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7/22/2010 - Geva extends the run of Girls Night! News and Press Releases
Rochester’s biggest party of the summer will continue through the 13th of August. Due to popular demand, Geva Theatre Center announces ten additional performances of Girls Night The Musical.
7/21/2010 - Girls Night is definitely one for the ladies! Review
But the less-than-traditional audience that filled the theater was merely a reflection of the show on stage. As the name suggests, "Girls Night" is definitely one for the ladies, although there were a handful of brave men in the crowd on opening night. ("Suckers!" the welcoming voice-over playfully taunted.) On the surface "Girls Night" appears to be a glorified bachelorette party onstage, but at its core, the show is a relatively rousing two-hour celebration of girl power.
7/15/2010 - Girls Night: The Musical on stage at Geva Review
Call your girlfriends and head to Geva Theatre – It's "Girl's Night Out". That's right. Girls Night: The Musical is now on stage and the party starts the minute the lights come up on stage. The show will have you dancing in your seat.
7/12/2010 - Summer Gets Hotter at Geva! News and Press Releases
As we are currently experiencing a heatwave in Rochester, I thought it only apropos to talk about the heatwave happening in our Mainstage, namely Girls Night the Musical. Think of it as “Sex in the City” meets “Desperate Housewives” with a little Mamma Mia thrown in for good measure.
6/29/2010 - Girls Night: The Musical, Reviewed by Ron Gross Review
BOTTOM LINE: Our highest recommendation! I’ve never seen an audience enjoy a musical more than at this touching and hilarious romp.
6/25/2010 - 'Girl Talk' follows in the fun footsteps of 'Girls Night' News and Press Releases
"Sonya Carter abandoned a 12-year corporate career with American Express to hit the boards with "Girls Night: The Musical," a tale of friends out for a bit of fun one evening. It played in Wilmington twice, and now Carter will be back Tuesday and Wednesday in another production by the same company, the world premiere of "Girl Talk: The Musical." It's more than girls just wanting to have fun, says Carter. "Every night is a new experience. This show is so different in that it really engages the audience. "
6/25/2010 - A night of 'Girl Talk' News and Press Releases
"Tim Flaherty, the president of Entertainment Events Inc., and Louise Roche, a British playwright, have discovered a theatrical goldmine."
6/25/2010 - 'Girl Talk' makes premiere at Dupont Theater News and Press Releases
"Sonya Carter knows there’s no business like show business. “Growing up, I was that kid who always made everybody sit down and watch me dance and sing,” she said over the phone. But, Carter’s road to a career on the stage came a little later in life."
4/28/2010 - "Girls" is a Bunch of Fun Review
From The Philadelphia Inquirer, By Toby Zinman: The "girls" who came to see Girls Night were every age, shape, size, race, and color. There were even a few guys. A group of 11 high school teachers was sitting next to me. Everybody seemed to have the same good time. The show's unpretentious fun and the talented, unembarrassable women on stage had all of the audience on their feet, clapping, singing, and dancing in the aisles.
4/9/2010 - Theater Review: ‘Girls Night’ at the Temple Theater in Des Moines Review
SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER The cast of “Girls Night: The Musical” tell the story of five longtime friends, one of whom is a ghost, and belt out 14 classic songs. (Special to the Register)
2/17/2010 - 'Til Death: Late Night Catechism' gives the audience top billing Review
The line on the accompanying pop-out box says “Play review,” but “’Til Death Do Us Part: Late Nite Catechism 3” is more an event. The audience is the show.
7/27/2009 - GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL at the Downstairs Cabaret at Sofia's Review
When the whole audience joins in to chant "I Will Survive," you realize that "Girls Night: The Musical" is not just a silly bachelorette-flavored night on the town. It's a rally. It involves the audience deeply and sincerely in a way that the current Broadway production of "Hair," in its earnestness, can only envy.
9/22/2008 - Get Ready for a Fun "Girls Night" Out Review
The opening night of "Girls Night: The Musical" at Shea's Smith Theatre was an estrogen extravaganza. Under a spinning disco ball, there was raucous laughter, singing and dancing - and that was just the audience.
12/4/2007 - Wimple while you work: Sister leads "Christmas Catechism" Review
So, a nun walks into a theater. No, really. It's not a joke. Not yet.
10/31/2007 - Paramount musical celebrates female friendships News and Press Releases
There's nothing quite so entertaining as watching girls who just want to have fun. They can be catty and cynical, silly or serious, weepy or wistful. And they've evene been known to get a bit raunchy every now and then - usually after midnight and only with the most innocent of intentions.
10/25/2007 - Sister rules, with sharp humor and nostalgia Review
"Late Nite Catechism" at the Olney Theatre Center for the Arts through Nov. 11, takes a hilarious and nostalgic look at parochial school education 40-some years ago, and incorporates many of the changes in the church since then, but it is never unkind or cynical about either the old or the new ways.
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GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL To Have It's Off-Broadway Premiere At the Downstairs Cabaret Theatre

Thursday, April 02, 2009


Entertainment Events Productions will present the Off-Broadway Premiere of the smash UK hit, GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL, written by Louise Roche and directed by Jack Randle.  Performances will begin June 2nd, for an Opening Night on June 4th at the Downstairs Cabaret Theatre at Sofia's (227 West 46th Street, next to the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre).  Featured in the cast are Sonya Carter, Renee Colvert, Laurie Gardner, Justine Hall and Carly Sakolove.  This limited engagement runs through July 26th.

