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Turnip greens yarrow ricebean rutabaga endive cauliflower sea lettuce kohlrabi amaranth water spinach avocado daikon napa cabbage asparagus winter purslane kale. Celery potato scallion desert raisin horseradish spinach carrot soko. Lotus root water spinach fennel kombu maize bamboo shoot green bean swiss chard seakale pumpkin onion chickpea gram corn pea. Brussels sprout coriander water chestnut gourd swiss chard wakame kohlrabi beetroot carrot watercress. Corn amaranth salsify bunya nuts nori azuki bean chickweed potato bell pepper artichoke.
Nori grape silver beet broccoli kombu beet greens fava bean potato quandong celery. Bunya nuts black-eyed pea prairie turnip leek lentil turnip greens parsnip. Sea lettuce lettuce water chestnut eggplant winter purslane fennel azuki bean earthnut pea sierra leone bologi leek soko chicory celtuce parsley jícama salsify.
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I’m going to mix up a little color. We’ll use Van Dyke Brown, Permanent Red, and a little bit of Prussian Blue. In painting, you have unlimited power. You have the ability to move mountains. You can bend rivers. But when I get home, the only thing I have power over is the garbage. If there’s two big trees invariably sooner or later there’s gonna be a little tree. Let’s put some happy trees and bushes back in here. You can do anything here. So don’t worry about it. You got your heavy coat out yet? It’s getting colder.
And I know you’re saying, ‘Oh Bob, you’ve done it this time.’ And you may be right. We might as well make some Almighty mountains today as well, what the heck. I spend a lot of time walking around in the woods and talking to trees, and squirrels, and little rabbits and stuff. Now we’ll take the almighty fan brush.
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Happy Fall by Lisa Sanaye Dring
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Kevin Kling: Unraveled by Kevin Kling
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Magdalene by Mark St. Germain
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Side Effects May Include… by Lisa Loomer
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025
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Did My Grandfather Kill My Grandfather? by Cody LeRoy Wilson
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Happy Fall by Lisa Sanaye Dring
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Kevin Kling: Unraveled by Kevin Kling
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Magdalene by Mark St. Germain
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025

Side Effects May Include… by Lisa Loomer
July 9, 2025 – August 3, 2025
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Grandfather by Cody LeRoy Wilson
July 10, 2026 – August 9, 2026
Cody tells the unlikely journey of his blended family from Vietnam to Plum Run, West Virginia. In this compelling tale, he examines what it means to be Asian American, to love one family while embracing the unknown, and ultimately to question his own identity.

Grandfather by Cody LeRoy Wilson
July 10, 2026 – August 9, 2026
Cody tells the unlikely journey of his blended family from Vietnam to Plum Run, West Virginia. In this compelling tale, he examines what it means to be Asian American, to love one family while embracing the unknown, and ultimately to question his own identity.
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Peggy McKowen’s (she/her) association with CATF began in 2006, when she designed the costumes for Mr. Marmalade and Jazzland. As her time with the festival continued, she designed costumes for: Antonio’s Song: I was dreaming of a son, The Welcome Guest, The Wedding Gift, Not Medea, Everything You Touch, 1001, H2O, and Scott and Hem in the Garden of Allah; and scenery for From Prague, Wrecks, and Gidion’s Knot.
In 2007, Peggy joined the full-time staff as the Associate Producing Director. Since then, she has produced new works by: Johnna Adams, Christina Anderson, Lee Blessing, Angelica Chéri, Kara Lee Corthron, Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, Lydia R. Diamond, Steven Dietz, Richard Dresser, Charles Fuller, Keith Glover, Allison Gregory, Barbara Hammond, Chisa Hutchinson, Dael Orlandersmith, J.T. Rogers, Antonio Edwards Suarez, Lucy Thurber, Michael Weller, Beau Willimon, Bess Wohl, and others. She was instrumental in expanding the festival’s season from four to five, and from five to six plays. She was a driving force behind transferring CATF’s Uncanny Valley by Thomas Gibbons to 59E59 Theaters in New York, CATF’s first Off-Broadway production.
Peggy is dedicated to creating an anti-racist and anti-oppressive (ARAO) culture at CATF. She was instrumental in creating the institution’s ARAO committee and monthly ARAO discussion groups. She is developing a strategic and ongoing ARAO plan with Sarah Bellamy, CATF’s equity, diversity, and inclusion consultant, while engaging both staff and trustees in the journey.
