Join us for this exciting Page to Stage event! Only 20 seats available!
Workshop Date: Tuesday, July 28th, 2026. 4-6 PM Location To Be Announced
Performance Date: Wednesday, July 29th, 2026. 8:30 PM at the Tuachan Amphitheatre in Ivins, Utah.
Price: $65
**Price includes workshop fee, ticket fee, and 1 meal we will have together before the show**
Les Miserables Page to Stage Workshop information:
Dates: July 28th, 4-6 PM Location To Be Announced
Building the Barricade, Understanding History through Story and Performance
During this workshop, we will examine the characters and themes of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables. This is a story filled with moral debate and complex character relationships. Through this workshop we will dive into these relationships and see how each one’s conflicts and desires move the story forward. Students will then have the opportunity to debate on of the major moral dilemmas at the heart of Les Miserables: can a person truly change?
By developing dramaturgical skills, students will research and gain an understanding of the historical, geographic, and political setting of Les Miserables and use that research to determine why this is such an important and timeless story. We will then explore how we might build our own barricades through performance pieces that focus on the themes, discussion, and research that we have done throughout the workshop. Turning human experience into art in an effort to build understanding and process the questions that Les Miserables asks its audience.
Join us for this exciting Page to Stage event! Only 20 seats available!
Workshop Date: Tuesday, July 28th, 2026. 4-6 PM Location To Be Announced
Performance Date: Wednesday, July 29th, 2026. 8:30 PM at the Tuachan Amphitheatre in Ivins, Utah.
Price: $65
**Price includes workshop fee, ticket fee, and 1 meal we will have together before the show**
Les Miserables Page to Stage Workshop information:
Dates: July 28th, 4-6 PM Location To Be Announced
Building the Barricade, Understanding History through Story and Performance
During this workshop, we will examine the characters and themes of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables. This is a story filled with moral debate and complex character relationships. Through this workshop we will dive into these relationships and see how each one’s conflicts and desires move the story forward. Students will then have the opportunity to debate on of the major moral dilemmas at the heart of Les Miserables: can a person truly change?
By developing dramaturgical skills, students will research and gain an understanding of the historical, geographic, and political setting of Les Miserables and use that research to determine why this is such an important and timeless story. We will then explore how we might build our own barricades through performance pieces that focus on the themes, discussion, and research that we have done throughout the workshop. Turning human experience into art in an effort to build understanding and process the questions that Les Miserables asks its audience.