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Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre

Coordinates: 39°25′11″N 77°27′5″W / 39.41972°N 77.45139°W / 39.41972; -77.45139
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre
Map
Address5 Willowdale Drive
Frederick, Maryland 21702
United States
OwnerKiska Corporate Enterprises
Bill Kiska, Executive Producer & CEO
Justin M. Kiska, President & Managing Director
Deb Kiska, Chief Financial Officer
TypeDinner theater
Opened1990
Website
http://www.wayoffbroadway.com/

The Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre, also known as Way Off Broadway or WOB, is a regional dinner theater and children's theater located in Frederick, Maryland, United States.

History

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The theater was first launched in 1990 as the Keynote Dinner Theatre under the direction of Don Wiswell with a production of the musical Grease. It was not until 1995, when the theater was purchased by the partnership of Pete Peterson, Terrance Warfield, and Jim Watkins, that it was renamed Way Off Broadway.[1] The following year, Way Off Broadway's Children's Theatre was created, opening with an original production of Sleeping Beauty. It was also in 1996, a year and a half after they bought the theater, that Peterson, Warfield, and Watkins sold WOB to Susan Thornton, the creator of the Children's Theatre. Way Off Broadway was purchased by the Kiska family in 2002, beginning their ownership of the theater with a production of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.[2] The Kiskas remain the theater's current owners.

Productions

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Mainstage

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Each season, Way Off Broadway produces five Broadway-style mainstage productions.[3] These range from the classics by Rodgers and Hammerstein and Kender and Ebb, to contemporary and current stage shows by Andrew Lloyd Webber and David Yazbek. Way Off Broadway has been credited with bringing many theatrical premieres to the area. In 2009, WOB was one of the first theaters in the country to obtain the rights to produce a regional theater production of the musical comedy The Wedding Singer.[4] Neil Simon’s The Goodbye Girl - The Musical, La Cage aux Folles,[5] Thoroughly Modern Millie, Mel BrooksThe Producers, All Shook Up, and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels all made their western Maryland regional theater debuts at WOB.

Children’s Theatre

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From 1996 - 2017, Way Off Broadway produced a full children's theatre season each year, presents four productions geared for young audiences and their families. These were originally musical adaptations of popular fairy tales and children's stories written specifically for the theater.[6] Most notably was WOB's 2005 world premiere stage production of Mr. Willowby's Christmas Tree, based on the 1963 children's book of the same name by Robert Barry. Until that time, Jim Henson’s Muppets had been the only group to obtain the rights to adapt Barry’s story, turning it into a television Christmas special in 1995.[7] In an interview, Barry later said he preferred Way Off Broadway’s adaptation, which had been written by Susan Thornton, the children’s theatre’s director, over the Muppets version.[8]

In 2011, The Children’s Theatre at Way Off Broadway began to change its productions line-up to include stage versions of popular children’s books and movies –- many of which came directly from the Disney Vault.  These new blockbusters were shows like Disney’s 101 Dalmatians, Cinderella, Aladdin, Peter Pan, and Alice in Wonderland; two incredibly successful runs of Pinkalicious – The Musical; Nickelodeon’s Dora the Explorer Live! Dora’s Pirate Adventure; a premiere production of Molly Shannon’s Tilly the Trickster; and the area's first production of Junie B. Jones - The Musical.[9]

Beginning in 2018, the theatre transitioned to offering children's theatre productions as special events periodically throughout the year.

Other performances and theater activities

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Way Off Broadway, in addition to its Mainstage and Children's Theatre, offers original interactive murder mysteries during the season.[4] The Children’s Theatre Breakfast Series includes an annual Princess Breakfast and Breakfast with Santa.

In the fall of 2019, Way Off Broadway co-produced the first regional theatre production of the new musical comedy The Book of Merman, which had made its Off-Broadway premiere the winter before at New York’s St. Luke’s Theatre. WOB’s production starred Melissa Ann Martin as Ethel Merman, Joseph Waeyaert as Elder Braithwaite, and Paul Cabell as Elder Shumway. The production was co-produced with Justin M. Kiska and Jessica Billones.[10]

Venue

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The theater is located in Frederick, Maryland, west of Baltimore and north of Washington, D.C. Since it opened, it has operated in the same location, in the Willowtree Plaza along Route 40, also known as Frederick’s "Golden Mile." A traditional proscenium style theater, Way Off Broadway serves a buffet meal to its audiences, who watch the show from their tables. The serving staff is made up of cast and crew members from the productions.

WOB Entertainment

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On November 11, 2010, Way Off Broadway announced the formation of WOB Entertainment, a multi-faceted division to manage all of the company's activities outside of the theater. Designed to develop, produce, and present stage productions at venues outside of the Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre, it offers theatrical consulting and operation services as well, both creative and managerial, to other arts and commercial organizations and companies. WOB Entertainment also acts as the agent and representative for all of the original works first produced at Way Off Broadway, including its interactive murder mysteries, holiday productions, and the Children's Theatre Collection.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Yost, Gregory (March–April 2008), "Dinner and a show", Hagerstown Magazine, retrieved 4 August 2010
  2. ^ Boch, Liz: The Frederick News Post, January 11, 2002, "Dinner theater has a new set of owners."
  3. ^ About the Theatre. About WOB. Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre. Retrieved 2010-07-20.
  4. ^ a b Cassie, Ron: The Frederick News Post, April 11, 2010, Way Off Broadway thrives despite the risks.
  5. ^ Oravec, Nathan: Frederick Gazette, January 19, 2006, "Family matters: Elaborate, eccentric La Cage opens at Way Off Broadway."
  6. ^ Morvay, Joanne E.: Baltimore Sun, August 5, 2004, Introducing children to live theater
  7. ^ Oravec, Nathan: Frederick Gazette, November 7, 2005, Jingle all the way
  8. ^ Leslie, Katie: The Frederick News Post, December 1, 2005, "Theatre for Christmas."
  9. ^ About the Theatre. About WOB. Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre. Retrieved 2023-03-27.
  10. ^ BWW News Desk: BroadwayWorld.com, October 10, 2019, The New Musical THE BOOK OF MERMAN Announced At Way Off Broadway.
  11. ^ Waters, Jr., Ed: The Frederick News Post, November 17, 2010, Frederick's Way Off Broadway Dinner Theatre launches production, consultation division
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39°25′11″N 77°27′5″W / 39.41972°N 77.45139°W / 39.41972; -77.45139