2007-2008 Season

The Carpetbagger's Children
The Mollusc
Long Day's Journey Into Night

2006 - 2007 Season

Tomorrow
Mill Town Girls
Pygmalion

2005 - 2006 Season

The Beginning of Summer
Frankie and Johnny

2004 - 2005 Season

The Weir
The Roads to Home
All My Sons

2003 - 2004 Season


September 11th Was a Tuesday
The Carpetbagger's Children
The Sea Gull

2002 - 2003 Season

Valentine's Day
A Doll's House

2001 - 2002 Season

The Last of the Thorntons
Premiere One Acts

2000 - 2001 Season

Uncle Vanya
Young Man From Atlanta

1999 - 2000 Season

A Thinking Heart: The Diary of Etty Hillesum

1998 - 1999 Season

Talking Pictures


Gay Hill and Rob Peters in Horton Foote's The Rocking Chair.

Gay Hill and Rob Peters in Horton Foote's The Rocking Chair.

Premiere One-Acts
October - November 2001

The production opened with a curtain-raiser, Steve LaRocque performed a selection from his own Eight p.m. at the Dreamland Café. The Stage Premiere of Horton Foote's The Rocking Chair followed, featuring James Archie, Morgan Aronson, Dana Ballard, Andy Greenleaf, Gay Hill, Erika Imhoof, Rob Peters, Lori Murray Sampson, and Brook Soden, directed by Jack Sbarbori. The program ended with the World Premiere of Steve LaRocque's While We Have the Light, featuring Colleen Estep, Andy Greenleaf, Beatrice Judge, Martha Karl, Steve LaRocque, Michele Osherow, and Vanja Scholls, directed by Sharon Dodd.
Steve LaRocque and Vanja Scholls in Steve LaRocque's While We Have the Light

Steve LaRocque and Vanja Scholls in Steve LaRocque's While We Have the Light

One night, two powerful plays...The Rocking Chair is a rare treat, a "new" work that adds another chapter to (Foote's) semi-autobiographical stories of small-town Texas. Directed by Sbarbori, Peters and Hill give quiet, understated performances that nonetheless are powerful enough to draw you into Foote's world of people trying to bridge the gaps between themselves and the rest of the world. The second premiere is a new play by Bethesda playwright and actor Steve LaRocque, While We Have the Light...a look at our links to the past and is a fitting match to the Foote play. ...(there is a) standout performance by Vanja Scholls as the young Miriam. Her engaging characterization of the bright, energetic acolyte contrasts nicely with the acerbic Klaus (LaRocque) in their flashback scenes. ...LaRocque deftly recites a scene from his Dreamland Café, a look at racism in a story set in the days (before) the Negro Baseball League. Quotidian has assembled an original, thoughtful, and thought-provoking program, unusual in scope for a small theater company and deserving a look.    Michael Toscano, The Washington Post

Three fine ones...the Quotidian Theatre Company tackled three heavy subjects -- racism; retirement and growing older; and intolerance and respect for the past - and came up shining with two one-act play premieres and a reading, performed at the Writer's Center.   -Louis Levy, The Review