$42-62: STUDENT RUSH AVAILABLE
One Nation, One Mission, One Promise is a must-see play for all who care about America’s past and future. It is a fabulously written production that seamlessly weaves together the narratives of our most stirring and motivating trailblazers who sacrificed so much in the name of freedom and liberty. Audience members are both uplifted and inspired by the timely significance of One Nation, One Mission, One Promise, which is superbly performed by a cast that dazzles. This show will resonate with all who believe that humanity’s struggles for a greater good are not in vain. You will not be disappointed!
LIMITED RUN ONLY 12 show Performances left:
Jan 19th-20th: 7pm Sunday Jan 21st: 3pm
Jan 26th-27th: 7pm Sunday Jan 28th: 3pm
Feb 2nd-3rd: 7pm Sunday Feb 4th: 3pm
Feb 9th-10th 7pm Sunday Feb 11th: 3pm
TICKETS:
Tickets are available starting @ $42
**Group rates (20+) & student rush also available
Use coupon code – CYBER for a 20% discount
Online: www.onenationonemissiononepromise.com
By Phone: 212-352-3101
In-Person:
The Players Theatre
115 MacDougal Street
Direction:
Trains: Take either the A/C/E/B/D/F/M Trains to West 4th street. Walk one block east on Third Street. Make a right onto MacDougal.
ONE NATION, ONE MISSION, ONE PROMISE
An American Story
Starring:
Odysseus Bailer
James Cougar Canfield
Kelsey Lea Jones
Jeff MacKinnon
Emelie Pla
Emma Romasco
Dana Scurlock
Samantha Talbott.
Writer & Director: Victoria Medina
Musical Director: Andrew Beall
Composers: Steven Beall, Andrew Beall
Choreographer: Ernest Felton Baker
Contributing Artist: Robert Shetterly
Set and Lighting Designer: Erin Nihill
Costume Designer: Lisa Renee Jordon
Stage Manager: Emily Pierce
Assistant Stage Manager: Kalen Sierra Hughes
Consulting Producer: Layon Gray
Co-Producer: Alexander Gloth
Social Media Marketing: Alyssa Denton
Written and directed by Victoria Medina, One Nation, One Mission, One Promise has great potential to fill in the gaps of what we are taught about our history in the school system, and for that it should be applauded. The tagline of the play is “What if Thomas Jefferson, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Martin Luther King shared the stage for the first time, or Frederick Douglass attended a Town Hall meeting with Ellen DeGeneres?” Yet while it is impressive that the production strives to tell as many stories of American history as possible, the delivery is uneven and heavy-handed, at some points just a massive hodgepodge of quotes and impressions of historical figures. All of these various vignettes are supposed to be tied together by the depiction of a soul waiting to be born (played by Emma Romasco). For some reason, this unborn baby is really eager to learn about American history, and smiles beatifically at all of the pageantry before her. Romasco’s singing voice is truly beautiful, and she has two solos in the production. However, it is unclear why she ever started singing in the first place. From there, the play jumps through time, from one story to another, from the Revolutionary Wa …Read more