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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260702T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260702T220000
DTSTAMP:20260529T172339Z
CREATED:20260529T172337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260529T172339Z
UID:92660-1783020600-1783029600@explorenewjersey.org
SUMMARY:Wildwood’s Music in the Plaza Concert Series Presents: The Juliano Brothers
DESCRIPTION:Wildwood’s Music in the Plaza Concert Series Returns for Another Summer of Free Live Entertainment\, Community Gathering\, and Jersey Shore Tradition \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe full 2026 Downtown Wildwood Music in the Plaza lineup features 11 different bands performing free weekly outdoor concerts. The performances take place every Thursday night from 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM at Byrne Plaza:  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nJune 18: The Roundhouse Band (Season Kick-Off)\n\n\n\nJune 25: Chicago 9\n\n\n\nJuly 2: The Juliano Brothers\n\n\n\nJuly 9: The Beat Tells\n\n\n\nJuly 16: Wrong Way Band\n\n\n\nJuly 23: Jamison\n\n\n\nJuly 30: Animal House Band\n\n\n\nAugust 6: Legacy\n\n\n\nAugust 13: Winslow\n\n\n\nAugust 20: 99 Reasons\n\n\n\nAugust 27: The Chatterband \n\n\n\n\nEvery summer\, communities along the Jersey Shore search for ways to bring residents and visitors together beyond the beach\, the boardwalk\, and the attractions that have made the region famous for generations. In Wildwood\, one of the most successful examples of that community spirit continues to thrive through the Music in the Plaza Concert Series\, a free outdoor entertainment tradition that transforms Downtown Wildwood into one of South Jersey’s most vibrant weekly gathering places. Returning for the summer of 2026\, the beloved concert series once again promises an entire season of live music\, dancing\, family-friendly entertainment\, and community celebration in the heart of one of New Jersey’s most recognizable shore destinations. \n\n\n\nHeld at Byrne Plaza\, the open-air downtown venue located at 3400 Pacific Avenue\, the Music in the Plaza Concert Series has evolved into far more than a weekly concert schedule. It has become a cornerstone of Wildwood’s summer identity\, attracting families\, seasonal visitors\, local residents\, and music lovers who gather each Thursday evening to enjoy free performances under the open sky. Against the backdrop of the city’s energetic downtown district\, the series offers an experience that captures everything people love about a Jersey Shore summer: live music\, warm evenings\, community interaction\, and a welcoming atmosphere that encourages visitors to slow down and enjoy the moment. \n\n\n\nRunning every Thursday evening from mid-June through late August\, the concerts begin at 7:30 p.m. and continue until 9:00 p.m.\, creating a perfect evening destination after a day spent on the beach or exploring Wildwood’s famous attractions. Unlike many ticketed summer events\, the Music in the Plaza Concert Series remains completely free\, making it one of the most accessible entertainment offerings along the New Jersey coastline. \n\n\n\nThe atmosphere at Byrne Plaza reflects the unique character of Downtown Wildwood itself. Concertgoers arrive early carrying lawn chairs\, beach blankets\, coolers\, and picnic baskets as they claim their favorite spots on the plaza lawn. Families spread out together while groups of friends gather to enjoy an evening of music and conversation. Children dance near the stage while longtime visitors reconnect with neighbors and fellow summer regulars. The result is an environment that feels equal parts concert\, neighborhood gathering\, and summer celebration. \n\n\n\nOne of the strengths of the Music in the Plaza Concert Series has always been its ability to present a wide variety of musical styles that appeal to multiple generations. Rather than focusing on a single genre\, organizers have assembled a schedule that reflects the diverse tastes of the Wildwood audience\, blending classic rock\, pop favorites\, country influences\, dance music\, oldies\, and tribute performances throughout the season. \n\n\n\nThe 2026 schedule begins on June 18 with The Roundhouse Band\, which will officially launch the summer season. Known for energetic performances and crowd-friendly song selections\, the group is expected to deliver a high-energy opening night that sets the tone for the weeks ahead. \n\n\n\nOn June 25\, Chicago 9 takes the stage\, bringing audiences a celebration of the iconic sound associated with one of America’s most enduring rock bands. Their horn-driven arrangements and faithful interpretations of classic hits make them a favorite among audiences seeking a nostalgic musical experience. \n\n\n\nJuly