Peggy strengthened CATF’s educational and outreach programming. She created new initiatives to increase and sustain the attendance of young audience members including Hostel YOUTH! for high school students and CATF/U for college students, and also reimagined the festival’s internship experience for emerging professionals. She enhanced and leads talktheater, the organization’s humanities series that encourages audience members to actively discuss the themes of the plays in a variety of events including lectures, panel discussions, and deliberative dialogues.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Peggy led the Contemporary American Theater Festival’s quick switch to digital programming. She envisioned CATF art in new ways for patrons and artists. She created both the CATFUNMUTED and playcastplus series that included online engagement between audiences and artists, interviews with designers and directors, audio dramas, and community celebrations.
Peggy was the featured artist in the exhibition High Drama: Costumes from the Contemporary American Theater Festival at the Museum of Fine Arts, Washington County, Maryland, which also toured to four cities throughout West Virginia. In 2018, Peggy was named West Virginia Artist of the Year at the Governor’s Arts Awards and in 2019, she was recognized by WV Living Magazine as one of the Wonder Women of the Year. Shepherdstown’s Insurance Outfitters awarded Peggy the 2018 Culture and the Arts Guide Award for her dedication to the local arts community. She is a member of United Scenic Artists 829.
Prior to joining the festival, Peggy was the resident designer for the Obie-award-winning Jean Cocteau Repertory in NY and the Phoenix Theatre Ensemble. Her regional theater work has been seen at Arkansas Repertory Theatre; Barrington Stage; Milwaukee Repertory Theater; Tennessee Repertory Theatre; Texas, Dallas, and Houston Shakespeare Festivals; and Perseverance Theater. International theater work includes the B.A.T. Studio Theatre (Berlin, Germany); the Teatro Alfa Real (Sao Paulo, Brazil); and the E.T.A. Hoffmann Theatre (Bamberg, Germany). Peggy designed the first full-length English-speaking production of The Tempest in Beijing, China and the first Mandarin translation of How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying for the Seven Stages Production Company in Beijing.
Peggy holds an MFA from the University of Texas (Austin), and has taught theater and humanities at Shepherd University, Dickinson College, Dickinson College/London/Rome, and West Virginia University, where she was Chair of the Division of Theatre and Dance for five years and received the Outstanding Creative/Scholarship and Teaching Award several times throughout her tenure. Peggy played a significant role in creating Shepherd University’s theater major – a B.A. in Contemporary Theater Studies, in collaboration with the Department of Contemporary Art and Theater. She is often a respondent for the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival for arts administration, design, and play performance.
Peggy has been a member of the Rotary Club of Shepherdstown, is currently a member of the Shepherdstown Centennial Lions Club, and connects CATF in an active partnership with the Eastern Panhandle Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. Peggy served on the Arts Advisory Council for Hagerstown Community College and the Board of the Shepherdstown Visitors Center. She directed the Antietam Remembrance walk, an inter-state event between West Virginia and Maryland. From 2011 to 2019, she also directed and produced Rumsey Radio Hour, the annual fundraiser for the Shepherdstown Library. She currently serves on the board for the National New Play Network.
In recognition of her work as both theater designer and administrator, Peggy has been featured in Live Design and Wonderful West Virginia magazines. Her production work has been captured in American Theater magazine, The New York Public Library Videotape for the Theater on Film and Tape Archive, The New York Times, Back Stage, New York Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, and The Theater Experience and Theatre: The Lively Art. Peggy is also the co-editor of the anthology, Plays by Women from the Contemporary American Theater Festival, a collection of plays by women that had their first production at the festival.
Trent Kugler spent his first summer at CATF in 2006 as Technical Director for the Frank Center Theater, and went on to build his professional career as the Assistant Technical Director at Studio Theater in Washington, D.C. working on shows including Helen Hayes nominated productions such as Adding Machine: A Musical (2009); The Solid Gold Cadillac (2010); Grey Gardens (2009); The History Boys (2009); Souvenir, A Fantasia on the Life of Florence Foster Jenkins (2008); Reefer Madness: The Musical (2008). During his time in DC, Trent was awarded the League of Washington Theatres’ Off Stage Award in 2008.
Trent began working full time with the festival in 2020 after spending the previous 10 years working seasonally with CATF and serving as Technical Director for the departments of art, theater, and music at Shepherd University. He continues to serve at Shepherd as an adjunct instructor of technical theater. Trent obtained his BFA in Theater Design/Technology from Otterbein University. His interest in robotics and building small electronic contraptions resulted in his first published paper by USITT and a Tech Expo “Best in Show” award for his work A Realistic and Interactive LED Candle in 2015.
