CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: The visitors get a chance to go on the stage and touch the things on the set. Not every play includes a touch tour. But Marcus Kyd says "You Can't Take It With You" was a natural choice.
MARCUS KYD: "The great thing about the play is almost everything in the play that has to be on stage ends up affecting the story. From the minute you open the script you get the description of the typewriter, the skull that is holding jellybeans."
Everyman Theatre has been doing touch tours for several years, usually for one play each season.
Roger Williamson regularly attends the theater's touch tours.
ROGER WILLIAMSON: "Because we don't see, we only get to form images of what we think is going on. This will enhance the performance greatly to know what things they are using as props."
Maurice Peret attended the play before taking the touch tour.
MAURICE PERET: "It brought the play that much more alive knowing what the set looked like. I can recall seeing the play and seeing where some of the performers were sitting. We see more with our brains than with our eyes. It's not a question of seeing things, but assimilating visual information."
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: Playwrights George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart wrote “You Can’t Take It With You.” It won a Pulitzer Prize. The play was made into a movie in nineteen thirty-eight, starring Jean Arthur and Jimmy Stewart.
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2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25