Coming up at Kechi Playhouse: Patsy Cline and big spiders
Pragmatism has always reigned high in Misty Maynard’s world, which is how she has kept her theater running for 44 years. It’s fueled by a budget smaller than that of some Kansan households and a wheelbarrow full of passion — hers and that of her (mostly) loyal audiences.
Granted, she lost a few of them following last summer’s construction season, which turned the neighborhood into a potential setting for a war movie and rendered her theater largely inaccessible: you had to park a block away and step over barriers to get to it.
And — as with theaters and entities everywhere involving public interactions — the catastrophic aftermath of the COVID era continues.
But Maynard has the spine of an English woman in the London Blitz, and she persists. Along with her further shrunken budget, she’s adapting to a delayed start in preparations after directing Wichita Community Theatre’s extraordinary production of “Medea,” which opened in April.
Her 44th season includes three royalty-free shows (free because she wrote them): “Noir Comedy” in July, “Office Party” in September, and the popular “IX’TICHA** Spider-God of the Amazon!!!” in October.
“All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten,” based on Robert Fulghum’s best-selling book, opens the season in June.
“The cast can be adapted by size and gender and age” based on actor availability in Wichita’s busy spring and summer theater season, Maynard said.
Her featured centerpiece, in August, is “Always…Patsy Cline.”
“I have wanted to do it for a long time, but I was sort of scared to try it; it is very expensive. But after COVID and the street construction, I wanted something that would bring more people back to the theater. Stephanie Hug is going to play Patsy Cline, and she is very excited about it.”
The Details
“All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten” will run June 5-28 at Kechi Playhouse, 100 E. Kechi Road in Kechi, Kansas.
Find more information about the upcoming season on the Kechi Playhouse Facebook page.
This story was first published by The SHOUT, a Wichita-based independent newsroom focused on artists living and working in Kansas.