<div dir="ltr"><b>SONGS WITHOUT WORDS, nationally recognized new play from Chicago playwright, to
perform at convergence-continuum’s Tweener Series August 29th - 31st</b><br clear="all"><div><br></div><div><i>Songs Without Words</i> (<i>or, The Mendelssohn Play</i>), an award winning solo play from Chicago-based actor/playwright Jennifer Vosters, will perform three
shows through con<i>ver</i>gence-continu<i>um</i>’s “Tweener Series” this August.
<i>Songs Without Words</i> is the humorous, heartbreaking story of one artistic soul inhabiting two
very different artists. Featuring Vosters’s tour-de-force performance as sibling composers Fanny
and Felix Mendelssohn, <br></div><div><br></div><div><i>Songs Without Word</i>s wrestles with gender and genius, family and fame,
siblinghood and the power of art. </div><div><br></div><div>The play won the 2024 M. Elizabeth Osborn Award from the American Theatre Critics
Association, a national award recognizing outstanding new plays from emerging playwrights.
<i>Songs Without Words</i> also won Critics’ Pick of the Fringe at the Cincinnati Fringe Festival. </div><div><br></div><div>Alan Jozwiak of the League of Cincinnati Theatres called <i>Songs Without Words</i> <a href="https://www.leagueofcincytheatres.info/cincy-fringe-2024-cancel-this-musical-and-songs-without-words-very-strong/">“a rich and beautiful tapestry of two composers’ lives that is well told and wonderfully acted</a>.” Fellow critic
Katrina Reynolds lauded its “<a href="https://www.leagueofcincytheatres.info/kats-fringe-reviews-june-7-9/">incredible writing, exciting direction, and what can only bedescribed as a flawless performance.</a>” Kirk Sheppard of The Sappy Critic gave it “<a href="https://thesappycritic.substack.com/p/fringe-62-day-two">a must-see recommendation</a>,” and Milwaukee’s Russ Bickerstaff described it as “<a href="https://thesmallstage.weebly.com/blog/mendelssohn-mendelssohn-vosters">a remarkable piece…[that]speaks to universals in art, life, and familial love, making it a one-hour journey anyone can take.</a>” </div><div><br></div><div>Fanny Mendelssohn was a 19th
-century composer who, like most women of the time, was not
permitted to be a professional artist. Her younger brother Felix, famous for masterpieces like
“The Wedding March” and “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing,” soared to stardom while she
remained relatively obscure, until recent interest in her music has propelled her into the spotlight. </div><div><br></div><div>While lovers of history and classical music will find much to enjoy, Vosters stresses that Songs
Without Words is a story for everybody. “It’s about sibling love and sibling rivalry, it’s about
family, it’s about trying and failing and trying again to live up to your potential,” she says. It’s
fast-paced—only 60 minutes—and from Ohio to Saskatchewan, it’s been striking a chord with
audiences from all walks of life.
<br></div><div><br></div><div>Songs Without Words<br>Written and Performed by Jennifer Vosters<br>Thu-Sat at 8 p.m.<br><br>ONE WEEKEND ONLY<br><br>August 29th through August 31st<br>Tickets are $20 general admission</div><div>for tickets please visit <a href="http://www.convergence-continuum.org">www.convergence-continuum.org</a><br><br>All performances are held at the Liminis Theater<br>2438 Scranton Rd. Cleveland 44113<br>in the Historic Tremont neighborhood.<br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><span class="gmail_signature_prefix">-- </span><br><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_signature" data-smartmail="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr">Cory Molner<div>Executive Artistic Director</div><div>convergence-continuum</div><div><a href="mailto:cmolner@convergence-continuum.org" target="_blank">cmolner@convergence-continuum.org</a></div><div>216-308-9375</div><div>He/him (<a href="https://pronouns.org/" target="_blank">what this?</a>)</div></div></div></div>