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Merrily We Roll Along
Sondheim's semi-autobiographical musical turns back the clock on friendship and the high price of success.
7
Roles
+ Ensemble
PG13
Rated
2
Acts
Full Synopsis

Act One

Franklin Shepard sits at a piano wearing a tuxedo. He is an accomplished pianist. As he stares into the distance, the company enters and a slide show plays, telling the story that is about to unfold about Frank and his friends Charley Kringas and Mary Flynn. The slide shows ends with an invitation to a party at Frank's house in Bel Air, California celebrating the new Hollywood movie he produced. The company reflects Frank's mindset ("Merrily We Roll Along").

We segue to the party where the most influential, and vapid, people in Hollywood praise Frank's success as a producer ("That Frank"). Meanwhile, Mary sits alone at the bar, obviously drunk. She is not in good shape; occasionally other guests approach her, but she summarily dismisses them with wry comments. Frank tries to appease Mary's obvious disappointment with him for selling out, while also encouraging his guests to have fun. Mary admonishes Frank for his estrangement from his son Frank, Jr. When a guest accidentally mentions Charley's Pulitzer Prize winning play, the party freezes. Charley is not to be mentioned in Frank's presence. Over the course of the party, we learn that Frank is cheating on his wife Gussie with the young star of his movie. Eventually, Mary blows up at Frank in front of everyone and storms out - she is finally out of his life, and the loss is unbearable. Gussie confronts Meg and Frank, and throws iodine in Meg's eyes. As everything falls apart around Frank, the company takes us back three years in time ("Transition 1").

An NBC Television Studio in New York City. Backstage during a news broadcast, we meet Charley, Frank's collaborator. Charley blames Mary for talking him into coming on this news program; Frank no longer seems interested in writing the musical they were working on. Frank is too focused on his money and Hollywood projects. Mary assures Charley that if he does this interview Frank will come back to their creative partnership, reminding him that their friendship is the cornerstone of all of their lives. He is convinced ("Old Friends - Like It Was"). Charley realizes Mary is still in love with Frank, as she has been for the past 20 years.

Just before the interview Charley discovers Frank has signed a three-picture deal meaning their work on their show will be postponed. Charley is furious. As they argue Frank reminds his collaborator he has a son to support and an ex-wife to whom he must pay alimony. Suddenly, in the midst of their argument, they are on the air. The interviewer asks how they work together and Charley bitterly answers by saying that Frank's business always gets in the way of their work ("Franklin Shepard, Inc."). Frank is furious and hurt that Charley has humiliated him on national television. Frank tells Charley he is dead to him. The two men actually come to blows as Mary attempts to intervene. Each goes his separate way and the company takes us back to 1968.

We are now in a luxurious New York apartment. Frank is on the phone as his nine-year old son, who has just arrived from Houston, runs in, followed by Mary and Charley. Frank has just returned from an extended vacation traveling first-class on an ocean liner. As they welcome him back, Frank gives Charley a present - the option agreement to turn their successful movie into a film. Charley is less than thrilled. He wants them to work on their passion projects. Frank wants to cash in on the Hollywood deal to adapt their musical to the screen. He needs the money to support his son, to maintain his life style, and to afford the payments on the alimony to his wife, Beth. Mary attempts to stop their argument by reminding them of the strength of their friendship ("Old Friends").

Gussie enters with her now husband Joe, the producer of their hit musical. Gussie is the star. For a few moments Frank and Gussie are left alone; it is revealed that they are in love. She announces she is going to leave Joe. Soon the others are back with glasses and a champagne bottle. Joe realizes Frank and Gussie are in love. She must hurry off to the theatre to make the curtain. Once Joe and Gussie leave, Charley levels with Frank advising him to get rid of Gussie and pleads with him to give up this phony life and get back to writing a new show together. Frank promises to meet Charley and Mary later at their favorite pub - despite the fact that Gussie has asked him to stay home and wait for her call.



Alone at the piano, Frank goes back and forth about what Charley has said to him ("Growing Up - Part 1"). Gussie reappears saying she's left Joe for good and that she and Frank belong together; she tells him that growing up is taking what you want ("Growing Up - Part 2"). Frank is at first reluctant and asks her not to discard her marriage so casually, but she persists and he gives in.

