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Mount Greylock students present 'Nice Work If You Can Get It' this Friday and Saturday.
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Student musicians provide live accompaniment.

Mount Greylock Presents 'Nice Work If You Can Get It'

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Mount Greylock Regional School District will present its annual musical theater production on Friday and Saturday, March 18 and 19, at 7 p.m. at the ’62 Centre for Theatre and Dance at Williams College.

The school will present "Nice Work If You Can Get It," a fresh (2012) presentation of the music of George and Ira Gershwin, with a book by Tony Award-winning author Joe Di Pietro, based on works by Guy Bolton and PG Wodehouse.  
Set in New York in the 1920s, the show tells the story of a band of bootleggers run by the illusive Brownbeard (senior Molly Wilson), looking for a place to stash a shipment of illegal gin. Billie (senior Nicole Jones), the leader of this small band of hoods, encounters society playboy Jimmy Winter (junior Whit Ellingwood) outside of a speakeasy and hatches a plot to store the hooch in the basement of his seldom used beach house on Long Island.

As the stash is unloaded, Jimmy and his new bride Eileen (senior Maggie Rorke) arrive, setting in motion a series of madcap events that result in Jimmy’s falling in love with Billie, a straight-laced prohibitionist “duchess” (junior Jenna Benzinger) falling for one of Billie’s bootlegging accomplices (Cookie, played by junior John Pfister), the appearance of a bevy of chorus girls led by the “very available” Jeannie Muldoon (sophomore Cedar Keyes), and the intervention of conservative, moralist Senator Max Evergreen (senior Noah Savage), who in the end learns that he is at the center of a secret that could derail his chances for re-election.

With classic songs from the Gershwin songbook, whose melodies are prominently interwoven into the fabric of American popular culture, such as "Nice Work If You Can Get It," "S’Wonderful," "Let’s Call The Whole Thing Off," "Someone to Watch Over Me" and the liltingly plaintive "But Not For Me," this show is a delight for all audiences.

This production involves more than 40 members of the Mount Greylock student body as actors, singers, pit musicians and crew members. It is directed for the 17th season by faculty member Jeffrey Welch, with vocal direction by Jean Kirsch, choreography by Ann Marie Rodriguez and pit orchestra direction by Lyndon Moors. Tickets are $6 for students and seniors and $8 for adults, and they are available at the door on the nights of the performances.

 


Tags: high school production,   local theater,   MGRHS,   musical,   

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Williamstown Affordable Housing Trust Hears Objections to Summer Street Proposal

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Neighbors concerned about a proposed subdivision off Summer Street last week raised the specter of a lawsuit against the town and/or Northern Berkshire Habitat for Humanity.
 
"If I'm not mistaken, I think this is kind of a new thing for Williamstown, an affordable housing subdivision of this size that's plunked down in the middle, or the midst of houses in a mature neighborhood," Summer Street resident Christopher Bolton told the Affordable Housing Trust board, reading from a prepared statement, last Wednesday. "I think all of us, the Trust, Habitat, the community, have a vested interest in giving this project the best chance of success that it can have. We all remember subdivisions that have been blocked by neighbors who have become frustrated with the developers and resorted to adversarial legal processes.
 
"But most of us in the neighborhood would welcome this at the right scale if the Trust and Northern Berkshire Habitat would communicate with us and compromise with us and try to address some of our concerns."
 
Bolton and other residents of the neighborhood were invited to speak to the board of the trust, which in 2015 purchased the Summer Street lot along with a parcel at the corner of Cole Avenue and Maple Street with the intent of developing new affordable housing on the vacant lots.
 
Currently, Northern Berkshire Habitat for Humanity, which built two homes at the Cole/Maple property, is developing plans to build up to five single-family homes on the 1.75-acre Summer Street lot. Earlier this month, many of the same would-be neighbors raised objections to the scale of the proposed subdivision and its impact on the neighborhood in front of the Planning Board.
 
The Affordable Housing Trust board heard many of the same arguments at its meeting. It also heard from some voices not heard at the Planning Board session.
 
And the trustees agreed that the developer needs to engage in a three-way conversation with the abutters and the trust, which still owns the land, to develop a plan that is more acceptable to all parties.
 
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