
But, there is more to do in our thumb area besides attend the theatre!


![]() I wrote last time about our first week playing Marine City's The Snug Theatre with "My Dearest Friend." We were very pleased with the critical review from Encore Michigan and the audience reaction to this wonderful historic play by Mary G. Kron. Since we opened, word of mouth has accelerated reservations for this coming week! Thank you to all who enjoyed the show! Tickets are going fast, but good seats are still available for all shows, online or by calling 810-278-1749. But, there is more to do in our thumb area besides attend the theatre! ![]() Last Friday, Mary Beth, her Mom, and Step , and I took the Blue Water Ferry across the St. Clair river to Sombra, Ontario, Canada for lunch at The Aft Cabin and a little shopping. Sombra has only about 250 residents, but the little town is charming and the food at The Aft Cabin was delicious! While in Sombra, I located the local historical museum, where I'm told a car owned by Al Capone for bootlegging is on display. Our older companions weren't up for the tour, so I didn't get to find out for myself -- maybe this week. ![]() Saturday was bright and sunny and so Mary Beth and I took the opportunity to indulge in another of our passions -- visiting lighthouses! Michigan is home to more than a hundred lighthouses and we've been to a lot of them, but our trip to the Fort Gratiot Lighthouse in Port Huron ranks as one of our best experiences.
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![]() Yep, that's Mary Beth waiting to go into The Snug Theatre for our first performance in Marine City, Michigan! We've been gearing up for this for weeks, because it is the first time we've been able to perform this show on the Eastern side of the state. The Sunrise Side is a bit of a tough nut to crack, but we're ecstatic that the Snug had an open slot and was willing to take a chance on an original work by a Michigan playwright, Mary G. Kron. ![]() To be honest, we didn't know what to expect. WE knew we had a quality entertainment experience, but what would theatre goers and critics on the East side of the State think. ![]() Maybe, we would go out on stage and find the theatre looking like this picture! Fortunately, for us and for the theatre, that wasn't the case. In fact, our first week's audiences were larger than normal for The Snug and they were very enthusiastic about the show! Encore Michigan even sent a reviewer. John Quinn called "My Dearest Friend" a "charming play" and remarked: "The fact that Mitchell and Quillin are married brings a spark of real-life to their performances. . . ." He also called our handling of the 18th Century language "well articulated," which we take as a high compliment. (See the full review here). ![]() Of course, actors do not live by theatre alone (as much as we might like to think so)! I'll tell you about some of our other adventures last week in my next installment. They don't call this area the Blue Water side for nothing! Stay tuned! To get tickets for "My Dearest Friend" next week go here, or call 810-278-1749. Good seats are still available for all performances - but that will change, if you wait too long! ![]() John Adams was born in a seafaring Colony. Boston, Massachusetts and the surrounding area in 1735 were already full of thriving ports and makers of ships. Whaling, which had started near Cape Cod as early as the Pilgrims' arrival at Plymouth Rock, was by 1740 a powerful industry in the New World. Adams' family was not in the shipping trade, but he had clients as a lawyer who undoubtedly were and his compatriot John Hancock had a fleet of ships that he used for his business. ![]() So, it is, perhaps, fitting that GEM Theatrics' version of John Adams will spend a part of this Summer in a Michigan city known, in its heyday, as a shipbuilding center. "My Dearest Friend" by Michigan playwright Mary G. Kron will play eight performances at The Snug Theatre in Marine City, Michigan. Shows run from June 12 - 22. Tickets are just $20 and are available online or by calling 810-278-1749. Marine City, situated at the convergence of the St. Clair and Belle Rivers, was, in the years before ![]() John Adams crossed the Atlantic ocean six times in his life. That is six more times than most others of his generation. Adams was no stranger to the ocean; his homes in Braintree and Boston, Massachusetts overlooked the Atlantic and he had had contact with that wide expanse his entire life. But, living near the sea and actual seafaring are two entirely different things, although it appears that John Adams suffered from seasickness less than others in his party and, indeed, less than some of the experienced sailors on his ships. We at GEM Theatrics celebrate these journeys with a crossing, of sorts, of our own. In less than a week, we will open our production of "My Dearest Friend" by Mary G. Kron across the state of Michigan from our home base in the cozy Snug Theatre in Marine City. Performances are June 12 - 22 and tickets can be obtained on the theatre's website or by calling 810-278-1749. Adams was sent three times across the Atlantic Ocean ![]() It's time for a celebration here at GEM Theatrics, because this year marks the 250th Anniversary of John and Abigail Adams! The actual date isn't until Fall, but we're kicking the festivities off a little early with eight (!) performances of "My Dearest Friend" by Mary G. Kron this month at the cozy Snug Theatre in Marine City, Michigan. Show dates are June 12, 13, 14, 19, 20 and 21 at 7 pm and June 15 and 22 at 3 pm. Tickets are just $20 are available online or by calling 810-278-1749. This is a wonderful opportunity for our friends on the East side of Michigan to see this wonderful production! We hope to see many of you there! On October 25, 1764, not everyone was certain the
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