The company transitions us to a year earlier on the steps of a courthouse ("Transition 3"). Frank's wife, Beth, is divorcing him in a messy publicized trial. His friends urge him to get away, get some rest, and take a cruise. Beth enters and Frank tries to reason with her, but when he admits he slept with Gussie she tells him it's over, no matter how much she may still love him ("Not A Day Goes By"). Mary leads Frank's friends in telling him to put this all behind him; hopefully, hard times help you grow ("Now You Know"). Frank sees this logic and begins to revive and feel hopeful.

Act Two

Gussie strides back and forth across the empty stage. She analyzes the fact that she always falls for the wrong men. It becomes clear she's singing in Frank and Charley's Broadway show ("Act 2 - Opening").

The scene shifts to the stage door while the group waits outside. Beth urges Frank to do another show for Joe, for the money, while Mary encourages him to work on his own projects. Beth thinks this is easy for Mary to say since she just wrote a best-selling book. Suddenly, the group hears huge applause from inside the theatre. Joe joins them to confirm it's a hit ("It's a Hit"). Charley's wife, Evelyn, is suddenly taken with labor pains and rushes to the hospital. After the show ends, Beth and Charley leave to join Evelyn. Frank is left alone with Joe and Gussie to celebrate. Mary encourages Beth to stay with Frank, but she says she wouldn't want a man she can't trust.

The company takes us back to1962 ("Transition 4"). In Gussie and Joe's brownstone on Sutton Place, a huge party is taking place. Frank and Beth are guests. Beth bubbles over pointing out celebrities and politicos. Her gushing embarrasses Frank. Charley arrives. Gussie introduces them to her friends, the New York elite, who she mocks for their group mindset ("The Blob"). Gussie gets rid of Beth by spilling wine on her dress and then offering her a dress from Gussie's own closet. Joe and Gussie offer Frank the opportunity to write the score for her next show - he is disappointed as he and Charley had hoped Joe wanted to produce their show. Gussie reminds him that growing up is making hard choices and urges him to do it, saying it will make his career ("Growing Up").

Gussie announces that Charley and Frank will perform for the crowd. Charley is uneasy, but as he sings he gets encouraging glances from Beth and Mary because the song is going over well ("A Good Thing Going"). Enthusiastic applause erupts on the last note. Gussie urges them to do the song again. Charley is against it, Frank insists on a repeat and begins the number again. Their audience is distracted, no longer interested; they return to their gossip. Charley storms out and the other guests hardly notice as Frank, Mary and Beth follow.

The company takes us back to 1960 at the Downtown Club ("Transition 5"). Beth, Charley and Frank are performing their Greenwich Village nightclub act, a satirical name-dropping spoof of the Kennedy clan to an Irish jig ("Bobby And Jackie And Jack"). Gussie and Joe are in the audience. Frank introduces himself. Gussie, already a Broadway star, is going through a divorce from her second husband. Frank and Beth are soon to be married. Charley joins the table. Beth confesses to Frank she is not pregnant. He says he still wants to marry her. Then she announces she actually is, but just wanted to make sure he really wanted to marry her. Beth's parents offer Frank $2,000 to call off the wedding. The couple refuses. Beth's mother offers her her grandmother's ring. The parents embrace their daughter, and the ceremony begins. Beth professes her love for Frank in front of everyone, while Mary sits at a cocktail table with her own thoughts and unrequited love ("Not A Day Goes By - Act 2").

The company leads us to 1959 ("Transition 6"). Frank is at the piano. Charley is at a typewriter. A light comes up on Mary on the telephone with Frank. We see them all working in their separate spaces. They are trying to make it at their respective crafts: Mary writing a novel, Charley his plays, and Frank his music ("Opening Doors")

The stage develops into various scenes: an interview at an agent's office, a rehearsal hall, a subway station. Mary moves from one magazine job to another. Soon, Frank and Charley are auditioning for Joe who complains that their music isn't hummable enough. The team pools their resources and decides to write a cabaret revue to showcase their own work. They audition Beth and hire her. Beth, Frank, Charley, Mary and Beth's mother transition us back in time for one last moment ("Transition 7").

