Upcoming
Home for the Holidays!
Friday, December 6 & Saturday, December 7 | 7:30pm
Shea Theater | Turners Falls, MA
Somewhat of a family show! Back by 'popular' demand! Your favorite Drag Family is back with their glittery riff on The Christmas Carol!
It's Home for the Holigays!
Yes, the wildly entertaining (and usually drunk) Drag Family is back this holigay, asking the deep enquirious question, "What would Mr Drag's Christmas Carol look like?" All of your favorites are back: Mr Drag (Joe Dulude II), Kat Drag (Jane Williams), DD Drag (Myka Plunkett), Ellsbeth the maid (Emily Pritchard), Jinnifer (Linda Tardiff), Karl (Kat Adler), Quince Cordial (Lori Holmes Clark) and with special guest, Marina Goldman. Yes, she finally squirmed her way into the special guest star role. Who knows what will happen now? Get ready to laugh, to sing and to drink copious amounts of alcohol.
Orlando
Spring 2025
Academy of Music | Northampton, MA
More info coming soon!
Eggtooth Productions is honored and grateful to have received a generous grant from the Markham-Nathan Fund for Social Justice to support our production of Orlando by Sara Ruhl at the Academy of Music this spring. We are deeply grateful to the MNF for their support of our work.
Ruhl's Orlando brings to the stage the life of an Elizabethan nobleman who's magically transformed into an immortal woman as Orlando, first as he and then as she, struggles to learn the relevance of gender identity and the true meaning of life, if one never dies. Now the questions Orlando explores of gender are less fantastical and have more to do with our new reality as the rights and safety of our Trans and LGBTQ+ community are in peril. This playful story written a hundred years ago celebrates the multiplicity of gender in a delightful and loving way that is more relevant than ever. By directly addressing the ways that a person contains multiple genders within their soul this play celebrates the diversity of humanity in a positive yet pointed way that entertains while educating.
Here’s what a member of the Lupinewood Collective, a Trans asylum community, said about the production, “For me, the most profound part of watching Orlando was feeling re-woven into the fabric of time, when so often culture is telling me I have no place in it.”