difference? Well the podcast version is a little shorter as some of the YouTube version is purely visual, like the opening and the photo montage, so those have been cut. My preferred version is the YouTube, but some folks don’t really want to sit and watch something on YouTube. Some would prefer to listen to a podcast, which they can do while driving, exercising, cooking, clipping their nails or shucking corn. And for those folks we have the podcast version, and to them I say happy shucking!!!

So while this exists for you to simply enjoy, you can also help do what this blog and these new versions of The Stages of MN was designed to do in the first place. Share the love of theater. You can help me spread the good words by sharing these shows on your social media pages, subscribing, liking, and reviewing them. For algorithms are a giddy thing, and this is my conclusion, the more these are viewed/listened to, the more the platforms themselves push them out to new folks. That is how we get others into the theater groove with us. They hear about a show and they check it out and then rinse and repeat! So let us rally to Austene Van’s call for us all to work together to ensure that theater does not go quietly into the night but blazes forth and comes out stronger and more vibrant and vital than ever. Theater is under attack, but we can do this.

Gratefully,

Rob Dunkelberger, Founder and Grand Poobah of The Stages of MN

Stop Kiss an Important and Beautiful Play for Pride Month From Theater Mu

Kelsey Angel Baehrens and Emjoy Gavino Photo by Rich Ryan

Necessity requires that going forward in order to produce a weekly YouTube show and podcast that reviews will become shorter. There are only so many hours in a day but, I have no intention of abandoning the blog version. Faithful readers, you have year after year grown The Stages of MN audience. While I hope you will become viewers or listeners as well, there will always be things here that cannot be found there. This will be the place for longer reviews, though slightly shorter than before, as well as Reviews of more shows than can be covered on the YouTube and Podcast versions. Essentially there will be some overlap, but each format will have unique content.

On to Stop Kiss which is a battle between two conflicting emotions and storylines. The play is broken into two timelines, both following two young women Callie, a long time resident of NYC and Sara, who has just moved to the city from the Midwest. One timeline follows them from their first meeting to their first kiss. The second storyline follows them in the aftermath of the kiss, but it’s not what you think. They are victims of a hate crime which leaves Sara in a coma. The two timelines alternate from scene to scene, so one moment we are watching a friendship blossom and then grow into an unexpected attraction. It is full of anticipation and joy and laughter and longing. The other is filled with tragedy, loss, and heartbreak, but also the growth and love. It’s a brilliant script by Diana Son and the duo timeline structure is anything but a gimmick. The one storyline joyfully heading towards tragedy the second revealing the extent of the damage and the repercussions of the horrible event that forms the nexus of the two timelines. What is miraculous is the way in which the telling of the story doesn’t diminish our giddiness at Callie and Sara’s growing bond in timeline one but it does inform our emotional response to timeline two.

The script does half of the work, but without such engaging and warm performances from the two leads Emjoy Gavino as Callie and Kelsey Angel Baehrens as Sara, the emotional resonance wouldn’t work. It’s that odd thing that we call chemistry, it’s why I tear up when Niles confesses his love for Daphne on Frasier (sorry if that’s a spoiler for anyone), and it’s why we are able to forget what we know is coming in Stop Kiss. We like these characters, we like the way they interact, in fact we forget they are characters. We become invested in their happiness, even though we know something horrible is coming. But to say that the success of the performances is due to some intangible thing called chemistry is not acknowledging the masterful work of Gavino and Baehrens. They are so good that they make it look easy. Make no mistake, it is their skill at crafting the roles, their understanding of what each timeline needs from them and their ability to swap between them from scene to scene that gives the play it’s heart and soul. The production is Directed by Katie Bradley who does an excellent job of staging the show, there are a million scene changes by the occur seamlessly and speedily which is key to keeping us invested.

Stop Kiss runs through June 29th at the Gremlin Theatre in St Paul and honestly I know it sounds like it could be a bit of a downer but I assure you it is ultimately a beautiful and hopeful production. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatermu.org/stop-kiss#gsc.tab=0

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

I’ve officially launched The Stages of MN YouTube Channel which you can view by clicking on this link. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Check out the intro videos and the weekly episodes. Subscribe to the channel so you’ll always know when a new episode has dropped. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Be a Part of The Stages of MN, Write the Theme Music For The Stages of MN YouTube Channel!

The launch of The Stages of MN YouTube channel is still over a month away. But I’m hard at work in developing what I hope will be an engaging new way to celebrate live theater. I want this to be a collaborative platform where I can engage with theatergoers and makers. With that in mind I’m sending out this request to you, faithful readers, if you or someone you know has experience writing music or songs I’m looking for something original to use as the Theme music for the show. Watch my latest video on YouTube for an idea of what I’m looking for.

I love the idea of having the show open with the something created by you whether you are a professional music and theater maker or just a novice fan of theater. I’m looking for something between 20 to 60 seconds, that I can use for the opening and closing of each episode. Like I say in the video anything goes, silly or serious, instrumental or with lyrics. I’m open to anything and everything. Send your creations to robdunkelberger@thestagesofmn.com, ideally by May 11th. I’d love to get as many options as possible, if there are multiple great choices I may use some for individual segments. I’m excited for you to be a part of The Stages of MN as it expands into new territory.

Feel free to reach out via email or any of the social media channels if you have any questions. I look forward to listening to your creations.

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. To subscribe on your computer: from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. New things are in the work! Click here to go to The Stages of MN YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Right now there is just a short introductory video, but there will be much more coming this summer. For now, check out the intro video and subscribe to the channel so that when we fully launch you’ll be the first to know!