The key jokes remain intact. “It puts the candle back. We are still putting the candle back,” said director Rosie Seitz Ayers, a staple of the Missoula theater community.
Ten actors dressed in neutral colors, tall boots and masks that made their faces look like dogs stood scattered across the stage inside the Masquer Theatre. They wore no microphones.
Not everyone fits into the square pants, but sporting brown plaid overalls, a yellow shirt and shiny, black shoes, Missoula Children Theatre Actor Daniel Crary captures the true energy of