The young cast in Saguaro City Music Theatre’s production of “Willy Wonka” was drawn from the company’s summer kids program.

Saguaro City Music Theatre kicks off its third season of performances next weekend with Roald Dahl’s “Willy Wonka” musical.

It’s the first of three musicals on the three-year-old nonprofit company’s 2024 season lineup.

“There have been so many versions and iterations,” said Saguaro City artistic director and cofounder Drew Humphrey. “The one that we’re doing is about 75 minutes long ... and closely represents the Gene Wilder version from my youth.”

The musical stage version of “Willy Wonka,” based on English children’s author Dahl’s 1964 novel “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” borrows liberally from the 1971 Hollywood version, which should surprise no one. The theatrical version was reimagined by the English composer and lyricist Leslie Bricusse and British singer-songwriter Anthony Newley, who worked on the original film.

You’ll hear several songs from that movie, which featured Gene Wilder as the eccentric chocolatier Wonka, who plants golden tickets in candy bars and invites the lucky ticketholders to experience the magic and mayhem of his magnificent chocolate factory.

Don’t be surprised to hear the audience hum along to “Pure Imagination” (“Come with me/and you’ll be/In a world of pure imagination”) and “The Candy Man” (“Who can take a sunrise (who can take a sunrise)/Sprinkle it with dew (sprinkle it with dew)/Cover it with chocolate and a miracle or two?/The Candy Man (the Candy Man)”).

“This show really scratches that nostalgia itch,” Humphrey said.

The cast is largely comprised of children and teens enrolled in Saguaro City’s summer camp program that kicked off June 1 and culminates in the “Willy Wonka” performances June 21-23 at the Berger Center for the Performing Arts.

Chris Will, center, leads the cast of Saguaro City Music Theatre's production of "Willy Wonka" the musical in rehearsals. The show, produced as part of the company's summertime kids workshops, runs next weekend. 

Saguaro City cast the adult roles, including Catalina Foothills High School senior Wesley Geary in the roles of Candy Man and Mr. Salt, after auditions in April, Humphrey said.

Geary, who started his theater journey eight years ago in a kids program similar to Saguaro City, appeared in Saguaro City’s recent production of “Little Shop of Horrors.”

Wesley Geary

Saguaro City will perform “Willy Wonka” at 2 p.m. Friday, June 21; 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday, June 22; and 2 p.m. Sunday, June 23, at the Berger Center, 1200 W. Speedway, on the Arizona Schools for the Deaf and Blind campus.

Tickets are $25 for adults and free for children 17 and younger with paid adult admission if you are unable to pay the $10 suggested children’s ticket. Tickets are available through saguarocity.org.

In October, Saguaro City will turn its attention to the jukebox musical “Million Dollar Quartet,” featuring music by Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash. It runs Oct. 4-20. And we’re no longer in Kansas, Toto: from Dec. 20-Jan. 5, 2025, the company is mounting the ageless magic of “The Wizard of Oz.”

For details, visit saguarocity.org.

Popcorn and the cinema go together like peanut butter and jelly; it's hard to imagine a more perfect combination. But when did this pairing begin? Popping corn became popular in the 1840s after "wire-on-the-fire" poppers and popping apparatuses were invented. Popcorn became a staple at fairs, circuses, and with street vendors in the following decades. By 1930, 90 million people attended movies weekly, and popcorn vendors seized the opportunity. However, theater owners initially thought vending all concessions was "beneath their dignity," but they soon changed their stance. During 'The Great Depression', the industry boomed. Popcorn was originally sold outside the theaters, but cinema owners soon brought it inside. Post-pandemic, with film studios taking 50% of revenue shares, popcorn and concessions have become vital for cinema survival.


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Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com. On Twitter @Starburch