PennDOT awards contract for another portion of I-83 project, next phase to begin soon

I-83 (File photo)

Construction on I-83 will keep on trucking.

PennDOT announced on Friday that it awarded the second of two contracts for East Shore Section 3 of the I-83 Capital Beltway Project in Harrisburg.

J.D. Eckman, Inc. of Chester County won the contract, submitting a low bid of $132.7 million. The contractor was one of three companies that submitted bids.

The contract includes widening and reconstructing I-83 from two lanes to three lanes in each direction. PennDOT will also construct new collector-distributor lanes in each direction. Additionally, they will construct a new 13th Street bridge and approaches, and reconstruct the 17th Street interchange, widen 17th Street, and construct a new wider 17th Street bridge over the railroad.

There will also be realignment and improvements made along the Paxton Street corridor, as well as retaining walls, new overhead sign structures, guiderail, drainage, highway lighting, pavement markings and other construction.

PennDOT is slated to begin construction this fall and will last through 2033.

“We are excited to take this important next step toward modernizing Interstate 83 in the Harrisburg region,” said PennDOT District 8 Executive Kevin Keefe. “I-83 is a vital corridor that fuels the economy and contributes to the quality of life in the region. The work associated with this contract will improve mobility and safety for all who travel through the area.”

PennDOT is currently working on the first contract for the East Shore Section 3, which includes widening and reconstructing portions of I-83, constructing overhead bridges at 29th Street and 19th Street and constructing a new Cameron Street Interchange. It also includes removing the 13th Street interchange, and roadway improvements on Cameron Street, 19th Street and 29th Street.

According to PennDOT, there may be impacts to traffic during both projects, including traffic shifts, lane restrictions and road closures/detours, but advance notice will be given.

For more information, visit PennDOT’s website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!     

Continue Reading

September home sales, prices up in Harrisburg area, says report

A house for sale in Harrisburg

Harrisburg-area home sales and prices both notched gains in September, according to the latest report on previously owned homes.

For the three-county region, 585 houses changed hands in September versus 573 in September 2024, as the median sales price rose to $297,495 from $275,000, according to the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, 266 homes sold, a dip from 293 in the year-ago period, while the median sales price increased to $289,900 from $261,950, GHAR said.

Cumberland County saw 281 home sales compared to 243 the prior year, as the median sales price rose to $320,000 from $310,000, according to GHAR.

In Perry County, 34 houses sold, an increase from 28 in September 2024, as the median sales price decreased to $244,500 from $257,500, GHAR stated.

The pace of sales was nearly unchanged as “average days on the market” totaled 24 days in September compared to 25 days in September 2024, GHAR said.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA!

What you’ll find ⤵️

For something new: Urban Churn has a new location in Mechanicsburg

Worth noting: The weekend is ripe with festivals: Pennsboro Pumpkin Fest (Sat-Sun), Senstoberfest (Sat), Choctoberfest (Sat), Italian Festival (Sun). Plus, the PA National Horse Show pulls into town

Things on my agenda this weekend: Harrisburg Regional Chamber B.A.S.H., in-laws visiting, youth baseball, Low Cut Connie at XL


🆕 Quick Weekend Links: ThursdayFridaySaturdaySunday


New + Noteworthy

you know, ICYMI

Sara’s Top Picks

for the group chat

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


Extras

  1. Be the taste everyone talks about! We’re looking for partners to support Berry Bash as “Food Station Sponsor” – great opportunity for fun, engaging activation! Email me with interest!
  2. Save the date for Plants + Pints 2026! Sunday, April 12 at Strawberry Square
  3. Want to share an ‘extra’? Email Sara with interest! 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Who Are We, Without a Story? Gamut Theatre kicks off their season with an all-female production of “The Revolutionists.”

Rebecca Thomas, Weimar Montero Candelario, Elizabeth Hood and Katherine Campbell Rossi

Try to picture a volatile political climate: opposing parties taking extreme actions, deeply entrenched ideologies ruling minds, the media going crazy, no person exempt from cruelty. Sound familiar?

Yes, I’m talking about the French Revolution. (I know, that’s exactly what you were thinking.)

Guillotines, baguettes and Hugh Jackman ballads aside, this highly romanticized period of European history carries with it an indefinite catalog of misrepresented voices. Namely, in the hidden female figures of the revolution. Who are these women? A local play aims to tell their stories.

