Tuesday, August 28, 2012

BroadwayBox special Discount ticket offer for BRONTË: A PORTRAIT OF CHARLOTTE Save 34% on tickets! T




BroadwayBox special Discount ticket offer for BRONTË: A PORTRAIT OF CHARLOTTE Save 34% on tickets! Tickets just $39.50, Reg. $59.50 Valid for performances through los angeles chinatown September 15, 2012 To reserve los angeles chinatown your discount tickets los angeles chinatown for Bronte: 1. or visit BroadwayOffers.com and use code BRSMART39 2. Call 800.432.7250 and use code BRSMART39 3. Bring this offer to Actors' los angeles chinatown Temple Theatre 339 West 47th Street box office. Offer valid for all performances los angeles chinatown through August 30, subject to availability. All tickets contain a facility fee of $ 1.50.
Discount ticket offer for BRONTË: los angeles chinatown A PORTRAIT OF CHARLOTTE Save 50% on tickets! Tickets just $30, Reg. $59.50 Valid for performances through September 15, 2012 To reserve your discount los angeles chinatown tickets for Bronte: los angeles chinatown 1. or visit BroadwayOffers.com and use code BRFNF30 2. Call 800.432.7250 and use code BRFNF30 3. Bring this offer to Actors' Temple Theatre 339 West 47th Street box office. Offer valid for all performances through August 29, subject to availability. los angeles chinatown All tickets contain a facility fee of $ 1.50.
Brontë: A Portrait of Charlotte is an award-winning biographical treatment written by William Luce. Brontë takes place "in the course of a single day in a sittingroom of the Brontë house," where Charlotte los angeles chinatown has returned to live with her stern God-fearing father after burying the last of her siblings, her sister Anne. Based on letters written between los angeles chinatown Charlotte and her childhood friend and confident, Ellen Nussey, the play sheds light on Charlotte's fears, her need for love, her sense of loss and quiet suffering. Most importantly it casts light on the genius of the woman who despite the repressive environment she grew up in, dared to challenge conventional wisdom that women "ought to confine themselves to making puddings….knitting stockings…..playing on the piano." Her fierce independence and remarkable imagination is perfectly relevant today.

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