Arts & Entertainment

'Salem Nights' Open SSU Stage To Witch City Residents Free Of Charge

The next show available free to Salem residents is "Angels in America, Part One: Millenium Approaches" on Friday night.

Johnathon Pappas as Joe Pitt in "Angels in America" at Salem State University.
Johnathon Pappas as Joe Pitt in "Angels in America" at Salem State University. (Salem State University)

SALEM, MA — Salem residents are invited to attend the Tony Award-winning and Pulitzer Prize-winning drama "Angels in America, Part One: Millenium Approaches" on the Salem State University stage for free on Friday night as part of the school's "Salem Nights" performing arts program.

Friday's performance will be free to Salem residents showing proof of residency.

"With about 70 arts events annually on campus featuring the work of students, faculty and guest artists, most of the events we put on are free, and our ticket prices are low when there is a ticket," President John Keenan said. "As a state institution continually looking for opportunities to remove barriers to accessibility, including for our own arts programming, Salem Nights are another way we strive to make some of our largest productions accessible to the residents of Salem, our home community. I'm also looking forward to seeing the show myself."

Find out what's happening in Salemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Angels In America is a two-part epic that focuses on the HIV/AIDS epidemic in New York City during the 1980s. The material contains mature subject matter.

“"Today's student generation has COVID-19 as a point of reference for what happens within a pandemic, when there's fear, and public health agencies are trying to get messaging out," said Karen Gahagan, director of the Center for Creative and Performing Arts at Salem State. "Angels in America, Part One was a significant undertaking, a really challenging body of material. It gives audiences a glimpse into the AIDS/HIV epidemic of the 1980s as it became part of that generation's reality."

Find out what's happening in Salemfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"It is more than overdue," Faculty Director Peter Sampieri added. "In committing to this
challenging material, we made meaningful connections with the nursing department, counseling and health services, NAGLY (The North Shore Alliance of GLBTQ youth), and World Aids Day on campus.

"Most importantly, our queer students and faculty share a deep sense of pride and validation exploring the characters and events."

In addition to Friday night's performance of Angels in America, three more Salem Nights are planned for the coming spring 2025 semester:

  • March 1: Collective Rage: A Play in Five Betties by Jen Silverman, in the Callan Studio Theatre;
  • March 29: The Ballad of Tam Lin, a folk opera by Molly Pinto Madigan '13, in the Recital Hall (Harrington Campus); and
  • April 25: As You Like It by William Shakespeare, in the Sophia Gordon Center Main Stage Theatre.

Visit the Angels in America event page for tickets and event times.

(Scott Souza is a Patch field editor covering Beverly, Danvers, Marblehead, Peabody, Salem and Swampscott. He can be reached at Scott.Souza@Patch.com. X/Twitter: @Scott_Souza.)

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