begins with The Juliano Brothers on July 2\, bringing a blend of crowd favorites and danceable classics that have earned them a loyal regional following. Their performance arrives just ahead of the Independence Day holiday weekend\, adding another layer of excitement to one of the busiest periods of the summer season. \n\n\n\nOn July 9\, The Beat Tells will transport audiences back to the golden age of British rock and pop\, delivering a tribute experience inspired by one of the most influential bands in music history. Their attention to musical detail and authentic presentation has made them a popular attraction throughout the region. \n\n\n\nBasic Cable follows on July 16\, offering a diverse setlist that spans decades of popular music. Their versatility allows them to connect with audiences of all ages\, creating the kind of shared experience that has become a hallmark of the Byrne Plaza concerts. \n\n\n\nJamison takes the stage on July 23\, continuing the summer momentum with an energetic performance designed to keep the crowd engaged from start to finish. As midsummer reaches its peak\, the concert series traditionally attracts some of its largest audiences\, and this performance is expected to continue that trend. \n\n\n\nJuly concludes with the Animal House Band on July 30. Known throughout the region for their lively stage presence and audience interaction\, the group has built a reputation for transforming concerts into full-scale dance parties\, making them a perfect fit for Wildwood’s festive summer atmosphere. \n\n\n\nAugust begins with Legacy on August 6\, bringing a polished performance style and a broad musical repertoire that appeals to both longtime music fans and younger audiences. Their appearance helps maintain the series’ momentum as the summer season enters its final stretch. \n\n\n\nWinslow follows on August 13\, delivering a performance rooted in classic American songwriting and timeless musical influences. Their appearance adds another dimension to a lineup that consistently emphasizes musical variety and broad audience appeal. \n\n\n\nOn August 20\, 99 Reasons takes over Byrne Plaza with a dynamic performance expected to blend popular hits\, dance favorites\, and crowd-pleasing energy. By this point in the season\, the concerts have become a weekly tradition for many attendees\, and the August performances often draw some of the most enthusiastic crowds of the summer. \n\n\n\nThe series concludes on August 27 with The Chatterband\, providing a fitting finale to another successful season of free entertainment in Downtown Wildwood. Their performance will serve as both a celebration of the summer that was and a reminder of the community connections that have made the concert series such an enduring success. \n\n\n\nBeyond the music itself\, the Music in the Plaza Concert Series plays an important role in supporting Downtown Wildwood’s local businesses. Restaurants\, ice cream parlors\, cafes\, and shops throughout the surrounding district benefit from the steady flow of visitors who arrive early to dine\, browse\, and explore before the evening performances begin. Many attendees make a full night of the experience\, combining dinner\, shopping\, and live entertainment into a single downtown outing. \n\n\n\nThe concerts also complement a broader schedule of activities hosted at Byrne Plaza throughout the summer months. Fitness in the Plaza programs provide weekday morning wellness opportunities for residents and visitors alike\, while Family Movie Nights transform the venue into an outdoor cinema each Tuesday evening. Together\, these events have helped establish Byrne Plaza as one of the most active and versatile public gathering spaces anywhere along the Jersey Shore. \n\n\n\nAs New Jersey continues to celebrate the unique communities that define its coastline\, the Music in the Plaza Concert Series stands as a powerful example of how free public programming can strengthen local culture\, support small businesses\, and create memorable experiences for residents and visitors alike. In a region known for its entertainment options\, Wildwood has succeeded in creating something refreshingly simple yet remarkably effective: a weekly gathering centered around great music\, shared experiences\, and community connection. \n\n\n\nFor families planning summer vacations\, day-trippers exploring the Shore\, and longtime Wildwood visitors searching for another reason to return downtown after sunset\, the Music in the Plaza Concert Series offers exactly what summer in New Jersey should be. It is welcoming\, accessible\, energetic\, and deeply connected to the spirit of the community that hosts it. As the 2026 season prepares to begin\, Byrne Plaza is once again ready to become the soundtrack of summer in Wildwood\, one Thursday night at a time.
