The inspired choice at the heart of this beautiful realization of Shakespeare’s vision in Twelfth Night is the creation of Illyria, the neverland in which Shakespeare set the play. There was no Illyria in Shakespeare’s time, and really had been no such nation since Roman times. Whatever Shakespeare was going for, it was not constricted by any realities contemporary to him. This meant that director Gavin Witt was free in turn to fashion something that in 21st-Century terms would correspond to Shakespeare’s fantasy. And what he presents is a kind of amalgam of the Marx Brothers’ Freedonia and the Warner Brothers’ Casablanca. There are slinky evening gowns you might see at Rick’s Café Americain. There is a hat that echoes a fez. There is an outfit like a Greek soldier’s. Sebastian and Viola wear plus-fours and Norfolk jackets, topped with newsboy hats. The costumes, by designer David Burdick, all fit together and, together with the set by Josh Epstein which suggests a colonnaded white town overlooking the Adriatic (locus of the ancient Illyria), convey a world between the two World Wars. It is at once idyllic and dangerous.
Tags:
Adriatic,
Allen McCullough,
Andrew Aguecheek,
As You Like It,
Balkans,
Brian Reddy,
Buddy Haardt,
Carolyn Hewitt,
Casablanca,
Center Stage,
David Burdick,
Downton Abbey,
Edith Piaf,
Feste,
fez,
Freedonia,
Gavin Witt,
Greek soldier,
Illyria,
Josph Epstein,
Julie-Ann Elliott,
Linda Kimbrough,
Malvolio,
Maria,
Marx Brothers,
Merchant of Venice,
newsboy hat,
Norfolk jacket,
Olivia,
Orsino,
Palmer Heffernan,
Portia,
Richard Hollis,
Rick's Cafe Americain,
Sebastian,
Sir Andrew Aguecheek,
Sir Toby Belch,
Toby Belch,
Twelfth Night,
Viola,
Warner Brothers,
William Connell,
William Shakespeare Comments Off on Visiting the Ilyrian Casbah: Center Stage Does TWELFTH NIGHT Proud |
Read the rest of this entry »
Many of Shakespeare’s comedies are essentially love delivery vehicles, giddy confections that give the audience an extraordinarily broad license just to roll in the bliss of it. I think especially ofTwelfth Night, Much Ado About Nothing, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. But the most love-mad of all is surely As You Like It. And thankfully, that love-mad champagne feeling is served up nearly full-force in the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company’s latest rendering of the play.
Tags:
A Midsummer Night's Dream,
Albert Gilman,
Ardennes,
As You Like It,
Barry Louis Polisar,
Celia,
Chesapeake Shakespeare Company,
Daniel O'Brien,
English Channel,
Forest of Arden,
Godspell,
Gregory Burgess,
Hall & Oates,
Ingrid Michaelson,
Jacques,
Jenny Leopold,
Matthew Armstrong,
Meiko,
Much Ado About Nothing,
Orlando,
Rosalind,
Sean Chambers,
sheepherding,
Stuck on You,
Touchstone,
Twlefth Night,
Vince Eisenson,
William Shakespeare,
WWF Comments Off on CSC’s AS YOU LIKE IT: You’ll Like It Like That |
Read the rest of this entry »
Director David Schweizer has employed the unique resources of a professional company to sand down some of the rough edges in the script, in a way smaller companies couldn’t do. Using those resources, he has sneakily transformed a mid-century work of American realism into something fantastical like Midsummer Night’s Dream or As You Like It, and thereby has solved a lot of problems.
Tags:
A Midsummer Night's Dream,
As You Like It,
Bus Stop,
Center Stage,
Centerstage,
David Schweizer,
Forest of Arden,
Irene Lewis,
Kansas,
Kwame Kwei-Armah,
Marilyn Monroe,
Midsummer Night's Dream,
Pirates of Penzance,
The Merchant of Venice,
William Inge,
William Shakespeare Comments Off on Not in Kansas Anymore: Bus Stop at Center Stage |
Read the rest of this entry »