Sticky 552 Beauty Bar, 249 5th Avenue, Brooklyn, 11215 Thursday, April 2, 7:30 pm $10 advance, $15 at the door, via www.stickyseries.bpt.me It’s the last one of our mini season, so we hope you make it out!
All photos by Mike Olivieri.
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Eliel and Tayvon taking the show in hand.
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Eliel, Sticky 552’s darling m.c.
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Lindsay Torrey and Cate Bottiglione in Liam Kuhn’s Kissing Weird, directed by Ali Ayala.
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When a woman ends up single after a long relationship (Cate), her friend (Lindsay) has loads of ideas on how she can ramp up her love life.
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Cate Bottiglione and Lindsay Torrey
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Tayvon the bartender instructing Michele the pretend bartender on how to pretend to tend bar.
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KL Thomas and her friend and David Marcus
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Ali Ayala & Eve Udesky in Libby Emmons’ Soft Little Song Like Doves, directed by Eliel Lucero
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There’s a man in Eve’s apartment.
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And she doesn’t know how he got there.
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Lindsay Torrey and Cate Bottiglione back stage.
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Ali is a tad worried about this man in Eve’s apartment.
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But Eve is starting to think
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she might like him to stay.
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Ali Ayala, James Pravasilis & Tricia Fukuhara in Anthony Noack’s Apple Martini, directed by Michele Travis
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Ali plays the bartender, James plays an ESL tutor.
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They used to go out.
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Ali knows his secrets, his habits.
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She knows he’s trying to date his Japanese student, played by Tricia.
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To impress her, he orders her an apple martini.
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Which the bartender begrudgingly makes, although not without flair.
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He thinks he’s got this under control, until it turns out that his ex has learned Japanese.
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Amina Henry and Stephanie Shipp in Judith Leora’s “Where We Ended Up,” directed my Michele Travis
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Joel Stigliano & Eliel Lucero round out of the cast.
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Playing co-workers who are stuck having a drink together for a going away party.
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The drinks are awkward, workplace issues surface.
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And all of us, who work in offices, felt that sinking feeling of spending virtualy all our time with people we would never choose.
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Ali and Michele running the show.
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Ari Vigoda in J. Michael Grey’s “Morning of Truth,” directed by Ali Ayal
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Tricia Fukuhara plays an emerging hipster rock star. Jacob Saxton is a friend to each.
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She played a gig last night.
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She got so drunk she had to sleep in her car. But she was good, right?
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About her talents there is some disagreement.
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Though no one wants to spit it out.
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Is it honesty or deceit
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that wins her heart?