
This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
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This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
This page may take a moment to load.

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Sheriff’s Office that list the reports from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load

This is a complete list of reports responded to by the Nacogdoches Police Department
This page may take a moment to load.

This is the report from the Nacogdoches County Jail that lists the arrests made from 6 a.m. of the previous day to 6 a.m. of the listed day.

This page may take a moment to load
As part of its 2013-2014 University Series “Live Out Loud,” the Stephen F. Austin State University College of Fine Arts, along with the SFA School of Theatre, will present “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Oct. 8 through 12, in W.M. Turner Auditorium on the SFA campus. A special 2 p.m. matinee performance will also be presented on Saturday, Oct. 12.
The play, by Sarah Ruhl, premiered in 2007 and won a Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding New Play. It examines the conflicts between present-day technology’s ability to connect and isolate people in the digital age.
“Dead Man’s Cell Phone” is a wildly imaginative comedy centered on a woman confronting her assumptions about morality, redemption and the need to connect in a technologically obsessed world, according to Laura Rikard, assistant professor of acting in the School of Theatre and the play’s director.
“I am so pleased the SFA School of Theatre is mounting a play by one of America’s most produced modern playwrights,” Rikard said. “Fifty years from now, our students will study the works of Sarah Ruhl just as they study Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams today. Her imaginative plots are driven by charming characters, and expressed through eloquent and poetic text that will entertain and enlighten the audience.”
Charles Isherwood of The New York Times writes of the playwright: “Characters in her plays, which include ‘The Clean House’ and ‘Eurydice,’ negotiate the no man’s land between the everyday and the mystical, talking like goofs one minute and philosophers the next. She writes surrealist fantasies that happen to be populated by eccentrically real people, comedies in which the surface illogic of dreams is made meaningful – made truthful – by the deeper logic of human feeling.”
Ruhl’s plays have been produced on Broadway by Lincoln Center Theater and off-Broadway at Playwrights’ Horizons, Second Stage, Classic Stage Company and Lincoln Center’s Mitzi Newhouse Theater. Her plays have been produced regionally across the country, with premieres at Yale Repertory Theatre, the Goodman Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Arena Stage, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Actors Theatre of Louisville and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.
In 2003, Ruhl was the recipient of the Helen Merrill Emerging Playwrights Award and the Whiting Writers’ Award. She is a member of 13P and of New Dramatists and was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2006. She was recently the recipient of the PEN Center award for a mid-career playwright, the Feminist Press’s 40 Under 40 award and a 2010 Lilly Award.
Prior to the opening night performance, there will be a 7 p.m. informative talk about the author and the play presented by Rikard in Griffith Gallery located across the hall from Turner Auditorium. The audience is invited back to the gallery for a post-performance reception to meet the cast, crew and director and to honor the event’s corporate sponsor, Tipton Ford Lincoln.
This play is recommended for mature audiences. Please visit www.theatre.sfasu.edu/ and click on the On Stage button to view the content advisory. If it were a movie, “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” would be rated PG-13.
Single tickets for “Dead Man’s Cell Phone,” which is also included in the School of Theatre’s Mainstage Series, are $20 for adults, $15 for seniors and $7.50 for students and youth. For tickets or more information, call the SFA Fine Arts Box Office at (936) 468-6407 or visit www.finearts.sfasu.edu.
Griffith Gallery and Turner Auditorium are located in the Griffith Fine Arts Building, 2222 Alumni Drive.
The Stephen F. Austin State University School of Theatre will present the student-directed one-act play “Lone Star” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27, and at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28, in the Downstage Theatre on the SFA campus.
The play, written by James McLure and directed by The Woodlands senior theater major Nick Pinelli, takes place in the cluttered backyard of a small-town Texas bar. Roy, the high school hero, has returned from serving in the Vietnam War and tries to re-establish his life in the community. When he is joined by his younger brother, Ray, and his brother’s friend, Cletus, the underpinnings of Roy’s world begin to collapse as the night continues, according to Pinelli.
“But, despite everything, it all ends as breezily and happily as it began,” he said.
The cast features Lewis Newman, exchange student from Sheffield, England, as Roy; Brandon Hood, Mesquite junior, as Ray; and Keenan Chiasson, Richmond freshman, as Cletus.
The production team includes April Gore, Katy junior, stage manager; Landy Trapp, Crystal City senior, scenic designer; Cadie Horne, Houston senior, costume designer; Daniel Miller, Sugar Land junior, lighting designer; Austin Holt, Weatherford junior, sound designer; and Vanessa Hendricks, Emory senior, properties designer.
Pinelli has many acting credits at SFA, among them the roles of Jason in “Rabbit Hole” and Keith in “Stage Door,” in the ensemble in “Little Shop of Horrors,” and in the biennial Festival of New American Plays.
Admission is $3. The Downstage Theatre is located on the first floor of the Griffith Fine Arts Building, 2222 Alumni Drive.