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Cutting Hall Performing Arts Center
150 E. Wood Street
Palatine, IL 60067
Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays
March 14th through March 30th
(No shows on Easter Day-Sunday, March 23rd)
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847-202-5222
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Synopsis
Musical Comedy, 90 minutes
A program note says that the time of the action is
"an average day in the life of Charlie Brown." It really is just that,
a day made up of little moments picked from all the days of Charlie Brown, from
Valentine's Day to the baseball season, from wild optimism to utter despair, all
mixed in with the lives of his friends (both human and non-human) and strung
together on the string of a single day, from bright uncertain morning to hopeful
starlit evening.
It seems to start off all right. After some brief
comments on the nature of his character by his friends, Charlie Brown is swept
into their center by a rousing tribute of only slightly qualified praise, in the
song You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown. He is then left to his own musings
as he eats his lunch on the school playground, complicated unbearably by the
distant presence of his true love, the "little redheaded girl," who is
always just out of sight.
True love also seems to be the only unmanageable
element in Lucy's solid life, which we discover as we watch her try to bulldoze
her way through to her boyfriend's sensitive, six-year-old musician's heart, in Schroeder.
The little scenes then begin to accumulate, and we learn that Lucy's little
brother, Linus, is thoughtful about many things but fanatical when it comes to
the matter of his blanket; that Patty is sweet and utterly innocent; and that
Charlie Brown's dog spends much if not most of his time thinking of being
something else-a gorilla, a jungle cat, perhaps a handsome trophy or two-but
that mostly his life is a pleasant one-Snoopy.
The events continue to trickle on. Linus enjoys a
private time with his most favorite thing of all -My Blanket and Me, Lucy
generously bothers to inform him of her ambition-of-the-moment, to become a
queen with her won queendom, and then Charlie Brown lurches in for still another
bout with his own friendly enemy -The Kite.
Valentine's Day comes and goes with our hero
receiving not one single valentine, which brings him to seek the temporary
relief of Lucy's five-cent psychiatry booth-The Doctor Is In.
We then watch as four of our friends go through
their individual struggles with the homework assignment of writing a hundred
word essay of "Peter Rabbit" in The Book Report.
Act Two roars in with Snoopy lost in another world
atop his dog house. As a World War One flying ace he does not bring down the
infamous Red Baron in today's battle but we know that someday, someday he will.
The day continues. We learn of the chaotic events
of the Very Little League's Baseball Game as Charlie Brown writes the
news to his pen pal. Lucy is moved to conduct a personal survey to find out just
how crabby she really is, and all the group gathers for a misbegotten rehearsal
of a song they are to sing in assembly.
It is suppertime, and Snoopy once more discovers
what wild raptures just the mere presence of his full supper dish can send him
into. And then it is evening. The gathered friends sing a little about their
individual thoughts of happiness and then they go off, leaving Lucy to make a
very un-Lucy-like gesture: she tells Charlie Brown what a good man he is.
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