Arts & Culture in Scottsdale
Arts & Culture Deals
Fred Astaire Dance Studios (Scottsdale)
- Multiple Locations
Instructors school students during private lessons and group classes
Picture Show Entertainment
- Paradise Valley
Guests sink into plush theater chairs to catch digital feature flicks while munching on buttery popcorn washed down with bubbly sodas
Recommended Arts & Culture by Groupon Customers
Arizona Curriculum Theater Inc. is a non-profit troupe of actors, artists, and musicians performing primarily in schools and libraries across Arizona. ACT, Inc. also performs three public productions throughout the year and is a resident company at Soul Invictus, 1022 Grand Ave., Phoenix, AZ.
Since 1986, Theater Works Peoria's mission has been to shower northwest suburban Phoenix with engaging entertainment, produced by members of their own community. Directors mount productions of Broadway plays and musicals, holiday classics, and adaptations from film, literature, and Bazooka bubblegum wrappers. A bevy of youth programs line up a parallel season of plays, workshops, and camps.
In the interest of enchanting family audiences, Great Arizona Puppet Theater has not only replaced human actors with marionettes and rod puppets but also replaced the bears in Goldilocks's story with sharks. Goldilocks & the Three Sharks parades vibrant sea creatures across the stage as the heroine, now a mermaid, acts out her legend against luminous black lights. This inventive take on an old myth is par for the course at the theater, whose adaptation of Cinderella won the 2010 UNIMA-USA Citation of Excellence in puppetry. Behind the scenes, professional puppeteers guide the characters through kid-friendly narratives, both ancient and original. Their performances often include a timely moral that parents can discuss with children with the help of accompanying study guides, which encourage guests to analyze themes and ask questions such as "how can puppets talk if they have no brains?"
The puppet masters have more than 50 tales in their collective memory. They perform them in the historical, hand-painted theater space five days a week, as well as at area schools and functions. By crafting scripts that address Arizonian themes, including the conservation of endangered condors and figures in Native American folklore, they hope to educate and engage their young spectators. Guests can interact with the stories even further by adopting puppets from the onsite gift shop or by attending a private party, where they create their own hand puppets out of paper bags. Additionally, seasonal adult shows prove that puppetry can be as edgy as any other art form.
At Scottsdale Desert Stages Theatre, three troupes—the Actor’s Cafe, the Children’s Theatre, and Cullity Hall productions—celebrate great storytelling with seasons full of classic plays and child-friendly adaptations. The Actor’s Cafe’s small, adult casts perform in a 60-seat cabaret, and the grownups and growing-ups of the other companies play on the main stage's still-intimate 132-seat theater-in-the-round.
Local thespians Matt McAuley and Richard Vines banded together with the Dysart Community Education Department to conceptualize Ghostlight Theatre on the tenets of entertaining and educating the community with the dramatic arts. The theatre's live productions give members of the community an opportunity to flex their theatrical muscles through acting, designing costumes, and pursuing careers as prop trees. Meanwhile, Ghostlight Theatre’s summer camps prepare budding thespians aged 10–18 for their moments in the spotlight.