Amy Wratchford is a seasoned arts leader with over two decades of experience in nonprofit theater. In 2021, Amy founded The Wratchford Group, an arts management consulting company with the vision to transform nonprofit arts organizations creating a stable, thriving, empowering, and equitable industry. Amy specializes in interim executive leadership, financial stabilization plans, Board governance, organizational analysis, and executive coaching. Interim leadership and advisory clients include Virginia Repertory Theatre, Barter Theatre, Virginia Stage Company, Synetic Theatre, the Old Globe, and the Historic Masonic Theatre. Beyond the arts, Amy also advises local nonprofits, including the Arrow Project, LIFEWorks, and New Directions Center.
Amy’s personal mission is to help create a more joyful, wholehearted, courageous world through the power of her example. She spent over ten years as Managing Director of the American Shakespeare Center. As the company’s chief administrative and financial officer, Amy oversaw finance, marketing, development, and other business management functions for ASC. In her first three years, Amy led the company to eliminate $1M in debt and back accounts payable. During her tenure, ASC’s budget grew from $2.4M in 2010 to $4.2M in 2020 (pre-COVID). She was instrumental in ASC’s successful SafeStart Season, becoming one of only a handful of theaters to safely produce for live audiences during the summer of 2020. During this time, she not only successfully garnered almost $2M in COVID relief funding but, also assisted numerous arts organizations in their SVOG and ERTC application processes.
Before joining ASC, Amy served as Managing Director of Synchronicity Theatre in Atlanta. Previously, she worked for 13 years in a number of capacities in theater in New York City including producer, director, and actor. Amy regularly serves on grant panels, including the National Endowment for the Arts and Virginia Commission for the Arts, as well as adjudicating panels, including EdTA China’s 2019 National Young Thespian Festival in Shanghai, as well as state, regional, and national community theater festivals.
She was an elected member of the Staunton City School Board (2018-2022; Vice Chair 2019-2022) and serves as Treasurer for both the Board of the Community Action Partnership of Staunton, Augusta, and Waynesboro (CAPSAW) and the Staunton High School Band Boosters. Amy has previously served on the advisory boards for both the Shenandoah LGBTQ Center and the Shenandoah Valley Governor’s School. She routinely lectures on finance, budgeting, and nonprofit governance for graduate, undergraduate, and high school programs. Amy holds a bachelor of fine arts degree in Acting from the Tisch School of the Arts of New York University and a master of fine arts degree in Performing Arts Management from Brooklyn College.
When not supporting all manner of performing arts, Amy enjoys reading, crocheting, baking, hiking, and riding her motorcycle through the back roads of the Shenandoah Valley.
As an alum of CATF’s internship program, Mayme (she/her) joined the Festival’s staff in 2024. She served as the Company Management Intern in 2006, helped patrons as the seasonal Group Sales and Ad Sales Manager in 2023, and is now with the company year-round to support Festival operations and the talented staff who work hard to make the magic of CATF happen year after year.
Mayme holds a B.A. in music from Otterbein University and a MBA from Hood College. Her professional experience includes work as the Campus Coordinator at Levine Music at Strathmore and time in higher education working as an Institutional Researcher. She valued her time spent at Hood College and Hagerstown Community College, gaining experience in data analytics, compliance reporting, assessment, and strategic planning. In this capacity, she served a year on the board of the Maryland Association for Institutional Research. In 2022, Mayme transitioned back into the arts, working part-time supporting the Appalachian Chamber Music Festival as their Festival Manager.
She currently calls Maryland home along with her spouse, their unbelievably friendly cats, and an array of house plants. In her free time, you may find her deep in a fantasy novel or working on a crochet or sewing project.
Vicki Willman joined the Theater Festival’s professional staff in January 2016 following over two decades of progressively responsible fundraising positions in the performing arts, public radio and television, eldercare, and higher education. Prior to joining CATF, she served for eleven years as Director of Development with the Maryland Symphony Orchestra where she worked with management, trustees, and volunteers to professionalize its development program to support concerts, educational programs, events, and community outreach initiatives.
Vicki was first drawn to the development profession through volunteering with a community orchestra and public radio station while simultaneously working alongside her father in the operation of a commission agency for Greyhound Bus Lines in Bismarck, ND. Following her father’s retirement, she joined the development staff of Prairie Public Broadcasting as a Corporate Support Associate. Vicki’s rebuilding of the radio network’s sponsorship base led to successive positions with Wisconsin Public Television in Madison, WI, and Maryland Public Television (MPT) in Owings Mills, MD.