Finally, we are on the rooftop of a tenement on 110th Street in 1957. Frank excitedly tells Charley he wants to turn his play into a musical; he believes together they can create something very meaningful ("Our Time - Part 1"). Mary enters the roof and introduces herself then promptly leaves. Charley asks Frank if he wants go get married, and they agree that's a long way off ("Our Time - Part 2"). When Mary returns, she compliments Frank on his piano music. Mary's roommate Evelyn pops up for a minute, but runs away when she sees the boys. Charley and Mary with binoculars search the sky. They suddenly spot the Russian satellite darting overhead: Sputnik. In this moment, the three new friends believe that anything and everything is possible for them.

The company files on to witness the birth of a new era, as the three friends solidify their budding friendship ("Our Time - Part 3").

Franklin Shepard

His character ranges from an influential songwriter and film producer to an innocent, bright-eyed optimist in NYC. Talented and handsome but misled, tragic, and tormented.

Gender: male

Vocal range top: Bb4

Vocal range bottom: A2

Charley Kringas

A stubborn, intense man with average looks. He ranges from a successful lyricist and Frank's long-time friend to a bright-eyed optimist creating his own opportunities in NYC.

Gender: male

Vocal range top: G#4

Vocal range bottom: A#2

Mary Flynn

A middle-aged theatre critic. Her character arcs to the youthful, gorgeous 20-something living in NYC with best friend Frank. Sardonic, bitter, and witty.

Gender: female

Vocal range top: Gb5

Vocal range bottom: G3

Meg Kincaid

Starry-eyed starlet who is naive and ambitious. At the start of the show, she is Frank's newest fling.

Gender: female

Vocal range top: Gb5

Vocal range bottom: D4

Gussie Carnegie

The flamboyant, self-invented actress. Her character begins at the end of her relationship with Frank, but throughout the show we see her grow more and more helplessly in love with him. Greedy and seductive.

Gender: female

Vocal range top: C5

Vocal range bottom: G3

Joe Josephson

Big-talking Broadway producer and husband to Gussie. He later becomes pathetic and poor.

Gender: male

Vocal range top: F#4

Vocal range bottom: A2

Beth

A naive and insecure middle-American who is the mother of Frank's son. She arcs from a down-trodden housewife at her wits end to a hopeless romantic at the beginning of her engagement to the man of her dreams.

Gender: female

Vocal range top: G5

Vocal range bottom: A3

Ensemble

Party Guests; Artists; Students

Show History

Inspiration

Original director Harold Prince's wife, Judy, had been "nagging" him to do a musical about teenagers, when he recalled Merrily We Roll Along, the 1934 play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart on which the now likewise titled musical is based.

The musical's writers retained the basic structure and overall theme of the play but updated it to encompass the period from 1957 to 1976. Sondheim said that since the play was about friendships, he wrote the songs to be interconnected.

The story revolves around Franklin Shepard who, having once been a talented composer of Broadway musicals, has now abandoned his friends and his songwriting career to become a producer of Hollywood flicks. Like the play, the musical begins at the height of his Hollywood fame and moves backwards in time, showing snapshots of the most important moments in Frank's life that shaped the man that he is today. The musical utilizes a chorus that sings reprises of the title song to transition the scenes.

Productions

Merrily We Roll Along, based on the 1934 play of the same name by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, is a musical with a book by George Furth and lyrics and music by Stephen Sondheim. Directed by Harold Prince with choreography by Larry Fuller, the show began previews on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre on October 8, 1981, before officially opening on November 16, 1981. The musical ran for 44 previews and 16 performances.

In 1985, Sondheim's new collaborator James Lapine mounted a revised version at the La Jolla playhouse in California and Furth and Sondheim were again inspired to make the show work. This was followed by a mounting at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. directed by Douglas C. Wagner, which further affirmed the show's great potential. More productions -- including one at Harvard University personally overseen by Furth -- continued to fine-tune the script.

Then in 1994, Merrily We Roll Along was revived by The York Theatre Company, Off-Broadway with Sondheim and Furth. The production, directed by Susan H. Schulman, was such a smash that it sold out and had to be extended. This streamlined version is the one licensed by MTI.