URL:https://explorenewjersey.org/event/wildwoods-music-in-the-plaza-concert-series-presents-the-juliano-brothers/
LOCATION:Byrne Plaza\, 3400 Pacific Ave\, Wildwood\, New Jersey\, 08260\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concerts,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorenewjersey.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Music-in-the-Plaza-2025.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260702T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260702T233000
DTSTAMP:20260525T123221Z
CREATED:20260525T123217Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260525T123221Z
UID:91462-1783020600-1783035000@explorenewjersey.org
SUMMARY:Alexis Morrast
DESCRIPTION:Alexis Morrast Brings a Stunning New Generation of Jazz\, Soul\, and Gospel Power to New Jersey’s Acclaimed Back Deck Concert Series \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAs New Jersey’s summer music calendar continues expanding into one of the most culturally exciting outdoor arts seasons anywhere in the Northeast\, the celebrated Back Deck Concert Series is preparing to welcome one of the brightest young vocal talents currently emerging in contemporary jazz. On Thursday\, July 2\, 2026 at 7:30 PM\, Alexis Morrast will take the stage for an evening that promises to combine jazz sophistication\, gospel-rooted emotionality\, soul-infused storytelling\, and intimate open-air atmosphere into one of the summer’s most unforgettable live music experiences. \n\n\n\nFor audiences searching for artists capable of blending timeless vocal tradition with fresh contemporary energy\, Alexis Morrast represents exactly the kind of performer redefining where modern jazz vocals are heading. Still early in what increasingly appears destined to become a major career\, Morrast has already established herself as one of the most compelling young singers working today through a rare combination of technical elegance\, emotional sincerity\, spiritual depth\, and natural charisma that immediately captures audience attention. \n\n\n\nWhat makes Morrast especially remarkable is how effortless her performances feel. \n\n\n\nMany young vocalists possess strong technical ability. Far fewer understand how to emotionally inhabit a song in ways that feel deeply personal and authentic. Morrast performs with the kind of emotional honesty typically associated with artists decades older and far more seasoned. Her phrasing never feels forced. Her tone remains warm\, expressive\, and inviting. Every lyric arrives with clarity and emotional intention\, allowing audiences to feel directly connected to the music rather than simply observing a performance from a distance. \n\n\n\nThat emotional accessibility has quickly become one of her defining artistic strengths. \n\n\n\nA two-time Apollo winner\, Morrast has already demonstrated an extraordinary ability to connect across generations and musical audiences. The Apollo Theater has long served as one of America’s most important proving grounds for emerging talent\, historically launching careers that would later reshape jazz\, soul\, rhythm and blues\, gospel\, and popular music itself. Winning there once commands attention. Winning twice signals the arrival of an artist with rare instincts and genuine emotional command over live audiences. \n\n\n\nMorrast carries that confidence naturally onto the stage. \n\n\n\nHer performances move fluidly between jazz standards\, soulful ballads\, gospel-infused moments\, and uplifting interpretations that feel simultaneously classic and contemporary. There is a purity to her voice that immediately stands out\, but what truly elevates her performances is the emotional warmth underneath the technique. She understands restraint\, pacing\, and atmosphere in ways many singers spend years trying to master. \n\n\n\nThat sophistication makes her appearance at the Back Deck especially fitting. \n\n\n\nSince first launching in 2020\, the Back Deck Concert Series has evolved into one of New Jersey’s most distinctive and respected outdoor music destinations by creating an environment centered around intimacy\, artistry\, atmosphere\, and emotional connection. What initially emerged as an innovative outdoor performance concept quickly transformed into a full-fledged cultural institution that has now hosted more than 72 performances\, welcomed over 11\,000 attendees\, and become one of the defining summer arts experiences in the state. \n\n\n\nUnlike traditional concert venues built around formality and distance\, the Back Deck creates an atmosphere that feels immersive and communal from the moment audiences arrive. \n\n\n\nGuests are encouraged to bring their own chairs\, refreshments\, and picnic-style setups while gathering beneath the open summer sky to experience world-class performances in one of the region’s most unique artistic environments. Over time\, the elevated deck became far more than simply a stage for performances. It became a destination for audiences seeking experiences that feel emotionally present\, culturally sophisticated\, and genuinely memorable. \n\n\n\nFor jazz and vocal music