Gamut Theatre presents “The Revolutionists” by Lauren Gunderson. This bold and witty comedy features punchy zingers, great wigs and an all-female cast and design team.

The crew is led by a fierce and fiery director, Kelli Kauterman. She believes that this story is needed now more than ever. As the first show Gamut is slated to produce this year, “The Revolutionists” opens the theatre’s season with a bang. By witnessing utterly human storytelling, unapologetic in its clear stance for human rights, audiences will be left with no choice but to respond.

“The Revolutionists” is a terrifyingly relevant story for a world where authoritarianism is rampant, freedom is tenuous, and the human voice is sacred.

But don’t worry, your evening at the theatre will not be all dour and drab. This show is a comedy. Playwright Lauren Gunderson is known for her comedic timing and witty zingers. “The Revolutionists” tackles monstrously intimidating topics through perfectly timed female zest, jabs and stabs. Yes, I said stabs. I would explain why, but I was told I could not include spoilers.

Kauterman promises the audience that they will see correlations between their world and the world of “The Revolutionists.” We, as the audience, may not all be women seeking revenge against the bourgeois of 18th century France … but we are humans trying to make sense of our world and our place in it.

“This show is about stories, and the importance of words,” Kauterman said.

Olympe De Gouges, 18th-century French playwright, wrestles with the ethics, challenges and fears of being an artist engaged with activism. She knows that her words are what will be remembered—the stories she tells are what will be documented as history.

“Don’t settle for the story that they’re giving you,” she tells her companions—and the audience.

“The Revolutionists” challenges every audience member to consider the power of their own stories and the history they can create with their own words. Now, more than ever, people need to know that their voices matter—that they have the power to champion the stories of women and every other historically silenced group. Humans are narrative-driven creatures. We make sense of the world through stories. Thus, the power of an individual’s story is mighty.

Everyone has a world. And everyone has a story. So, everyone can be a revolutionist.

“If it gets people involved in their immediate world, that would be success,” Kauterman said.

This show doesn’t require us to change the whole world. “The Revolutionists” asks every audience member to examine their world and the change they can make within it.

While “The Revolutionists” is literally about women during the French Revolution, it’s really about how we all go about changing our world.

Find people in your life that you want to share this story with. Secure your seats by purchasing tickets online at Gamut’s website. Come curious and open to hear a story that will undoubtedly challenge you to be a revolutionist in your world.

“The Revolutionists” runs Oct. 4 through Oct. 19 at Gamut Theatre, 15 N. 4th St., Harrisburg. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.gamuttheatre.org/revolutionists or call 717-238-4111.

UPCOMING EVENTS

At Gamut Theatre
www.gamuttheatre.org
717-238-4111

Gamut Theatre
“The Revolutionists”
Oct. 4 to 19


Popcorn Hat Players

“Little Red Riding Hood”
 Sept. 17 to Oct. 4

“The Frog Prince”
Oct. 29 to Nov. 15


TMI Improv

Halloween Improv Show
Oct. 24 at 7:30 p.m.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading

Harrisburg awards money to affordable housing projects, made possible by federal COVID dollars

Mayor Wanda Williams and Business Administrator Sam Sulkosky announced recipients of affordable housing funds at city hall.

Over a dozen local projects will get a boost of cash to create housing.

Harrisburg officials on Wednesday announced the 13 affordable housing projects that will receive a total of almost $8 million in grants, money that was made available to the city through federal COVID-relief funds.

“I am proud to continue fulfilling one of my original campaign promises to make Harrisburg a city where everyone has access to a safe affordable place to call home,” Mayor Wanda Williams said at a morning press conference.

The money for the initiative was made possible through the federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) program. Harrisburg received a total of $47 million in ARPA money.

City Council, in 2023, approved putting $31.4 million into the city’s general fund to replace revenue lost during the pandemic. That money then went to pay for regular budget items, freeing up money for special projects. Council designated certain projects that the money should fund, such as the $8 million for affordable housing, in addition to other projects.

