Payomet's 2006 season

PAYOMET'S 2006 SEASON

David Corn returns to the Payomet Tent to do what he does best: dig below the surface and lay out the dirt on the American political scene.
-- Sue Harrison, The Provincetown Banner

Salvatore Del Deo advises young painters to stop looking for galleries, just paint.
-- Rebecca M. Alvin, The Cape Codder

Payomet has moved…it’s picked up its tent, in fact brandspanking new. Thirty thousand dollars of white majesty sitting atop the Highlands Center at the Cape Cod National Seashore…The political satirist Barry Crimmins’ heartwrenching take on the state of our country, was quick-witted and so terribly poignant.
-- Michael Persson, Provincetown Magazine

Love Letters a testament to fine acting…It was only on for one evening, but a very special evening it was...Beverly Bentley and Guy Strauss, both accomplished professional actors, are flawless…as well as the fine Director— Natalie Ross Miller.
-- Judith Shaw Beardsley, The Cape Cod Times

Sebastian Junger explores at the Payomet Tent A Death in Belmont which taught the journalist something about impartiality.
-- Ann Wood, The Provincetown Banner

This Tempest stirs up a storm. Perfectly in sync with the rugged Outer Cape setting, intensifying the juice of Shakespeare’s text. Tyrus Lemerande and Amy McLaughlin shift shapes and moods with barely a break, sustained by youth, energy and ability to balance Shakespeare’s full throttle physical comedy with the play’s more romantic reflective moments.
-- Susan Rand Brown, The Provincetown Banner

The Shakespearean Jukebox is instantly appealing to people of all ages and levels of familiarity with Shakespeare…it’s a fantastic way to hook people into Shakespeare, especially children. The Lemerandes bend over backward to involve the audience.
-- Diana Kenney, The Cape Cod Times

Beyond the Horizon is worth seeing. Four C’s Theater and Payomet Performing Arts are to be commended for this undertaking…
-- Gwen Friss, The Cape Cod Times