especially\, the environment creates something uniquely powerful. \n\n\n\nJazz thrives in intimacy. The best vocal performances depend on subtle emotional communication\, nuanced phrasing\, spontaneous interaction\, and atmosphere that allows audiences to fully absorb the emotional texture of the music. Large venues often dilute that connection. The Back Deck enhances it. Every performance feels closer\, warmer\, and more emotionally immediate because audiences remain physically and emotionally connected to the artists throughout the evening. \n\n\n\nAlexis Morrast’s vocal style seems almost tailor-made for that kind of environment. \n\n\n\nHer voice carries remarkable versatility while remaining grounded in emotional clarity. Gospel influence shapes her delivery with spiritual sincerity and soulful depth\, while her jazz phrasing demonstrates sophistication well beyond her years. She can glide effortlessly through standards with classic elegance before shifting into emotionally powerful interpretations filled with warmth and vulnerability. \n\n\n\nThat combination reflects a broader resurgence happening within contemporary jazz itself. \n\n\n\nIncreasingly\, younger audiences are rediscovering jazz not through rigid academic presentation\, but through artists capable of reconnecting the music to its emotional and cultural roots. Jazz historically existed as living\, emotionally direct music deeply connected to storytelling\, spirituality\, improvisation\, struggle\, joy\, and human connection. Alexis Morrast belongs to a generation of artists helping restore that emotional immediacy to modern audiences. \n\n\n\nImportantly\, she accomplishes this without sounding nostalgic or trapped by tradition. \n\n\n\nHer performances honor classic vocal lineage while remaining contemporary\, vibrant\, and emotionally accessible. She understands the timeless qualities of jazz phrasing while allowing her own personality and generational perspective to remain fully present. That balance gives her performances unusual freshness. Longtime jazz fans hear sophistication and discipline. Younger audiences hear honesty\, warmth\, and emotional relatability. \n\n\n\nThat broad appeal helps explain why Morrast’s profile continues rising so rapidly. \n\n\n\nAt a moment when much of the entertainment world feels increasingly dominated by digital noise\, overproduction\, and disposable trends\, audiences continue responding powerfully to performers capable of creating genuine emotional presence. Alexis Morrast’s performances feel human in the deepest sense of the word. They slow audiences down. They create stillness. They encourage listening rather than distraction. \n\n\n\nThat emotional quality aligns perfectly with the broader identity the Back Deck series has cultivated over the past several years. \n\n\n\nThe series has consistently distinguished itself not simply through artist bookings\, but through atmosphere and intentionality. Every performance feels carefully curated to create emotional immersion rather than passive entertainment. Whether presenting internationally acclaimed chamber ensembles\, legendary jazz artists\, emerging vocalists\, or adventurous contemporary performers\, the Back Deck consistently prioritizes artistry capable of creating genuine audience connection. \n\n\n\nSupport from organizations including Gary’s Wine & Marketplace and the Morris County Tourism Bureau has helped strengthen the series’ role as one of New Jersey’s most important cultural destinations\, while leadership support from Will and Mary Leland and founding donor F. Gary Knapp continues helping attract exceptional artists from across the national music landscape. \n\n\n\nFor New Jersey audiences\, the July 2 Alexis Morrast performance represents an opportunity to experience an artist at precisely the moment her national profile appears poised for major expansion. \n\n\n\nHistorically\, some of the most memorable live music experiences occur before artists fully cross into mainstream recognition — when audiences can still experience extraordinary talent within intimate environments where emotional connection remains central to the performance itself. The Back Deck has increasingly become one of the rare places where those moments continue happening organically. \n\n\n\nUnder the open summer night sky\, surrounded by one of New Jersey’s most sophisticated outdoor arts audiences\, Alexis Morrast will bring a voice filled with soul\, elegance\, gospel fire\, jazz intelligence\, and emotional honesty to a venue perfectly designed for exactly that kind of musical experience. \n\n\n\nIn an era increasingly dominated by distraction and superficial entertainment\, evenings like this continue reminding audiences why live music still matters at its highest level. \n\n\n\nIt creates intimacy. \n\n\n\nIt creates atmosphere. \n\n\n\nIt creates emotional memory. \n\n\n\nAnd when an extraordinary young artist steps into her moment surrounded by listeners fully ready to hear her\, the result becomes far more than a concert. \n\n\n\nIt becomes the kind of night audiences remember long after summer disappears.