Recipients of the Affordable Housing Development Fund grants are as follows:

  • Beahive Affordable Housing Outreach, 4 units-$400,000
  • Breneman Group, 14 units-$650,000
  • Habitat for Humanity, 4 units-$400,000
  • Handles Helping Hand Foundation, 4 units-$900,000
  • Latino Connection Foundation LLC-Sycamore Homes, 23 units-$800,000
  • Latino Connection Foundation LLC-Woodward Lofts, 48 units-$700,000
  • PSV Properties, 3 units-$73,000
  • Scholars Inc. dba Thrive Housing Services, 3 units-$300,000
  • TLC Capstone, 34 units-$600,000
  • TLC Cornerstone Renewal, 50 units-$750,000
  • Vice Capital LLC and Savoy Harrisburg LLC, 10 units-$1,300,000
  • Wildheart International Ministries Gateway, 9 units-$377,000
  • Williams and Williams Properties LLC, 14 units-$500,000

The amount awarded totals $7,750,000. According to Williams, the remaining $250,000 is being saved in case of needed adjustments during the projects’ construction processes.

A total of 26 applications were submitted to Harrisburg, and 13 were awarded.

According to city officials, all of the awarded projects are fully affordable, except for one, Vice Capital’s Savoy project, which includes 10 affordable units out of 48.

Applications for the money opened on Aug. 11 and were due Sept. 5. A two-person, independent committee, made up of Doug Hill, retired director of the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania and Eric Jenkins, retired Harrisburg Fire Bureau firefighter, scored each application and made a recommendation to the mayor and several members of her cabinet.

Applicants were required to have experience developing affordable housing, and the projects could include constructing or renovating units. Williams said that the projects were also scored based on their readiness, impact and community engagement.

According to city Business Administrator Sam Sulkosky, the list of recipients includes some projects that have been completed and some that have yet to break ground.

Tarik Casteel, of Harrisburg-based TLC Construction, received money for his already completed Cornerstone Renewal project, which they cut the ribbon on in Nov. 2024, as well as for his second phase of the project that will add 34 more units to the development at N. 16th and Walnut streets.

“It helps tremendously,” Casteel said of his award. “I’m happy with what I got.”

Casteel said that he received exactly the amount of money that he requested from the city.

When asked how the amount of funding was chosen for each awardee, Sulkosky said that it differed for each project, depending on factors like their total project cost, their requested amount and their other funding sources.

Several other developers told TheBurg that they also received the exact amount that they requested and were satisfied with it.

Harrisburg-based Wildheart Ministries will receive $377,000 from the city for its $4 million project to construct nine units in an empty lot at 1260-1270 Market St. The project is shovel-ready, according to Tannon and Cristina Herman, and the units will be for sale at affordable prices.

“This is huge,” Cristina said. “It’s huge that the city is doing this, because that’s what all the other funders want to see. Their buy-in will help us get the others to the finish line.”

Wildheart plans to break ground in the spring.

For more information on the Affordable Housing Development Fund, visit Harrisburg’s website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading

Bodega favorites, with a twist, served up hot at new Midtown restaurant

(From left) Sean Banks, Chrissy Banks and Patrick Murphy

Ever try a chopped cheese sandwich on a Jamaican beef patty? Or a smash meatball sandwich? How about chicken Caesar loaded fries?

These are just a few of the hot menu items at Bodega Food Co., a new restaurant in Midtown Harrisburg that’s cooking up out-of-the-box creations for the neighborhood.

The shop opened at the corner of N. 3rd and Herr streets a little over a month ago, beginning without much fanfare and steadily building business through word of mouth.

Already, neighbors have become regulars, some even coming several times a week.

“I live right down the street, so this is kind of my kitchen away from my kitchen,” said resident Demitrius Randolph. “It’s like walking to the fridge.”

That’s exactly what owners Sean and Chrissy Banks and Patrick Murphy were going for—a neighborhood spot with something for everyone.

The idea for Bodega Food Co. actually originated early this year, when husband and wife duo Sean and Chrissy started a food trailer that regularly appeared at the Harrisburg Beach Club on City Island, among other locations.

Excited about their vision, Murphy linked up with the Banks’ and the crew found their perfect location to launch their take on an urban bodega in a brick-and-mortar shop.

Sean, originally from Altoona, said that he was first introduced to a bodega when he and Chrissy lived above one in Jersey City, N.J.

“I always shopped there, but I never ate there,” he said. “Then he [the owner] made me a sandwich and I was like, ‘Oh, this is different.’ Once I tried it, I couldn’t stop.”

His visits to other bodegas and corner stores inspired his menu at the new restaurant, with an added twist.

“We do things just a little bit differently than everyone else does,” he said.

