Continued from Page 6 With the theater poised to open this fall, drama enthusiasts and local actors are anticipating the comeback. Frank Jagodnik is a longtime actor at the theater, coming up on his 25th season with the organization. He said this past year was diffi cult without being able to be around his theater friends. He missed the creative and social experiences that com- munity theater provides. “The theater has become such an inte- gral part of my leisure activities that it felt like I couldn’t spend time with fam- ily there too,” he said. “Even if I wasn’t in the cast, my wife and I always enjoyed all the other productions and seeing our the- ater friends in action.” The shows to come In the coming months, the theater will off er four productions, two of which will take place in the theater while adhering to health guidelines for COVID-19. The fi rst two shows in this year’s lineup are “Sixty-Second Shakespeare” and “The Case of the Coaster Clambake.” Both productions will be performed at the Cannon Beach Park on Fridays and Satur- days, from July 9 to Sept. 4. “(‘Sixty-Second Shakespeare’ is) really designed to be accessible to everybody, whether you’re a Shakespeare afi cionado or not. It’ll be nice little snippets from things that people will recognize,” Tronier said. “And the mystery is just, you know, who doesn’t love a good mystery read in the summer?” Jagodnik is particularly anticipating the upcoming mystery production. He and his wife, Liz, created the show’s origi- nal concept some 15 years ago, he said. It has since been enhanced by play director Katherine Lacaze and executive director Patrick Lathrop. The fi nal two productions of the year, Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray” and Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol,” are planned to take place on stage and under the show lights of the theater. “(‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’) actu- ally will be the fi rst show we have in the theater,” Tronier said. “It’s one act, so we won’t have intermission. We’re just trying to limit interaction with others just as we ease back into being in a theater space.” The “Dorian Gray” production will run on Fridays and Saturdays for the whole month of October. For the holiday sea- son, the theater will off er showtimes for “A Christmas Carol” on Fridays and Sat- urdays from Nov. 19 to Dec. 18. No callbacks for COVID In preparation for the upcoming shows, Actors perform the Coaster’s rendition of ‘Annie’ in 2019. the theater developed a COVID-19 safety and mitigation plan to help guide the reopening. Not only for people who are purchasing tickets and attending shows, Tronier said, but also to keep volunteers, actors, and anybody involved in shows as safe as possible. The theater follows practices set forth by the Oregon Health Authority and rec- ommendations by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Some of these preventative measures include social dis- tancing, temperature screenings and face coverings for employees and guests alike. Due to meticulous planning, Tronier said, the summer productions are tak- ing place at the Cannon Beach Park as outdoor spaces prove to be safer from COVID transmission than indoor events. Although social distancing will be encouraged at the performances, the CDC’s recent recommendation allowing vaccinated people to resume their activi- ties without masks has raised some ques- tions. The matter has not yet been offi - cially discussed within the theater but its safety and mitigation plan is a living doc- ument that’s subject to change, Tronier said. At the start of the year, the theater also implemented a new ticketing system that automatically social distances those in the audience. Event goers in the same group, Tonier said, can select the seats they want in their cohort, so the system will auto- matically block out seats around them to create a socially-distanced bubble. “We don’t want people to put their time, energy and money, when it comes to buying tickets, out there and then some- one gets sick and we have to cancel,” Tronier said. “We’re just trying to do the best for our community … We have to be fl exible. That’s kind of been our guiding word in planning for things.” ORIGINAL FINE ART on the waterfront port of ilwaco, wa marie-powell.com 360-244-0800 THURSDAY, MAY 27, 2021 // 7