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University of Idaho Theatre Arts Department announces 2025-2026 season

Coeur d'Alene Press | UPDATED 2 months, 3 weeks AGO
| September 12, 2025 1:00 AM

The University of Idaho’s Department of Theatre Arts has announced its 2025-26 season, featuring two musicals and two plays on stage in Moscow.

“Pippin” — Oct. 30 to Nov. 9
• Music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz, book by Roger O. Hirson
• Hartung Theater, 625 Stadium Drive 

“Pippin”— a genre-defying musical journey with a score by Stephen Schwartz, the creator of “Wicked” — tells the story of a young prince’s quest for purpose through war, pleasure and power, only to discover that fulfillment might lie in life’s quiet, everyday moments.  

“No Exit” — Dec. 4-14
• By Jean-Paul Sartre, adapted from French by Paul Bowles
• Pocket Playhouse, Shoup Hall, 1028 W. Sixth St. 

In “No Exit,” two women and one man are locked up together for eternity in a hideous room in Hell. With no mirrors, lights that never turn off and no escape, each soul is stripped of secrecy as even the blackest deeds are mercilessly exposed. 

First Bite New Play Series
• Details to be announced

“Ride the Cyclone” — Feb. 27 to March 8
• Book, music and lyrics by Jacob Richmond and Brooke Maxwell
• Forge Theater, 404 Sweet Ave. 

“Ride the Cyclone” is a darkly hilarious and unexpectedly heartfelt musical. Six Canadian teens from the St. Cassian Chamber Choir meet their untimely end on a roller coaster — only to wake up in limbo, greeted by an aging mechanical fortune teller named The Amazing Karnak. In a dusty, forgotten amusement park warehouse, these ghostly teens are given one extraordinary chance: Tell their story, and one of them will be returned to life. But who most deserves a second chance?  

“A Comedy of Errors” — May 1-10 
• By William Shakespeare
• Hartung Theater, 625 Stadium Drive

Shakespeare’s classic “A Comedy of Errors” spins a madcap tale of double trouble. After being separated from their twins in a shipwreck, Antipholus of Syracuse and his servant, Dromio of Syracuse, arrive in Ephesus, only to be confused when locals seem to recognize them. Unaware their twins live in the city, the Syracusans unwittingly cause havoc through a comedic series of incidents of mistaken identities. 

Admission for all productions is free for U of I students and $6-$26 for the public. Tickets for “Pippin” are on sale now at uitickets.com.