Girls Night: The Musical has earned rave reviews playing packed houses throughout the United Kingdom since 2003.  It premiered in the US in May 2007 and has toured across the country since then.  It has been described as "'Desperate Housewives' meets Mamma Mia!" (Applause Magazine), "a boisterous, bust-out, bawdy musical revue" (Wisconsin State Journal), "an infectious, exhilarating sense of intoxication!" (Hollywood Reporter) and "As funny and outrageous as Sex in the City!" (The Advocate).

Hilarious and touching, Girls Night: The Musical follows five friends in their 30s and 40s during a wild and outrageous girls night out at a karaoke bar.  Friends since their teens, they have all had their fair share of heartache and tragedy, joy and success.  Among the characters are Carol the party girl, blunt Anita who tells it like it is, Liza with her marital (and eating) issues, boring Kate the designated driver and Sharon, the not-so-angelic angel who just couldn't resist tagging along.  Together, they reminisce about their younger days, celebrate their current lives and look to the future, all the while belting out an array of classic anthems such as "It's Raining Men," "I Will Survive," "Lady Marmalade," "Man, I Feel Like a Woman," and "Girls Just Want to Have Fun."

The Off-Broadway premiere marks the latest chapter in Girls Night's meteoric rise from an idea in a Milton Keynes' mom's kitchen, through a community production, medium scale tour and culminating in 2006 in an extensive National Tour starring Lucy Speed ("EastEnders") and Gwyneth Strong ("Only Fools and Horses").  The story behind Girls Night is an inspiration to any writer still waiting for their big break.  One night, four years ago, Louise Roche, a mother of three children under the age of five, went out with a group of friends to see a musical.  She looked around the theater, saw that the audience was mostly women and thought "I could do this...I could write a show that lots of women would enjoy watching."  So she did.  She went home and wrote her first play, Girls Night, a musical comedy about a group of friends who relive the past on a wild night out at a karaoke club!  She put it on with some of her friends at the local community theatre.  Five old friends from school did the acting.  She got a woman that she met at her daughter's playgroup to design the posters and the set.  Her mom did the costumes and she dressed the auditorium up like a nightclub herself.  It sold out its entire run and gained legendary status in the area.  One audience member claimed that it made her laugh so hard her Tampax fell out!  Bolstered by this success, she hired the much larger Milton Keynes Theatre to mount a spectacular performance of Girls Night.  Not one to do things by halves, our heroic housewife put her money where her mouth was and ploughed her life savings of £10,000.00 into the show.  Every one of the 1400 seats in the auditorium sold and she made back just over £10,000.00.  Since then, Girls Night has gone from success to success.

Louise Roche has written and produced six plays: Girls Night (UK Tours 2003, 2004 and 2006), Bobby and Johnny (UK Tour 2005), Girls Behind (UK Tour 2005), Checkout Girls (Milton Keynes 2005), Lucky Balls (Milton Keynes 2002) and Milton Keynes The Musical (Milton Keynes 2002).  Her writing for television includes "Where the Heart Is" and "Doctors."  She also has a novel, Glutton for Punishment, published in paperback by Pan books.  Previously, she worked in television production as a researcher and producer of factual programs.  Credits include, "Where There's Life," "First Tuesday" and the drama documentary "Shoot to Kill."  Three more plays, True Love, Happy Christmas Shirley and Finding Daddy are in development.  Louise became co-director of Goodnights Entertainment in 2003.

Jack Randle studied Drama at Exeter University.  On graduating, he took acting roles with Leda Theatre, Nottingham; Theatre of Fact, Milton Keynes; New Victoria Theatre, Stoke; Theatre Alibi, Exeter; Forced Entertainment, Sheffield and M6 Theatre Company, Rochdale.  He also played Dylan in the UK tour of The Magic Roundabout for David Graham.  He more recently starred as Bobby D'Angelo in Bobby and Johnny (Milton Keynes, 2003).  Television has included "EastEnders," "Emmerdale," "Cracker," "Out of the Blue," "Hetty Wainthropp Investigates," and a series of commercials for Draught Bass.  His directing credits include Girls Night (UK Tours 2003, 2004, 2006), Bobby and Johnny (UK Tour 2005), Girls Behind (UK Tour 2005), Lucky Balls (2002) and Frankie's Game (1999).  He became co-director of Goodnights Entertainment in 2003.

Performances, which begin June 2nd, will be Tuesday at 7PM, Wednesday through Friday evenings at 8PM, Saturday at 5PM, and Sunday at 3PM.  Tickets for all performances will be $55 and may be purchased online at www.girlsnightthemusical.com or by phone at (212) 947-9300.

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