ARTC Premieres “In Need of a Bard” at Dragon Con

ARTC Premieres In Need of a BardThe Atlanta Radio Theatre Company (ARTC) charmed fans Friday evening with the debut of In Need of a Bard, a whimsical, trans-dimensional, musical, fantasy epic cleverly disguised as a radio play. Sacha Dzuba excelled in triple duties as Brad the Bard, playing the guitar and singing as well as acting. Fiona K. Leonard acted and sang as Nocturne the Protector. Daniel Taylor (“Old Brad”) and Cathleen Young (“Solvi”) provided the frame for the piece. Daniel W. Kiernan (“Glorinda”) and Khayman Bliss (“Alvise the Miraclemonger)” competed to steal the limelight from the other voiced characters with their delightfully frenetic portrayals. For more information on the actors and voices also heard during the standing-ovation performance, consult the online playbill of ARTC performances.

In Need of a Bard playwright Kelley S. Ceccato is no stranger to Dragon Con. Last year, ARTC performed her play The Wood-Bound Werewolfat the convention. Ceccato has also written a novel Atterwald forthcoming from Gilded Dragonfly Press. Ceccato describes her novel as “Beauty and the Beast meets The Secret Garden with shapeshifters.”

The online playbill also includes details of ARTC productions of The War of the Worlds: the Untold Story, penned by Ron N. Butler. Celebrating the 75th anniversary of the imminently believable radio performance by Orson Welles based on the H. G. Wells novel, the radio play is billed as “not a re-creation, but a brand new adaptation.” ARTC will present The War of the Worlds: the Untold Story at Dragon Con on Sunday, 7PM, Regency VI-VII (Hy).

HPIM4018

ARTC will also appear on Tolkien’s Middle-Earth (TOLK) track with its track-traditional, dramatic voiced performance of Tolkien’s “The Scouring of the Shire” on Mon 1PM, L401-L403 (M).

Visit the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company at ARTC and listen to many of their productions at ARTC Podcast.

Author of the article

Amy L. Herring (Louise Herring-Jones) writes speculative fiction, with a preference for historical fantasy and alternate mystery. Her stories, appearing in fourteen anthologies, include “The Poulterer’s Tale” in God Bless Us, Every One—Christmas Carols beyond Dickens (Voodoo Rumors Media). Amy coordinates the HSV Writers’ group in Huntsville, AL. Visit her online at http://www.louiseherring-jones.com.