By ANDREW BERGMAN


JUNE 8 – 24

"Just when you were beginning to think you were never going to laugh again on Broadway, along comes Social Security and you realize that it is once more safe to giggle in the streets. Indeed, you can laugh out loud, joyfully, with, as it were, social security, for the play is a hoot, and better yet, a sophisticated, even civilized hoot.” – N.Y. Post


Andrew Bergman is a director, screenwriter, author, playwright and producer. Bergman earned a PhD in American history from the University of Wisconsin, his dissertation being a study of Depression-era Hollywood films. Bergman’s knowledge of 1930s screwball comedies influenced the “old-fashioned genre entertainment” of much of his work. His screenplays include “Blazing Saddles,” “The In-laws,” “So Fine,” “Fletch,” “The Freshman,” “Soapdish,” “Honeymoon in Vegas,” and ”It Could Happen to You.”

Trendy Manhattan art dealers Barbara and David Kahn have their domestic tranquility hilariously shattered with the arrival of Barbara’s eccentric mother, goody-goody nerd of a sister and her uptighthusband. Add their desire to “rescue” their sexually precocious college student daughter to the mix, as well as an unexpected romance between their 90-year client and Barbara’s mom and you have a sure-fire recipe for laughter.