This website intended to for family and friends only. It is a collection of the plays that Alex and Emma have performed while at the Georgetown Palace, Middle school or High school
Georgetown Palace Theater - July 28th 2018
This engaging adventure captures the hearts of both young and old with spirited verse and humor galore! Robin Hood is leading a merry life with his followers in Sherwood Forest. Unfortunately, the evil Prince John has taken the place of King Richard the Lion-Hearted, who has gone to the Holy Land on a crusade. With King Richard absent, Prince John is waging a personal war against Robin Hood.
Meanwhile, Lady Merle of Cornwall hopes to make John more acceptable to the people of England by forcing Maid Marian, Robin’s childhood sweetheart, to marry the wicked prince. Only the brave and shrewd Robin Hood can secure Nottingham for the safe return of the king. Your audiences will be thrilled when Robin splits the arrow of a famed archer in two, winning a golden prize! This is family entertainment at its utmost, filled with delightful songs.
https://www.pioneerdrama.com/SearchDetail.asp?PC=HIHOROBINH
Georgetown Palace Theater - March 17, 2018
Sleeping Beauty (French: La belle au bois dormant, or The Beauty in the Sleeping Forest; German: Dornröschen, or Little Briar Rose), also titled in English as The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods, is a fairy tale about a princess cursed by an evil fairy to sleep for a hundred years before being awakened by a handsome prince. A good fairy, knowing the princess would be frightened if alone when she wakes, uses her wand to put every living person and animal in the palace and forest asleep, to waken when the princess does.[1]
The earliest known version of the tale is found in the narrative Perceforest, written between 1330 and 1344.[2] Another was the Catalan poem Frayre de Joy e Sor de Paser.[3] Giambattista Basile published another in his collection titled The Pentamerone, published posthumously in 1634[4] and adapted by Charles Perrault in Histoires ou contes du temps passé in 1697. The version collected and printed by the Brothers Grimm was one orally transmitted from the Perrault.[5]
The Aarne-Thompson classification system for fairy tales lists Sleeping Beauty as a Type 410: it includes a princess who is magically forced into sleep and later woken, reversing the magic.[6] The fairy tale has been adapted countless times throughout history and retold by modern storytellers across a variety of media.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleeping_Beauty
Georgetown Palace Theater - 2018
Who or what is that shadowy figure playing the piano in the school music room after dark? Several students and Deputy Barney set out to solve this musical mystery with surprising results.