The show finally received its West End premiere at London's Donmar Warehouse on December 11, 2000, in a production directed by Michael Grandage. It was seen again in the West End when Maria Friedman directed a revival of the musical at London's Menier Chocolate Factory, which opened on November 28, 2012, and transferred to the Harold Pinter Theatre in the West End on May 1, 2013. It has been stated that this production received more 5-star

Critical Reaction

"Glorious... Heartbreaking... The charms of the music are still abundantly evident... The cheers began with the first bars of the show s overture, the most infectious and conventionally stirring that Mr. Sondheim wrote." - New York Times

"The songs, and the mood and verve and expertise... in all these aspects, Merrily sings." Time

"A 'merry' experience - hugely witty, tunefully inventive and brightly entertaining& has the freshness of real-time thought and the sting of genuine feeling." - The Telegraph

"The songs are rich in melody... the lyrics are deftly sophisticated and witty, and there is brilliant use of musical themes." - Talkin Broadway

Show History

Inspiration

Original director Harold Prince's wife, Judy, had been "nagging" him to do a musical about teenagers, when he recalled Merrily We Roll Along, the 1934 play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart on which the now likewise titled musical is based.

The musical's writers retained the basic structure and overall theme of the play but updated it to encompass the period from 1957 to 1976. Sondheim said that since the play was about friendships, he wrote the songs to be interconnected.

The story revolves around Franklin Shepard who, having once been a talented composer of Broadway musicals, has now abandoned his friends and his songwriting career to become a producer of Hollywood flicks. Like the play, the musical begins at the height of his Hollywood fame and moves backwards in time, showing snapshots of the most important moments in Frank's life that shaped the man that he is today. The musical utilizes a chorus that sings reprises of the title song to transition the scenes.

Productions

Merrily We Roll Along, based on the 1934 play of the same name by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, is a musical with a book by George Furth and lyrics and music by Stephen Sondheim. Directed by Harold Prince with choreography by Larry Fuller, the show began previews on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre on October 8, 1981, before officially opening on November 16, 1981. The musical ran for 44 previews and 16 performances.

In 1985, Sondheim's new collaborator James Lapine mounted a revised version at the La Jolla playhouse in California and Furth and Sondheim were again inspired to make the show work. This was followed by a mounting at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. directed by Douglas C. Wagner, which further affirmed the show's great potential. More productions -- including one at Harvard University personally overseen by Furth -- continued to fine-tune the script.

Then in 1994, Merrily We Roll Along was revived by The York Theatre Company, Off-Broadway with Sondheim and Furth. The production, directed by Susan H. Schulman, was such a smash that it sold out and had to be extended. This streamlined version is the one licensed by MTI.

The show finally received its West End premiere at London's Donmar Warehouse on December 11, 2000, in a production directed by Michael Grandage. It was seen again in the West End when Maria Friedman directed a revival of the musical at London's Menier Chocolate Factory, which opened on November 28, 2012, and transferred to the Harold Pinter Theatre in the West End on May 1, 2013. It has been stated that this production received more 5-star

Critical Reaction

"Glorious... Heartbreaking... The charms of the music are still abundantly evident... The cheers began with the first bars of the show s overture, the most infectious and conventionally stirring that Mr. Sondheim wrote." - New York Times

"The songs, and the mood and verve and expertise... in all these aspects, Merrily sings." Time

"A 'merry' experience - hugely witty, tunefully inventive and brightly entertaining& has the freshness of real-time thought and the sting of genuine feeling." - The Telegraph

"The songs are rich in melody... the lyrics are deftly sophisticated and witty, and there is brilliant use of musical themes." - Talkin Broadway

Requirements

You must give the authors/creators billing credits, as specified in the Licence Agreement, in a conspicuous manner on the first page of credits in all programs and on house-boards, displays and in all other advertising announcements of any kind. You agree to supply to the Licensor full details of all such material for Licensor's approval prior to printing and distribution and supply two (2) copies of the program after printing.
Percentages listed indicate required type size in relation to title size.

