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Mount Greylock students present 'Nice Work If You Can Get It' this Friday and Saturday.
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Student musicians provide live accompaniment.

Mount Greylock Presents 'Nice Work If You Can Get It'

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Mount Greylock Regional School District will present its annual musical theater production on Friday and Saturday, March 18 and 19, at 7 p.m. at the ’62 Centre for Theatre and Dance at Williams College.

The school will present "Nice Work If You Can Get It," a fresh (2012) presentation of the music of George and Ira Gershwin, with a book by Tony Award-winning author Joe Di Pietro, based on works by Guy Bolton and PG Wodehouse.  
Set in New York in the 1920s, the show tells the story of a band of bootleggers run by the illusive Brownbeard (senior Molly Wilson), looking for a place to stash a shipment of illegal gin. Billie (senior Nicole Jones), the leader of this small band of hoods, encounters society playboy Jimmy Winter (junior Whit Ellingwood) outside of a speakeasy and hatches a plot to store the hooch in the basement of his seldom used beach house on Long Island.

As the stash is unloaded, Jimmy and his new bride Eileen (senior Maggie Rorke) arrive, setting in motion a series of madcap events that result in Jimmy’s falling in love with Billie, a straight-laced prohibitionist “duchess” (junior Jenna Benzinger) falling for one of Billie’s bootlegging accomplices (Cookie, played by junior John Pfister), the appearance of a bevy of chorus girls led by the “very available” Jeannie Muldoon (sophomore Cedar Keyes), and the intervention of conservative, moralist Senator Max Evergreen (senior Noah Savage), who in the end learns that he is at the center of a secret that could derail his chances for re-election.

With classic songs from the Gershwin songbook, whose melodies are prominently interwoven into the fabric of American popular culture, such as "Nice Work If You Can Get It," "S’Wonderful," "Let’s Call The Whole Thing Off," "Someone to Watch Over Me" and the liltingly plaintive "But Not For Me," this show is a delight for all audiences.

This production involves more than 40 members of the Mount Greylock student body as actors, singers, pit musicians and crew members. It is directed for the 17th season by faculty member Jeffrey Welch, with vocal direction by Jean Kirsch, choreography by Ann Marie Rodriguez and pit orchestra direction by Lyndon Moors. Tickets are $6 for students and seniors and $8 for adults, and they are available at the door on the nights of the performances.

 


Tags: high school production,   local theater,   MGRHS,   musical,   

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Williamstown Shooting Still Under Investigation

iBerkshires.com Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- State Police detectives continue to investigate a Sunday morning shooting on Cole Avenue, and the Williamstown Police plans a community meeting to discuss procedures when the investigation ends.
 
On Tuesday morning, WPD Chief Michael Ziemba sent a news release to update the committee that while police believe there is no threat to the general public, the probe continues into a shooting at 330 Cole Ave. that sent one individual to the hospital.
 
Ziemba's news release did not indicate that any arrests have been made in the case.
 
He did provide a little more detail about the aftermath of the shooting.
 
A 10:15 a.m. call to the Williamstown Police dispatcher reported that someone had been shot at the housing complex and that, "he was en route to the hospital via personal vehicle," the release reads.
 
Later, the gunshot victim was brought from a separate location to Berkshire Medical Center by ambulance, Ziemba wrote.
 
Ziemba said he brought in the State Police Detective unit to assist the local police. Investigators determined there was no threat to the general public from the shooter and relayed that message via the town's Code Red reverse 911 system and social media.
 
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