7653 E 1st Pl
Denver, Colorado 80230

Spotlight Theatre
presents
Harvey
By Mary Chase
Directed by Bernie Cardell
Performed at the John Hand Theater in Lowry
Spotlight Theatre Company presents “Harvey” opening Saturday, February 26 and running through Saturday, March 26 at the John Hand Theater, 7653 E. 1st Place in Denver. Performances are Friday/Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Sundays, through March 20, at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 Adult/ $18 for Students/Seniors and available by calling 720-880-8727 or online at www.thisisspotlight.org.
Elwood P. Dowd is an average mild-mannered man with one slight eccentricity: he keeps introducing people to his best friend, an invisible six-and-a-half foot tall white rabbit named Harvey! In order to save the family from further embarrassment Elwood’s sister Veta Louise decides to have Elwood committed to the local sanitarium, and soon the search is on for Elwood and his invisible companion. Denver native Mary Chase gives us a screwball comedy about friendship that the whole family will enjoy.
The cast, under the direction of Bernie Cardell, includes, Andy Anderson (Elwood P. Dowd), Angie Thatcher (Myrtle Mae Simmons), Deb Curtis (Veta Louise Simmons), Bob Byrnes (E.J. Lofgren), John Greene (Duane Wilson), Johanna Jaquith (Ruth Kelly, R.N.), Jim Landis (Judge Omar Gaffney), Ken Street (William R. Chumley, M.D.), Linda Suttle (Betty Chumley), Nancy Thomas (Mrs. Ethel Chauvenet) and David Trudeau (Lyman Sanderson, M.D.).
Mary Coyle Chase was an American journalist, playwright and screenwriter, known primarily for writing the Broadway play “Harvey”, later adapted for film starring James Stewart. She wrote fourteen plays, two children's novels, one screenplay, and worked seven years at the Rocky Mountain News as a journalist. She began her career as a journalist on the Denver Times and Rocky Mountain News in 1924, leaving the News (the Denver Times was folded into the News in 1926) in 1931 to write plays, do freelance reporting work, and raise a family. At the News, she started writing on the society pages, but soon became a feature writer, reporting the news from a sob sister, emotional angle, becoming part of the news itself as a comic figure, "our Lil' Mary", or writing funny, flapper era pieces as part of a series of "Charlie & Mary" stories (Charlie Wunder drew the cartoons and Mary wrote the text). Chase received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for“Harvey” in 1945.
PSA/Listing
Spotlight Theatre Company presents “Harvey”
The classic comedy about an average mild-mannered man and his invisible white rabbit.
Feb. 26. – Mar. 26
Fri./Sat. at 7:30 p.m.; Sun. (through Mar. 20) at 6:30 p.m.
John Hand Theater, 7653 E. 1st Place in Denver.
Tickets are $20 Adult/ $18 for Students/Seniors
720-880-8727 or online at www.thisisspotlight.org.

Added by GS on February 12, 2011

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