 Hi, I'm Kaye Schultz and I'm playing Lizzie Bennet. And I'm Anna Rock and I'm playing Mary as well as Mr. Bingley. What I love about this adaptation is that it is relatable for somebody who is not familiar with the text. If you are familiar with the text, it brings out some of our favorite moments and gives light to them in a new buoyant way. And it's very fun to see a cast of eight people play all of the characters we know and love or people that we're coming to know for the first time. It's a very friendly adaptation and very light without losing sight of the true lesson and the message of the book. This adaption is really, really funny and we all know that the book Pride and Prejudice is obviously funny but this kind of takes all those elements and blows it into big out of the box proportions. And I think that's a really cool thing because it actually makes the serious parts a little more poignant and serious I think. And it really makes the whole thing really fun and really vibrant and very buoyant. My name is Abby Page and I'm going to be playing Mr. Bennett and Charlotte Lucas. I'm Kim Bennett and I'm the Artistic Director of the Law Station Theatre and I am playing Mrs. Bennett. It lets you know right away that this is not a standard kind of adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. It takes a lot of risks, it has a lot of fun with the story. I'm Christopher Scheer, I'm dialect coaching Pride and Prejudice. It's fun to be here as a dialect coach, coaching the cast to all have a period received pronunciation, Queen's English, British accents. Oh she is much too perfect to be admired, I rather hate her. The dialect work in a show like this, a period show like this, is really a holistic part of the whole style of the piece but there's a sort of magic to it where the same way that a chiropractor or an acupuncturist might work on one part of your body and it affects the rest of your body, the shift in resonance and muscularity of the accent really helps transform the actor throughout their entire physicality and physical presence on stage. The play is relevant today, there are many universal truths primarily of sisterhood, that's what I've found working on this show, is that there are a lot of universal truths that unfortunately still hold true today in terms of the way that people approach women, the way that women are pressured to do a variety of things socially that they might not otherwise be inclined to do without the pressures of their family or society or their surroundings. It's pretty standard throughout that all characters are playing multiple parts and that means actually requires some very fast costume changing and a lot of suspension of disbelief on the part of the audience from moment to moment, very quick, very fast changes of the actor from one role to another, the same actor playing a different role. I think people should come and see this show, well it's a romantic comedy, everybody loves a good romantic comedy and this especially is so comedic and so full of love, I think it's a really fun evening out. And you've got to come see this, Kim Vence portrays Mrs. Bennett alone is worth the price of admission, so yeah, it's going to be a lot of fun.