Chopped cheese on Jamaican beef patty

The menu features bodega classics, like the chopped cheese sandwich, a New York City favorite, cheeseburgers and wings. But there are also lots of unique offerings like the loaded fries, Altoona hotel-style pizza and the Italian chopped sandwich. Sean’s mother, “Mummum,” as his kids affectionately call her, bakes homemade desserts like brownies and sweet potato pie for the shop. Combining a dessert and a sandwich, Sean is currently working on a new menu item—a cinnamon bun burger.

So far, Sean said that a lot of New York natives have visited the shop and have walked away impressed, but there have also been plenty of locals who’ve never heard of a chopped cheese.

“There’s not really anyone else that does a chopped cheese in the area, especially on a Jamaican beef patty. Everybody comes in and doesn’t understand what it is and we have to explain it,” Murphy said. “I almost want to make a notecard, because I say it so much.”

Some customers even make special requests, leading Chrissy to add their concoctions to the ordering system. Somewhat of a “secret menu” has developed.

“If enough people ask for it, it’ll be on the menu,” Chrissy said.

Chicken Caesar loaded fries and wings

All three of the owners have years of experience in the restaurant industry, the Banks’ in the corporate world and Murphy at more local businesses. Most recently, Murphy served as the general manager of the Federal Taphouse downtown, before it closed.

Each of them brings their own specialty to the partnership and described their skillsets. Chrissy is on operations, Sean is the creative guy and Murphy is the tinkerer. They all help cook and develop menu items, as well.

After years of working for other people, they all enjoy having their own place, and even have hopes of opening more locations in the future.

“It’s exciting, but it’s all possessing, in a good way,” Chrissy said. “There’s such a sense of pride that we’ve made it here. We’ve all put in our dues; we’ve all put in our time working for other people, and being able to say, ‘this is ours; we did it; it’s happening,’ that I think is the most gratifying part.”

Bodega Food Co. is located at 1100 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website or Facebook page.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading

Christmas market planned for Harrisburg’s SoMa neighborhood, with shopping and Santa

A past SoMa Christmas Market

While it may just be fall, the holidays are just around the corner, and one festival is getting ready for the holly jolly.

The SoMa Christmas Market will return to downtown Harrisburg on Sunday, Nov. 30, bringing shopping, food and, of course, Santa.

The event, hosted by Sara Bozich and Harristown Enterprises, will take place on S. 3rd Street, between Market and Chestnut streets.

Over 30 vendors will line the street selling handmade goods and gifts. Additionally, DJ EMD will be playing holiday music and Santa will be on site for photos. Food and beverage vendors will be there to serve attendees as well, including 717 Tacos, Cousins Maine Lobster, Madeline’s Sweets & Savories, HOLLA Spirits, Royal Winery and Shy Bear Brewing.

SoMA businesses will be open during the festival as well.

The festival runs from 12 to 4 p.m. and is free to attend.

For more information and a full list of vendors, visit Sara Bozich’s website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Harrisburg announces trick or treat night, Halloween festival

Harrisburg’s Bash at the Brownstone 2023. Photo courtesy of the City of Harrisburg.

Harrisburg has announced the date of one of the sweetest nights of the year.

The city will celebrate trick-or-treat on Thursday, Oct. 30, Harrisburg announced on Monday.

The trick or treat night includes all neighborhoods in the city and runs from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Harrisburg has historically observed the holiday on the Thursday before Halloween.

Additionally, on Oct. 22, the city will hold its annual Bash at the Brownstone in Reservoir Park, from 5 to 8 p.m. The festivities include trunk or treat, goat cuddling, a magician, face painting and free food. Costumes are encouraged and the city will award prizes as well.

For more information, visit Harrisburg’s website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Is Nursing Your Second Act? A Friendly Guide for Central PA Career-Changers

In 2025, many people are switching careers. If you are thinking about a career change, you should seriously consider nursing as a second act. Nursing is a profession that appeals to many people because it enables them to help others and make a positive impact, but there are many other reasons why it is a sensible second career in 2025. This post will explore the reasons why people are changing careers, why nursing is a smart choice, and offer advice on how to get started. Interested? Read on to find out more.

 Why People Are Changing Careers in 2025

Many people are changing careers in 2025, and this is for a few different reasons. Industries are shifting, which means that jobs that once seemed stable and secure now face huge changes.