 

MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG
 
 Music and Lyrics by
STEPHEN SONDHEIM 
Book by
GEORGE FURTH
 

 

Based on the original play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart
 
Orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick 
 
Originally Directed on Broadway by Harold Prince 

 

Originally produced on Broadway by Lord Grade, Martin Starger, Robert Fryer

and Harold Prince in association with Ruth Mitchell and Howard Haines 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Video Warning

The videotaping or other video or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited

Included Materials

Resource Quantity
COPYRIGHT WARNING 1
LIBRETTO/VOCAL BOOK 25
VOCAL BOOK ADDENDUM 1
PIANO CONDUCTOR'S SCORE ACT 1 2
PIANO CONDUCTOR'S SCORE ACT 2 2

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Title Address Organization Website Date Venue
Merrily We Roll Along

196 Hughes Street
Swoyersville, PA 18704
United States

Music Box Players http://www.musicbox… to Music Box Players Dinner Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

210 E Vistula
Bristol, IN 46507
United States

Elkhart Civic Theatre http://www.elkhartc… to Bristol Opera House
Merrily We Roll Along

8600 University Boulevard
Usi Theatre Performance Center
Evansville, IN 47712
United States

Univ Of Southern Indiana https://www.usi.edu… to Univ Of Southern Indiana
Merrily We Roll Along

118 East Washington Street
Quincy, FL 32351
United States

Quincy Music Theatre http://www.quincymu… to Quincy Music Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

1108 State Street
Utica, NY 13502
United States

Players Of Utica http://www.playerso… to Players Of Utica
Merrily We Roll Along

1300 Biscayne Blvd
Miami, FL 33131
United States

Zoetic Stage http://www.zoeticst… to Adrienne Arsht Center For Perf Arts
Merrily We Roll Along

1179 Union Circle
Denton, TX 76203
United States

University Of North Texas-theatre And Dance http://www.dancandt… to Univeristy Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

275 N. Eagleson Avenue
Bloomington, IN 47408
United States

Indiana University/theatre And Drama http://theatre.indi… to Ruth N. Halls Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

260 W. Main Street
Suite 204
Hendersonville, TN 37075
United States

Hendersonville Performing Arts Company to Hendersonville Performing Arts Co
Merrily We Roll Along

'sanctuary' In Paradise Green, Augustine United Ch
Edinburgh
EH1 1EL
United Kingdom

Edinburgh University Savoy Opera Group to 'sanctuary' In Paradise Green, Augustine United Ch
Merrily We Roll Along

41 Navasota Street
Austin, TX 78702
United States

Entr'acte http://www.atxmusic… Draylen Mason Music Studio Kmfa
Merrily We Roll Along

217 Locust St
Hickman, NE 68372
United States

Nebraska Communities Playhouse http://www.neplayho… to Nebraska Communities Playhouse
Merrily We Roll Along

Theatre Arts Dept
4245 East Avenue
Rochester, NY 14618 3790
United States

Nazareth University to Nazareth University Arts Center
Merrily We Roll Along

609 Webster Street
Needham, MA 2494
United States

Needham High School to Needham High School Auditorium
Merrily We Roll Along

United States

Scuola Del Teatro Musicale to Stm--Teatro Studio
Merrily We Roll Along

2113 Columbia Park Rd
Edgewood, MD 21040
United States

Harford Music And Arts http://www.harfordm… to Harford Music And Arts
Merrily We Roll Along

2113 Columbia Park Rd
Edgewood, MD 21040
United States

Harford Music And Arts http://www.harfordm… to Harford Music And Arts
Merrily We Roll Along

5500 Campanile Drive
San Diego, CA 92182 7601
United States

San Diego State University https://ttf.sdsu.ed… to Main Stage
Merrily We Roll Along

5500 Campanile Drive
San Diego, CA 92182 7601
United States

San Diego State University https://ttf.sdsu.ed… to Main Stage
Merrily We Roll Along

The Playgorund Theatre
London
W10 6RQ
United Kingdom

Associated Studios to The Playgorund Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

1125 College Avenue
Gallery Players
Columbus, OH 43209 2893
United States

Leo Yassenoff Jewish Community Center http://www.jccgalle… to Leo Yassenoff Jewish Community Cent
Merrily We Roll Along