URL:https://explorenewjersey.org/event/alexis-morrast/
LOCATION:New Jersey
CATEGORIES:Concerts,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://explorenewjersey.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/b04d5f21-ad18-4c1b-81df-c5ff95903b40.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Morris Museum":MAILTO:info@morrismuseum.org
END:VEVENT
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260702T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260718T233000
DTSTAMP:20260630T105318Z
CREATED:20260630T105316Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260630T105318Z
UID:98190-1783020600-1784417400@explorenewjersey.org
SUMMARY:The 39 Steps
DESCRIPTION:Four Actors\, 150 Characters\, and a Plane Crash on a Black-Box Stage: Princeton Summer Theater Stages “The 39 Steps” \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe technical challenge embedded in Patrick Barlow’s stage adaptation of The 39 Steps is\, on paper\, close to absurd: take Alfred Hitchcock’s sprawling 1935 spy thriller — a film built around train chases across the Scottish Highlands\, a manhunt spanning multiple cities\, and a cast of dozens of characters — and stage it with exactly four actors\, none of whom leave the stage for long enough to suggest the production has any budget for understudies or scene changes in the conventional sense. Princeton Summer Theater opens that production on July 2\, running Thursdays through Sundays through July 18 at the Hamilton Murray Theater on the Princeton University campus\, and the company’s track record over more than five decades of summer programming suggests they understand exactly what makes this particular theatrical magic trick work. \n\n\n\nThe production is the second mainstage offering in Princeton Summer Theater’s 56th season\, following the company’s June run of Neil Simon’s Barefoot in the Park and preceding a July 23 production of Sam Shepard’s True West that closes the company’s main stage programming for the summer. Evening performances run Thursday through Saturday at 7:30 p.m.\, with Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. — a four-show-per-week rotation across the production’s three-week run\, July 2 through July 18\, with specific performance dates of July 2-5\, July 9-12\, and July 16-18. \n\n\n\nWhat The 39 Steps Actually Is\n\n\n\nPatrick Barlow’s adaptation\, which won two Tony Awards and two Drama Desk Awards during its Broadway run\, takes John Buchan’s 1915 spy novel and Alfred Hitchcock’s celebrated 1935 film adaptation and compresses them into a two-hour stage farce that functions simultaneously as a loving homage to classic Hitchcock suspense and as a deliberate parody of the theatrical conventions that period mystery thrillers depend on. The plot follows Richard Hannay\, an ordinary man whose unremarkable life is upended when a mysterious woman is murdered in his London flat\, leaving him the prime suspect in her death and the unwitting custodian of a dangerous secret involving an international spy ring. Hannay flees north toward Scotland\, encountering an escalating series of dangers\, disguises\, and unlikely allies and adversaries as he attempts to clear his name and unravel the conspiracy at the center of the plot. \n\n\n\nThe genius of Barlow’s theatrical adaptation lies not in faithfully recreating the cinematic scope of Hitchcock’s film but in openly acknowledging the impossibility of doing so and turning that impossibility into the production’s central comedic engine. Where the film uses the full resources of 1930s British cinema to depict train chases across the Highlands\, biplane pursuits over open countryside\, and crowd scenes in London theaters\, the stage production accomplishes the same narrative beats using minimal set pieces\, deliberately visible theatrical artifice\, and a small ensemble of performers who must physically transform between characters in full view of the audience. A description that mixes “a Hitchcock masterpiece with a juicy spy novel\, add a dash of Monty Python” captures the production’s tonal blend accurately: this is suspense theater that is fully aware of its own absurdity and that invites the audience to delight in watching the mechanics of theatrical illusion rather than concealing them. \n\n\n\nThe Four-Actor Structure That Makes It Work\n\n\n\nPrinceton Summer Theater’s production features Jacob Schorsch as Richard Hannay — the production’s sole actor playing a single character throughout\, anchoring the frantic transformations happening around him — alongside Shaelin McKenna\, who takes on the principal female roles of