Monthly Archives: July 2011

STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL 2011: THE GRAPES OF WRATH

In one year, as a teen, about twenty years after the Great Depression’s end, I read Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, saw John Ford’s film of the novel, and heard Ramblin’ Jack Elliot at a club sing Tom Joad by … Continue reading

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STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL 2011: TITUS ANDRONICUS

Director Darko Tresnjak’s set for Titus Andronicus has a boldly white marble effect with occasional highlights of striking blood red, all suggesting both a butcher’s slab and a cruel and bloodthirsty Roman culture. Four statues atop a column each depict … Continue reading

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STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL 2011: JESUS CHRIST SUPER STAR

  Something encouraging happens after a performance of director Des McAnuff’s Jesus Christ Superstar. People, young and old, and some not too old, enthusiastically discuss both the musical and its production. They do so in the Avon’s lobby, in the … Continue reading

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STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL 2011: RICHARD III

Director Miles Potter sees “Richard’s theatrical ancestors” as “the Vice characters of medieval plays” whose “stated mission” was to “destroy virtue wherever they found it. In order to do so, they would do anything, assume any role, in order to … Continue reading

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STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL 2011: CAMELOT

Geraint Wyn Davies as King Arthur in Camelot This is Lerner and Loewe’s Camelot on Stratford’s 2011 stage. The tree vines and balconies are all gold. A “bird of prey” about which we’ve been warned by a sign in the … Continue reading

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SHAW FESTIVAL 2011: MY FAIR LADY

My Fair Lady opens with an aggressively active Covent Garden setting, one that feels alive and abrasive with survival in Molly Smith’s broadly realized production. Entertainers and regular folk do acrobatics and vigorously dance in this drab and dirty late … Continue reading

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SHAW FESTIVAL 2011: HEARTBREAK HOUSE

Christopher Newton’s gradually unsettling production of Heartbreak House begins with strains of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, one of music’s most potent statements of primitive energy and chaos. It ends with the sound of not too distant explosions as the Shotover … Continue reading

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STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL: THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR

Lucy Peacock as Mistress Ford and Laura Condlin as Mistress Page As a theatrical presence, Geraint Wyn Davies’ Falstaff  is playfully physical yet burdened with both bodily weight and the weight of age. He is stiff and sprite at the … Continue reading

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QUEEN OF PUDDINGS MUSIC THEATRE: ANA SOKOLOVIC’S OPERA SVADBA-WEDDING

A bride to be and five girlfriends gather to celebrate on the eve of her wedding ceremony. They wear knee length skirts of wine and black hues that flare out in puffs and folds over pattered or boldly reddish tights. … Continue reading

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