The Rise of Technology

Of course, one of the primary reasons for this has been the rise of AI and automation. Technology is currently reshaping many industries, and many people have valid concerns about being replaced and struggling to find comparable work. Around a fifth of US workers fear that AI will make them obsolete in the years to come.

Economic Uncertainty

There has been domestic and global economic uncertainty since the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting in mass layoffs, mergers, and outsourcing. This can keep employees on their toes and create concerns over job security.

Wellbeing

There has also been greater emphasis placed on wellbeing since the COVID-19 pandemic. Many people find themselves rethinking their jobs, particularly if they work long hours, feel a lack of recognition, and/or have high levels of stress. Many are ditching their old jobs and finding work that has greater meaning and improves their wellbeing.

Why Nursing is a Great Second Career

Nursing is a smart choice for those seeking a second career. There are many benefits to a career in nursing, such as:

Growing Demand

There is faster-than-average job growth for registered nurses in the years to come, which means that it can be easier to find work. This is due to aging populations and increased healthcare needs, particularly in areas such as Pennsylvania.

Job Security

Following this, you benefit from job security in nursing. Aging populations, the need for healthcare even during economic instability, and the fact that nursing is not at threat from AI and automation all mean that nurses will always be in demand.

Career Growth Opportunities

Nursing is a broad field, and there are many different pathways and areas for growth. Many registered nurses continue to study and specialize in different areas, whether this is children’s nursing, mental health nursing, A&E nursing, etc.

Good Pay

Nursing can also be a lucrative field. The median annual wage for RNs was $93,600 in May 2024, and those who specialize can earn well into six figures.

Flexibility

Nurses can also work in many different places and in different settings, allowing them to find the place that best suits their needs. Many people also use nursing as a way to travel, as there is a strong demand in many countries, which is ideal for those who want to see the world.

Meaningful Work

Finally, there are few professions as meaningful as nurses. Nurses have the satisfaction of knowing that they are helping people and even saving lives each and every day. For many nurses, they see their job more as a way of life than a profession. If you are looking for a job that gives you a sense of purpose and commands respect, nursing is a great option.

Getting Qualified

So, if you are considering a career in nursing, obviously, you need to get qualified and receive sufficient training. For career switchers, an Accelerated Bachelor of Science (ABSN) is the best option if you already hold a bachelor’s degree in a non-nursing field. These programs allow you to earn your degree much faster, often in around 2 years (as opposed to four). For instance, there are ABSN programs in Pennsylvania that combine online coursework with hands-on clinical experience. This will provide you with the real-world experience and confidence you need to launch your nursing career.

In 2025, many people are changing careers, and this trend shows no signs of slowing in the years to come. For many people, a second career in nursing is a fantastic option. Nursing allows you to make a positive difference to the world, but you also benefit from strong job security, good pay, and a high level of flexibility. It can be daunting to start, but those with a bachelor’s degree in a non-nursing field can accelerate their career switch with an ABSN and embark on an exciting and rewarding new chapter in their lives.

Sponsored Content

Continue Reading

Burg Review: Gamut’s “The Revolutionists” is a timely, taut, entertaining exploration of rights, tyranny

The principal cast of “The Revolutionists”

“You don’t always get to pick the ending, but it doesn’t mean it’s not a good story.”

Paris, 1793. Four women enmeshed in the French Revolution and a Haitian uprising find sisterhood as they march to the – well. You know. Let’s not give away the ending, or leave the impression that “The Revolutionists” is dark.

“The Revolutionists,” opening Gamut Theatre Group’s Season 33, is a funny play about dark themes. The abuse of power. Oppression of women. How, and even whether, to use our talents to overturn a world order tottering toward authoritarianism.

Gamut’s presentation of Lauren Gunderson’s 2018 play about women finding their voices in a society intent on keeping them voiceless is timely and taut. An all-women production crew spotlights the continuing need for women to demand their inalienable rights.

Director Kelli Kauterman brought the relevant script to Gamut, the Harrisburg production company known for exploring contemporary themes through the lens of history and by amplifying overlooked voices. Kauterman keeps a fast pace, fearlessly embracing the entwined humor and pathos of four women in untenable situations.

Gunderson uses her literary license to convene three divergent historical characters, with one fictionalized from an amalgam of real women.