Hanger Farm Arts Centre
Southampton
SO40 8FT
United Kingdom

Eastleigh Operatic & Musical Society to Hanger Farm Arts Centre
Merrily We Roll Along

Ackworth School
Pontefract
WF7 7LT
United Kingdom

Ackworth School to Ackworth School
Merrily We Roll Along

2100 Bristol Street
Middleton, WI 53562
United States

Middleton Players Theatre to Middleton Black Box Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

184 San Marco St.
St. Augustine, FL 32084
United States

Apex Theatre Studio to The Waterworks
Merrily We Roll Along

Po Box 18695
Minneapolis, MN 55418
United States

Morris Park Players http://www.morrispa… to Morris Park Players
Merrily We Roll Along

4530 Colorado Avenue
Sheffield Village, OH 44054
United States

Lorain County Metro Parks http://www.lorainco… to French Creek Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

5407 Roland Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21210
United States

Gilman School http://www.gilman.e… to Alumni Auditorium
Merrily We Roll Along

3125 S. Texas Ave., Ste. 500
Bryan, TX 77802
United States

The Theatre Company Of Bryan College Station http://theatrecompa… to Theatre Co Of Bryan/college Station
Merrily We Roll Along

560 Seneca Street
Oneida, NY 13421
United States

Oneida High School to Oneida High School
Merrily We Roll Along

255 E. Main Street
Stoughton, WI 53589
United States

Stoughton Village Players http://www.stoughto… to Stoughton Village Players Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

1010 West Chicago Ave
Chicago, IL 60642
United States

Chicago Academy For The Arts to Essie Kupcinet
Merrily We Roll Along

311 Kent Square Road
Gaithersburg, MD 20878
United States

Damascus Theatre Company http://damascusthea… to Arts Barn Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

At Dennis Union Church
Rt. 6a And Old Bass River Rd
Dennis, MA 2638
United States

Eventide Arts to Gertrude Lawrence Stage
Merrily We Roll Along

Cb 2800
Elon, NC 27244
United States

Elon University http://www.elon.edu to Black Box Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

196 Hughes Street
Swoyersville, PA 18704
United States

Music Box Players http://www.musicbox… to Music Box Players Dinner Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

350 Division Street
Pawtucket, RI 2861
United States

Community Players http://www.thecommu… to Jenks Junior High School
Merrily We Roll Along

C/o Vac
3638 Osage Street
Garden City, ID 83714
United States

Alley Repertory Theater http://www.alleyrep… to Visual Arts Collective
Merrily We Roll Along

224 Polk Street
Raleigh, NC 27604
United States

Burning Coal Theatre Company http://www.burningc… to Burning Coal Theatre Company
Merrily We Roll Along

470 Castle Blvd
Akron, OH 44313
United States

Akron School Of The Arts/firestone High School to Linda B. Kersker Auditorium
Merrily We Roll Along

Boland Hall
5600 City Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19131
United States

St Josephs University to St Josephs University Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

1801 West Saint Andrews
Midland, MI 48640
United States

Midland Center For The Arts http://www.mcfta.org to Little Theatre- Mcfta
Merrily We Roll Along

805 Nichols Road
Suwanee, GA 30024
United States

Lambert High School http://www.atldrama… to Lambert High School
Merrily We Roll Along

2820 W Kelton Ln
Phoenix, AZ 85053
United States

Arizona Conservatory For Arts And Academics (acaa) http://www.azconser… to Arizona Conservatory
Merrily We Roll Along

502 3rd Ave West
Bradenton, FL 34205
United States

Manatee Performing Arts Center http://www.manateep… to Stone Hall Theatre
Merrily We Roll Along

559 West King St
Boone, NC 28607
United States

Appalachian Musical Theater Club http://none to Appalachian Theatre Of The High Co
Merrily We Roll Along

15 Kimball Hill
Putney, VT 5346
United States

Wild Goose Players http://nextstageart… to Next Stage Arts
Merrily We Roll Along

8788 Metcalf Ave.
Overland Park, KS 66212
United States

Barn Players http://www.thebarnp… to The Barn Players
(264957)
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