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


Darius Suziedelis and Steve LaRoque in Conor McPherson's The Weir

Darius Suziedelis and Steve LaRoque in Conor McPherson's The Weir

The Weir
by Conor McPherson
October 29 - November 28, 2004

This production featured John Decker, Steve LaRocque, Stephanie Mumford, Ted Schneider, and Darius Suziedelis. It was directed by Jack Sbarbori with a lighting design by Don Slater.

" Sometimes theatergoing is like eavesdropping on strangers. Seldom is that eavesdropping so compelling, indeed spellbinding, as it is in this short but tremendously satisfying production. Part of the reason is the writing by Irish playwright Connor McPherson who won the Olivier Award for Best New Play in London in the 1998 season for this piece of naturalistic storytelling. The superb direction and the performances of the cast of five is the other reason. The production matches the naturalistic style of the script so well that it almost seems effortless and artless. But there is an art to being apparently artless, which the Quotidian Theatre Company's team knows quite well. It is their mission to create theater that feels like life and this is one of their great successes at that challenging mission. "

-- Bruce Hathaway of Potomac Stages
Read the entire review.

Plus:

"...a healthy dose of warmth and Guiness-tinged local color...The stories are gems in themselves, and...the characters are finely developed by director Jack Sbarbori and his cast. "

-- Washington City Paper