Here is writer Olympe De Gouges (Katherine Campbell Rossi), who went from young widow to campaigner against forced marriages and for women’s rights. In “The Revolutionists,” it’s her female friendships that inspire her to pen “The Declaration of the Rights of Women and of the Female Citizen” to counter the French Revolution manifesto declaring the rights of “man and of the citizen.”

Marianne Angelle (Weimy Montero Candelario), the play’s fictional character, represents the women fighting and spying during the simultaneous revolution of Haiti, fighting French enslavement on the island known then as Saint-Domingue. Her story bears witness to the freedom fighters left out of the history books. (Personally, I loved her red sash proclaiming “Revolution for All” and portending the sisterhood of suffragettes to come).

The name of Charlote Corday (Elizabeth Hood) comes down in history as the assassin of Jean Paul Marat, leader of the Revolution’s Jacobin faction that imposed its will through bloodshed and terror. “I have killed one man to save 100,000,” she said in her defense.

Whether Marie Antoinette (Rebecca Joy Thomas) was a heartless monarch or a misplaced Austrian girl drowning in a vat of French court intrigue, “The Revolutionists” finally gives her a say in her story. In a witty line, she justifies her infamous, and debunked, “let them eat cake” quote with, “I thought I was ordering lunch!”

Here, she is not a caricature but a human with children to love, fears to express, and a delight in ribbons – pretty red playthings that morph into reflections of the rivers of blood carrying these women to their destinies.

As the lights come up, we meet De Gouges, comically floundering as she seeks her writer’s voice. Soon, she finds herself sought by the other characters pleading to use her pen for their causes.

Angelle is visiting while conducting reconnaissance for the Haitian attempt to overturn France’s enslavement and colonization of Haiti, known then as Saint Domingue. She wants her friend to write pamphlets exhorting her cause.

The fiery Corday and flighty Marie Antoinette just walk in, because it’s perfectly natural that a future assassin needs some killer last words to shout from the scaffold and a doomed, maligned former queen wants someone to tell her story.

The happenstance of their encounters creates initial mistrust, but the four women build bonds over their convictions and strengths. They support each other on their way to the deeds they must do. Using the only tools available to them – a pen, a knife, a letter – they express their feelings to the men in their lives, with varying degrees of success.

De Gouges’ frustration at the National Assembly’s rejection of her “Declaration of the Rights of Women” to the National Assembly starts a slide toward discouragement. Corday meets her target in his bathtub, carving her name into history with, as the script puts it, a “stab-stab” – an assassination driving further rifts into a deep political divide.

The actors convincingly build relationships and find their characters’ commonalities. Rossi’s bouncy, energetic De Gouges gushes with ideas, ready to tell off the establishment about its shortcomings.

As Angelle, Candelario brings real-life passion to the character without a historic counterpart. Angelle knows that her fight could devastate her happy family, but Candelario helps us understand her fight against the hypocrisy of a nation seeking liberté and égalité while suppressing both to reap the rewards of Haiti’s sugar cane.

Hood is fierce as Corday, burning with determination to snuff out the voice of the extremist Jacobin leader whose words sent countless people to their deaths. Thomas’ flitting and fretting gives Marie Antoinette some of the night’s biggest laughs, but she effortlessly pivots to lines that nail the dire truths of the lives of these women – she can be “unexpectedly profound,” she says – and faces the credible and the trumped-up charges against her with regal poise.

Lynne Porter’s minimalist set tells us all we need to know about the fate of the characters – and maybe ourselves, if we fail to deploy our powers of art and storytelling against tyranny. In a nation where the zealots are in charge, a giant guillotine frames the doorway on the stage. Two more guillotines dangle over the heads of the audience.

The laughter diminishes as each woman faces her fate. Cracks in their solidarity begin to show as fear of the next knock on the door forces some to choose between activism or survival.

Gunderson’s play could use some editing here, as repetition of the key themes – words matter, stories matter, art can be as real as death, hope survives – blunt their emotional impact. Skillfully, the actors and Kauterman’s direction chart a steady course back to relevance and a revelatory connection with the audience.

The characters hope, in the words of De Gouges, to “outlive these f-ers.” In Gamut’s production of “The Revolutionists,” they do, confronting the rise of darkness in society through the illuminating power of theater.

“The Revolutionists”: Gamut Theatre Group, Oct. 4 to 19, 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets at www.gamuttheatre.org. Strong language. Recommended for ages 12+.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading