SF Playhouse
The SF Playhouse is dedicated to bringing intimate and professional live theatre to the San Francisco Bay Area.
Information
Location:
San Francisco, CA, 94102
Phone:
415-677-9596
Tues - Sat:
1:00 pm - 11:00 pm
Fans

6 of 917 fansSee All

Events

1 upcoming eventSee All

 
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse That's Tuesday the 17th! Previous discount applies for the rest of previews.

November 17 at 1:38pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Hey, Facebook fans, We're trying to beef up the audience for our first preview. Come on by tonight at 8:00 and we'll give you a comp. Help us spread the

Source: www.sfplayhouse.org
An actress (played by a man) schemes to woo back her estranged female lover by playing Orlando opposite her lovers’ Rosalind in this gender-bending romp by one of New York's most innovative writer/performers.
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse The cast and crew of "She Stoops to Comedy" after a successful technical rehearsal

SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse She stoops to Comedy goes into previews Tues the 17th. Don't miss it. Special discount for Facebook Fans. Preview Tickets $10! Codeword: "Asyoulikeit." Call. 415-677-9596

Source: www.sfplayhouse.org
An actress (played by a man) schemes to woo back her estranged female lover by playing Orlando opposite her lovers’ Rosalind in this gender-bending romp by one of New York's most innovative writer/performers.
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Ok, here comes the stragest casting request you're going to here this week, but we like to find a three-legged dog with stage experience. Anybody out there heard of one?

October 31 at 1:54pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Wow! Just cleaned the office. A dumpster's worth of junk, old posters, reciepts from 04' It's starting to feel like SF Playhouse has been here a while. Weird!

October 30 at 2:51pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse We had the first night of our Rising Star program with forty high school students that our subscribers bought tickets. Wow! A really moving experience for actors and audience and great talk-back after. Thanks to everyone who made it happen. Another one next Tuesday

October 28 at 11:15am
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse OK, off with the fundraising hat, on with the horndog. YAY

October 27 at 5:41pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Auditions today for Den of Thieves. Who will be the next discovery?

October 26 at 4:31pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Just saw an excellent production of "Goldfish" at The Magic. Go team!

October 25 at 9:41pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Are we getting sick of these great reviews for "First Day of School?" NOWAY!!!! Here's one from the examiner

Source: www.sfexaminer.com
For a sampling of not-quite-clean good fun, try SF Playhouse’s world premiere, “First Day of School.” The comedy by New Yorker Billy Aronson, whose credits include “Beavis & Butt-head,” goes down quite easily, serving up of lots of laughs and a sweet outr
Eric Pease
Eric Pease
Have tix for this Sat!
October 15 at 4:16pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse What is a guileless horndog, anyway? Definitions anyone?

October 13 at 4:33pm
Christine
Christine
Of course! A guiltless horndog is a shamelessly unapologetic skitchasing man, no?
October 13 at 6:12pm
SF Playhouse
SF Playhouse
No, guileless, not guiltless. That's the opposite. Sheeeeesh!
October 13 at 9:59pm
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse CHECK OUT THE GREAT REVIEW IN VARIETY.SF Playhouse continues to compete on a national level.

Source: www.variety.com
An SF Playhouse presentation with William O'Keefe of a play in one act by Billy Aronson. Directed by Chris Smith.Susan - Zehra BerkmanDavid - Bill EnglishPeter - Jackson DavisKim - Marcia PizzoAlice - Stacy RossBelinda - Torie LaherJonah - Myles Landberg
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse It's such a pleasure to be a play that makes people laugh so much. We get to do it twice today. YAY!

October 10 at 11:12am
SF Playhouse

SF Playhouse Why do David and Susan want to invite friends into their sex lives in the first place. Some of the critics didn't get this. I'm wondering what you all who've seen the play think?

October 1 at 4:54pm
Arlene Jaffee
Arlene Jaffee
lighten up people!
October 2 at 1:37pm
Robert Estes
Robert Estes
Making too much department and definitely not lightening up (sorry!), but it seemed that they had become very literal (i.e., the need to actually see someone else as noted above) in the beginning. The could be so direct because they had lost a sense of mystery. In the end, perhaps they were once again enraptured by what they could not see but what ... Read Morethey suddenly could feel again. Maybe not needing the literal is part of being spritual or in love. But then, maybe, in the begining the playwright just wanted to cut to the chase.
October 3 at 1:18am