Annabella\, Margaret\, and Pamela\, and Joseph McLean and Jordan Rashdan\, credited as Clown 1 and Clown 2\, who between them portray the remaining roster of more than 150 characters that populate Buchan’s and Hitchcock’s narrative. \n\n\n\nThe character count is not exaggeration for marketing purposes. The structural demand of Barlow’s script requires McLean and Rashdan to embody an enormous range of supporting roles — policemen\, conspirators\, hotel proprietors\, train passengers\, Scottish farmers\, London theatrical performers\, and dozens of others — through the kind of instantaneous costume and characterization shifts that depend entirely on quick-change choreography\, vocal and physical versatility\, and split-second timing between the performers and the production’s backstage crew. This structural constraint is what gives the production its distinctive energy: rather than concealing the labor of theatrical transformation behind the curtain\, The 39 Steps puts that labor on display as the central spectacle of the evening. Audiences are not simply watching a story unfold — they are watching two performers execute an extraordinary feat of theatrical athleticism in real time\, swapping hats\, coats\, and accents with a speed that becomes\, in itself\, one of the production’s primary comedic and technical achievements. \n\n\n\nThis kind of multi-role demand is genuinely difficult to execute well\, and it places significant pressure on the production’s pacing and stage management. A transition that takes a beat too long breaks the comedic momentum the entire show depends on; a transition executed with precision becomes one of the most purely enjoyable elements of live theatrical craft an audience can witness. Princeton Summer Theater’s track record of training young theater professionals across every discipline of production — performance\, direction\, stage management\, design — gives the company’s productions a level of technical rigor that this particular script rewards heavily. \n\n\n\nA Director With a Specific Pedigree for This Material\n\n\n\nThe production is directed by Erik Bloomquist\, an award-winning New England stage and film director whose background gives him a particular and well-matched set of credentials for material built around tight comedic timing and suspense pacing. Bloomquist is a two-time Emmy Award winner\, having won for Outstanding Director and Outstanding Writer for his nationally syndicated PBS mystery-comedy television series The Cobblestone Corridor — credentials that place him squarely within the genre territory The 39 Steps occupies\, blending mystery plotting with comedic execution in a format that depends on disciplined pacing rather than indulgent scene work. \n\n\n\nBloomquist’s stage credits include productions at Ivoryton Playhouse\, Ozark Actors Theatre\, Priscilla Beach Theatre\, and Trinity College\, while his film credits include Founders Day\, She Came from the Woods\, and Long Lost — a filmography weighted toward suspense and genre filmmaking that gives him direct professional experience with exactly the kind of tonal balance The 39 Steps requires: genuine tension and stakes delivered with a wink\, never losing narrative momentum even as the production acknowledges its own theatrical artifice. A director whose professional television work specifically rewards tight cues and cinematic pacing over long\, drawn-out theatrical pauses is\, for a script built around relentless forward motion and rapid-fire character transformation\, close to an ideal match. \n\n\n\nThe Venue: An Intimate Black-Box Alternative to the Outdoor Festival Circuit\n\n\n\nPrinceton Summer Theater stages all of its productions at the Hamilton Murray Theater\, also known as Theatre Intime\, located inside Murray-Dodge Hall on the Princeton University campus. The venue’s character is central to understanding what this production will actually feel like to attend. Unlike the large-scale outdoor festival tent productions that define much of central New Jersey’s summer performing arts calendar\, Hamilton Murray Theater is a small\, indoor\, air-conditioned space — the kind of intimate black-box-adjacent environment where audiences sit close enough to performers that vocal nuance\, physical comedy\, and the small technical details of quick-change craft register clearly without amplification or the acoustic compromises that outdoor tent venues introduce. \n\n\n\nFor a production built specifically around the visible mechanics of theatrical transformation — the audience needs to actually see McLean and Rashdan swap a hat and a coat in three seconds to