Prior to joining MPT, she briefly held other development positions in her native North Dakota with The Sacred Heart Benedictine Foundation and at her alma mater, the University of Mary, where she earned her BS in Music Education. Vicki has served as a music panelist for the Maryland State Arts Council and performs regularly as a timpanist with the Frederick (MD) Symphony Orchestra.
Hope Campbell Gundlah joined CATF as their Grant Writer in February 2025. She relocated to the DC area from Chicago, where she served for three years as the Marketing & Communications Coordinator at A Red Orchid Theatre and two years as the Grant Writer at Perceptions Theatre.
Originally from Massachusetts, Hope earned her degrees in Theatre & Performance Studies and English Language & Literature from the University of Chicago (BA 2020). During her studies, she also served as an Undergraduate Research Fellow in Dramaturgy at Court Theatre and as the Assistant to the Director of the Youth Ensemble at The Revival.
Hope continues to work as an actor, playwright, and voiceover artist. She has performed with numerous companies, including Silver Spring Stage, A Red Orchid Theatre, Violet Surprise, Possibilities Theatre, Underscore Theatre, and the San Francisco Shakespeare Festival. She is represented for stage, screen, and voiceover by Grossman & Jack Talent. Her plays have won the Olga & Paul Menn Playwriting Award and the Sherwood Collins Playwriting Award and have received festival readings and productions at A Red Orchid Theatre, Beverly Arts Center, Accidental Shakespeare Company, and StageQ Theatre.
In her free time, Hope enjoys singing, doing puzzles, playing roleplaying games, and watching other people play roleplaying games.
Gaby (she/her) has been a part of the festival since 2010, when she joined the box office team. She graduated from West Virginia Wesleyan College, where she majored in Musical Theater and Arts Administration. After earning her Master’s Degree in Arts Management from George Mason University, she joined CATF’s full time staff. While at GMU, Gaby served on the executive committee of the Graduate Arts Management Society and received the Erin Isabelle Edwards Gaffney Award. Still involved at her alma mater, Gaby is an active member of the program’s Alumni Working Group. She’s served as a panelist for workshops at the Theatre Communications Group and WV Arts Day, and has directed productions at Shepherd University (Wondrous Strange, Dog Sees God) and in the community (The Miracle Worker). Gaby has also worked with Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Arvold Casting (History Channel’s The Wars), and Scrappy Cat Productions.
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CATF BOARD CELEBRATION TONIGHT
Tonight the CATF Board Of Trustees will honor and show our appreciation for the remarkable leadership of Lisa Younis. Lisa has completed her two year term as Board President and her nine years of service as a Trustee. Suzanne Shipley, President of Shepherd University, is hosting a party for Lisa and the CATF Board in her beautiful, … Continued
THE CATF TREK
The Contemporary American Theater Festival attracts theater fans, theater tourists and adventure seekers who travel short and long distances to see and experience our work…they follow us…they take to the road to see contemporary theater. We have created a sub-culture of audience members who participate in the entire experience. Where else can you spend two … Continued
OUR ODYSSEY CONTINUES…
The passion that we share for the Contemporary American Theater Festival acts like jet fuel and ignites the passion in our artists and audiences. This mutual passion helps us achieve critical success. And our passion and love for the work helps us overcome the financial barriers and obstacles that we face with each new season. … Continued
Fall 2010: Another Beginning
The 2010 Festival is history and the work speaks for itself. Now it is time to re-invent a new repertory. Nothing compares to the feeling that I have when I begin to plan a new season. It is Fall in Shepherdstown and that means reading scripts. I have been traveling back and forth to New York … Continued
FESTIVAL TIME
It is FESTIVAL TIME in Shepherdstown WV. Shepherdstown is the oldest town in West Virginia doing the newest plays in America. Visitors from across America are descending on this historic semi-rural town nestled in the foothills of the BlueRidge Mountains to experience Five new American plays in rotating Repertory. Our small town is alive with … Continued
Benefits Comparison Table
Classic
- Get the best seats—yours to keep year after year*.
- Get half-price additional single tickets for your member shows, available before the general public+.
- Book a spot in our private Lounge before the show
- Choose your dates in advance but receive unlimited ticket exchanges
- Save 25% at the Theatre bar and gift shop
Choice
SAVE 25%- Choose your dates in advance but receive unlimited ticket exchanges
- Save 25% at the Theatre bar and gift shop
- Select your own plays from our main and studio stage seasons
Whenever
- Select your own plays from our main and studio stage seasons
- Purchase 4-10 passes for the current season
*The Studio Theatre Series is general admission by floor.
+Half-price tickets available for Classic members for shows in your series. Members receive 15% off tickets for A Christmas Carol.













