Jobsite's 2009–10 Main Stage Season

Jobsite Theater, resident theater company at TBPAC and recipient of the 2008 Creative Loafing Best of the Bay Awards for Best Play, Best Costumes and Best Artistic Direction, is proud to announce their 2009–10 season, marking their 12th season of bringing quality innovative theater to Tampa Bay.

Year after year, Jobsite’s audience has grown from 5% to 55% without ever taking a single step back at the box office. Jobsite productions consistently rank high in annual lists, like those made by Creative Loafing, and the unique nature of their programming draws an unmatched share of the elusive 18–35 year old demographic. Jobsite’s 10th anniversary season again set records, with season ticket sales up 55% from the previous year. Jobsite estimates that they will service over 8,000 patrons in this current season.

The Line Up

This 2009–10 season features: a return to a favorite Jobsite playwright, a stage adaptation of one of the great horror film classics, a swinging ‘60s British sex farce, a hilarious new comedy fresh out of New York, a wildly imaginative new comedy by MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient and Pulitzer Prize finalist, and a very adult coming-of-age tale inspired by one of the world’s most beloved comic strips.

For more about a show, click the title in the menu at left, or see a full schedule of all our shows at our events calendar.

Tickets

Jobsite has frozen prices for the third straight season to encourage continued patronage in a down economy. All productions will run at 8p Thu. – Sat. and 4p Sun. with all tickets priced at $24.50.

2009–10 Season Tickets

A mini-season ticket to the remaining three 2009–10 plays is now on sale for 20% off the regular price – that’s $58.80 per season ticket plus a $10 handling fee per order. For more ticket information, .

“In a little less than 10 years, Jobsite has become the closest thing to a top Off-Broadway theater that the Bay area has to offer … While the productions put on by other local theaters last season were hit-and-miss, Jobsite shows were consistently first-rate. If you believed in theater as an art form, if you looked to stage plays to provide you not just with entertainment but with illumination, Jobsite had to be your destination. Bay area culture wouldn’t be the same without it.” – Creative Loafing