One Performance only! Wednesday, March 26 @ 7:30 pm
The Marsh, 1062 Valencia Street @ 22nd Street in San Francisco.
Tickets are $8-25 Sliding Scale. To buy tickets call 1-800-838-3006 or visit www.themarsh.org
For more information, visit www.themarsh.org or call 415-826-5750
Jessica Ferris is looking for someone invisible.
In 1979, her father stormed out of the house after an argument, and no one has seen him since: not his family, not his friends, not the federal agents tracking his case.
The clues are bizarre; an international con man, a linen-obsessed housewife and an ordinary folding chair all become portals to a dangerous world in this fantastical and true story.
One Performance only! Wednesday, March 19 @ 7:30 pm
The Marsh, 1062 Valencia Street @ 22nd Street in San Francisco.
Tickets are $8-12 Sliding Scale. To buy tickets call 1-800-838-3006 or visit www.themarsh.org
For more information, visit www.themarsh.org or call 415-826-5750
For fortune and glory… The American Dream and Steve McQueen.
Stevie Lee, travels far and wide, but cannot find an Asian Hollywood role model who represents who he is as an individual. So Stevie Lee finds his role model in Steve McQueen, a man who made no compromises. Now follow, follow Stevie Lee as he embarks on a perilous, divided quest, to be the first Korean leading man in Hollywood that does not do kung fu.
Stevie Lee must be a Korean daredevil if he wishes to make it, for his dream is a billion to one shot. Will he make it or will he freefall into Snake River Canyon?
The show plays Thursday & Friday @ 8:00 pm and Saturday @ 8:30 pm on The Marsh Main Stage, 1062 Valencia Street @ 22nd Street in San Francisco.
Tickets are $15-35 sliding scale on Thursday; $22-35 sliding scale on Friday and $25-35 sliding scale on Saturday. . To buy tickets call 1-800-838-3006 or visit www.themarsh.org
For more information, visit www.themarsh.org or call 415-826-5750
“Riveting…Funny and Poignant…Mr. Hoyle is both a first-rate reporter and actor.” --Wilborn Hampton, New York Times
“Wildly entertaining and the most nuanced and insightful treatment of the complexities of oil politics I have encountered in a decade of covering energy for The Economist.” Vijay Vaitheeswaran, The Economist
In celebration of his wildly successful five-month New York run, and in honor of this year’s Will Glickman Award for Best Play, Dan Hoyle’s TINGS DEY HAPPEN returns to The Marsh for a limited engagement.
A riveting adventure story, a geopolitical tour de force about the year he spent in Nigeria on a Fulbright Scholarship, exploring the West African oil frontier, dubbed the new Middle East of American energy security and an extremely dangerous place.
His base was Port Harcourt - the same malarial swamp where disease and attacks from jealous warriors once killed the British and where now a second generation of warlords blow up Chevron pipelines to steal the oil and militants kidnap oil workers. Dan traveled alone around the swamps, befriending the militants, warlords, diplomats, activists and prostitutes. Even the U.S. ambassador sought him out to find out what was going on. And, indeed, he contracted malaria.
Dan acts all the characters in his story, except himself. We hear the characters speak to him, just as he heard them - he wants us to experience it as he did, in all its intensity and hilarity. For although its not a comedy, it's often very funny.
The show plays Thursday & Friday @ 8:00 pm and Saturday @ 8:30 pm on The Marsh Main Stage, 1062 Valencia Street @ 22nd Street in San Francisco.
Tickets are $15-35 sliding scale on Thursday; $22-35 sliding scale on Friday and $25-35 sliding scale on Saturday. . To buy tickets call 1-800-838-3006 or visit www.themarsh.org
For more information, visit www.themarsh.org or call 415-826-5750
“Riveting…Funny and Poignant…Mr. Hoyle is both a first-rate reporter and actor.” --Wilborn Hampton, New York Times
“Wildly entertaining and the most nuanced and insightful treatment of the complexities of oil politics I have encountered in a decade of covering energy for The Economist.” Vijay Vaitheeswaran, The Economist
In celebration of his wildly successful five-month New York run, and in honor of this year’s Will Glickman Award for Best Play, Dan Hoyle’s TINGS DEY HAPPEN returns to The Marsh for a limited engagement.
A riveting adventure story, a geopolitical tour de force about the year he spent in Nigeria on a Fulbright Scholarship, exploring the West African oil frontier, dubbed the new Middle East of American energy security and an extremely dangerous place.
His base was Port Harcourt - the same malarial swamp where disease and attacks from jealous warriors once killed the British and where now a second generation of warlords blow up Chevron pipelines to steal the oil and militants kidnap oil workers. Dan traveled alone around the swamps, befriending the militants, warlords, diplomats, activists and prostitutes. Even the U.S. ambassador sought him out to find out what was going on. And, indeed, he contracted malaria.
Dan acts all the characters in his story, except himself. We hear the characters speak to him, just as he heard them - he wants us to experience it as he did, in all its intensity and hilarity. For although its not a comedy, it's often very funny.
The show plays Thursday & Friday @ 8:00 pm and Saturday @ 8:30 pm on The Marsh Main Stage, 1062 Valencia Street @ 22nd Street in San Francisco.
Tickets are $15-35 sliding scale on Thursday; $22-35 sliding scale on Friday and $25-35 sliding scale on Saturday. . To buy tickets call 1-800-838-3006 or visit www.themarsh.org
For more information, visit www.themarsh.org or call 415-826-5750
“Riveting…Funny and Poignant…Mr. Hoyle is both a first-rate reporter and actor.” --Wilborn Hampton, New York Times
“Wildly entertaining and the most nuanced and insightful treatment of the complexities of oil politics I have encountered in a decade of covering energy for The Economist.” Vijay Vaitheeswaran, The Economist
In celebration of his wildly successful five-month New York run, and in honor of this year’s Will Glickman Award for Best Play, Dan Hoyle’s TINGS DEY HAPPEN returns to The Marsh for a limited engagement.
A riveting adventure story, a geopolitical tour de force about the year he spent in Nigeria on a Fulbright Scholarship, exploring the West African oil frontier, dubbed the new Middle East of American energy security and an extremely dangerous place.
His base was Port Harcourt - the same malarial swamp where disease and attacks from jealous warriors once killed the British and where now a second generation of warlords blow up Chevron pipelines to steal the oil and militants kidnap oil workers. Dan traveled alone around the swamps, befriending the militants, warlords, diplomats, activists and prostitutes. Even the U.S. ambassador sought him out to find out what was going on. And, indeed, he contracted malaria.
Dan acts all the characters in his story, except himself. We hear the characters speak to him, just as he heard them - he wants us to experience it as he did, in all its intensity and hilarity. For although its not a comedy, it's often very funny.