Playwright Bob Bartlett wrote Love and Vinyl as a small-scale romance set in a record store. Its main characters, best friends Bogie and Zane visit their local shop and and “leave with so much more than a stack of vinyl.”
Most plays are made for the stage, but why create a set of a local record store when there’s countless shops around the country already built? Our neighborhood favorite Good Records has more character than any theater set could. For the rest of June, you can watch the story of Bogie and Zane unfold around the Alice Cooper and Polyphonic Spree iconography that so memorably coat the walls at Good Records.
The residency is presented by Kitchen Dog Theatre and directed by co-artistic director Christopher Carlos. Performances take place at 8:00 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday until June 23. Seats are placed in the two aisles and are very limited. Tickets are selling fast, secure yours here.