register the joke — the intimacy of the venue is not incidental. It is structurally necessary to the production’s comedic and technical effect in a way that a large outdoor amphitheater or festival tent could not replicate. The historic character of Hamilton Murray Theater\, a building with its own substantial history within Princeton’s campus theatrical tradition\, adds a further dimension of atmosphere appropriate to material steeped in the visual and tonal conventions of 1930s British mystery theater. \n\n\n\nPrinceton Summer Theater’s Place in the American Theatrical Pipeline\n\n\n\nFounded by a group of Princeton University students in 1968\, Princeton Summer Theater has operated continuously for more than five decades as an institution explicitly dedicated to training the next generation of theatrical professionals — offering young artists\, including current Princeton students and recent graduates from Princeton and other institutions\, the opportunity to develop expertise across every dimension of theatrical production\, from performance and direction to stage management\, design\, and company administration. The organization’s alumni roster includes Tony Award-winning actress Bebe Neuwirth\, Broadway and television writer Winnie Holzman\, and the late actor William Hootkins\, whose film career included roles in the original Star Wars trilogy and Batman — a roster that reflects the organization’s genuine track record of launching durable professional careers across multiple branches of the entertainment industry. \n\n\n\nThe 2026 season’s leadership reflects that ongoing mission directly. Executive Director Orion Lopez-Ramirez\, returning for his second year in the role\, graduated this spring from Princeton University with a degree in Public and International Affairs and minors in Urban Studies and Theatre\, bringing both administrative and performance experience to the organization’s operational leadership. Artistic Director Lucy Shea\, an English major from the Class of 2027 pursuing minors in theater and teacher preparation\, has described the 2026 season’s programming as deliberately structured to move audiences between registers — from the romantic comedy of Barefoot in the Park through the mystery and wit of The 39 Steps to the family reckoning at the center of True West — a season Shea has characterized as bringing together a youthful spark and a mature sensibility across its four productions. \n\n\n\nWhat to Expect and How to Attend\n\n\n\nThe production carries a recommended age guidance of 11 and older\, with the company noting that the show includes stage haze\, gunshot sound effects\, and content of a suggestive nature consistent with its noir source material. The fast-paced\, multi-role theatrical format is\, by design\, constructed to prevent the kind of slow\, static pacing that can sometimes characterize traditional regional theater drama — the production’s entire structural premise depends on relentless forward momentum\, and audiences attending should expect a brisk\, high-energy two hours rather than a contemplative evening. \n\n\n\nEvening tickets for performances at 7:30 p.m. and matinee tickets for the 2:00 p.m. performances are available for purchase online through Princeton Summer Theater’s ticketing partner. Opening night\, July 2nd\, includes an additional program at the Princeton Public Library — Princeton Summer Theater: Live at the Library — a moderated conversation with the production’s actors and director discussing the behind-the-scenes process of mounting the show\, scheduled for 5:30 p.m. ahead of that evening’s performance. \n\n\n\nFor audiences in central New Jersey looking for a summer theatrical experience distinct from the large-scale outdoor festival programming that defines much of the region’s warm-weather arts calendar\, Princeton Summer Theater’s production of The 39 Steps offers something genuinely different: an intimate\, air-conditioned\, tightly paced evening of theatrical craft\, built around a script whose entire reason for existing is to demonstrate what four skilled performers and a disciplined director can accomplish with almost nothing but timing\, talent\, and a closet full of hats.
URL:https://explorenewjersey.org/event/the-39-steps-2/
LOCATION:Princeton Summer Theater\, Hamilton Murray Theater\, Princeton University\, Princeton\, New Jersey\, 08544\, United States
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ORGANIZER;CN="Princeton Summer Theater":MAILTO:princetonsummertheater@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
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