Gilbert Theater brings “Little Shop of Horrors” to stage

The Gilbert Theater is bringing another campy cult classic to the stage with its upcoming Little Shop of Horrors production. Opening night is Friday, May 16, and runs until Sunday, June 1st. Theatergoers can catch a show on Friday nights at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets can be purchased at the box office located at 116 Green Street, 2nd Floor, or online at https://ci.ovationtix.com/36002/production/1206179.

“Prepare for a blooming good time… with a bite!” with the cast of Little Shop of Horrors. While Rick Moranis, Ellen Greene, and Vincent Gardenia brought the characters of Seymour, Audrey, and Mr. Mushnik to a broader audience, the original low-budget, dark comedy, directed by Roger Corman in 1960, is the inspiration for it all. In 1982, two of Disney’s musical mavens, Howard Ashman and Alan Menken, wrote a musical adaptation that would give the cult movie of decades past a new life on the stages of Broadway.

Southern Pines native, professional actor, and Gilbert alum, Bill Saunders, is directing the musical hit and has worked tirelessly to bring the stage to life for this show, which has proven to be a massive undertaking, but is worth every minute when the vision is realized on stage for audiences. Saunders is well-versed in the history of both films and the final transition onto the stage, making him the perfect fit for the role.

“…Roger Corman apparently made the film on a bet he could do it for under $10,000. So they did it over the course of a weekend on the set of a film that had finished filming, and it’s terrible. But it’s famous because it starred Jack Nicholson in one of his earliest speaking roles as the masochist who goes to the dentist and wants to be tortured… It’s a parody [the musical stage adaptation] of the 1950s style melodrama. Audrey is supposed to be kind of a Billie Dawn from Born Yesterday, and it has become one of the archetypes of theater. We are having a blast with doing the show. It makes fun of all the Motown songs and that kind of thing,” he eagerly explained…

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