Category: 2011 Season


CANDIDA and TITUS ANDRONICUS Win SFBATCCs

April 11th, 2012 — 11:19am
James Carpenter and Rob Campbell in TITUS

SFBATCC winners Carpenter and Campbell in TITUS; photo by Kevin Berne.

On April 2, the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle (SFBATCC) announced its 2011 award winners during a ceremony at the Palace of Fine Arts. In the categories for Plays at Venues Over 300 Seats, our productions of Candida and Titus Andronicus took home several awards each: Cal Shakes Artistic Director Jonathan Moscone got the nod for his Candida direction, and Will McCandless for that production’s sound design; for Titus, James Carpenter garnered the Performance by a Male Actor in a Principal Role prize for his portrayal of the title character, Rob Campbell’s Saturninus role won him the Male Actor in a Principal Role category, and Paloma H. Young earned the costume design award.

Read the full list of winners here, and hearty congratulations to all!

Comment » | 2011 Season, Weekly News

VERONA, CANDIDA, SHREW, and Others Make Year-End Lists

January 3rd, 2012 — 6:21pm

Amid the hurry and flurry of the holiday season just past, Bay Area media outlets were busy crowning the year’s best creative achievements. We’re proud to say that our productions made most critics’ top-ten lists for 2011.

In the San Francisco Chronicle, critic Robert Hurwitt named Jonathan Moscone‘s production of Candida, by George Bernard Shaw, among the year’s ten best, calling it “buoyantly nuanced, exquisitely designed, and unexpectedly suspenseful.” Hurwitt also gave this year’s Bay Area acting MVP nod to Rod Gnapp, who played Baptista in our The Taming of the Shrew this season. On his theater blog The Idiolect, independent critic Sam Hurwitt, a.k.a. Hurwitt the Younger, included Amanda Dehnert‘s brand-new play, The Verona Project, as one of his favorite 2011 productions, “entirely new and electric, with a touch of magical realism, witty dialogue, fiendishly clever storytelling devices, and some awfully catchy pop-rock songs”; one of his two MVPs was Verona‘s Julia, actress Arwen Anderson. Critic Chad Jones gave Shana Cooper‘s production of The Taming of the Shrew a prominent place on his Theater Dogs top ten, admitting that it was a tough call between that and our Candida but ultimately falling for how “leads Erica Sullivan and Slate Holmgren brought not only humor to this thorny comedy but also a depth of emotion I hadn’t ever experienced with this play.” And Cooper’s Shrew “packed a punch” according to KCBS‘ list of the Bay Area’s best arts and culture in 2011.

Accolades must also be given to Cal Shakes Artistic Director Moscone, whose production of Clybourne Park at A.C.T. made it onto every single list mentioned above!

Read the Chronicle‘s Top Ten list here.

Read The Idiolect‘s Top Ten list here.

Read the Theater Dogs Top Ten here.

Read KCBS’ Best Ofs here.

Comment » | 2011 Season, Candida, The Taming of the Shrew, The Verona Project, Weekly News

You can make a difference right now.

December 2nd, 2011 — 5:02pm

December 2, 2011

Jonathan MosconeCal Shakes builds community. Our work—whether onstage, in classrooms, or in community settings—helps people of all ages discover and develop vital imaginative tools that improve lives and strengthen our society.

By giving to Cal Shakes this year, you will directly impact individuals  and communities, many of whom desperately need creative resources to survive, let alone thrive. You make a difference when you invest in Cal Shakes. You became a fundamental partner in our distinctive service: Fostering a vital culture of creativity that makes the Bay Area the most innovative, inclusive, and interesting super-neighborhood in our country.

Cal Shakes needs a major influx of donations in order to successfully meet our financial goals this year, and to ensure that we’re in the strongest position to meet the challenge of fulfilling our mission in 2012.

As government funding for the arts and arts education continues to decrease, many people are less and less able to access the creative tools and experiences that connect us as people and help our communities thrive. That’s where Cal Shakes comes in. And that is why I need your help, as our partner, to sustain and expand the work we do: building community through theater.

With your support for our Annual Fund, we can:

  • Respond to the ever-growing demand for Cal Shakes arts education programs, and serve more Bay Area students.
  • Ensure that future generations of artists and theatergoers—including your children and grandchildren—will be able to experience the beauty and power of Shakespeare and the classics.
  • Create new outlets for marginalized voices, as Cal Shakes makes new American plays in collaboration with members of disparate Bay Area populations.

Your support makes the work of this Theater—your Theater—possible, and impacts thousands of people, many of whom would not have access to the arts or arts education without you.

Your investment in our work is an investment in building our community. Please make a 2011 contribution today.

Thank you for all that you do.

Sincerely,

Jonathan

 
Jonathan Moscone
Artistic Director

P.S. Click here to make your gift online; or to speak with someone personally, contact Donor Relations Coordinator Ian Larue at 510.548.3422 x107. Gifts can be made in installments.

P.P.S. By giving $100 or more in a 12-month period, you become eligible for benefits as a Cal Shakes Champion. If you’re already a Champion, increasing your gift may make you eligible for additional benefits.

 

Photo by Kevin Berne.

 

Comment » | 2011 Season, 2012 Season, Artistic Learning, New Works New Communities, Weekly News

“Richly inventive” and “red-hot” SHREW

September 26th, 2011 — 12:25pm

The enthusiastic reviews have begun to roll in for The Taming of the Shrew, the final production of our 2011 season.

“Without hesitation,” writes Lauren Gunderson in the Huffington Post,  ”I can say that Cal Shakes’ production of Shrew (running now through Oct 16) is a lovely, funny, smartly directed production performed with muscle and wit.” In the San Francisco Chronicle, Robert Hurwitt calls Shana Cooper’s production “a richly inventive, funny and at times provocative Shrew.” On his Theater Dogs blog, Chad Jones asserts that leads Erica Sullivan (Kate) and Slate Holmgren (Petruchio) “have red-hot chemistry from the very first, and they’re so good together you really do want them together.” And Cindy Warner writes on Examiner.com that “Shana Cooper’s shrewd direction of Taming of the Shrew at Cal Shakes brings inspiration, enlightenment, over-the-top joy and abandon… you want to see the show again before you even leave the theater.”

“[The] marriage of witty and warm shines throughout this production,” writes Karen D’Souza in the San Jose Mercury-News, who calls it ”a flashy season closer.” On CultureVulture.net, Suzanne Weiss wrote that “Shana Cooper’s exuberant production of the classic comedy… is as funny as they come; fast moving; a thoroughly enjoyable night of theater.” SFist.com raves that “Cooper’s direction shines through for its cleverness, comic timing, and a desire to make of this play an edgy romantic comedy.” And in the Contra Costa Times, Sally Hogarty declares that ““Cal Shakes’ Shrew no tame adaptation.”

More reviews to come, so watch this space! The Taming of the Shrew runs through Sunday, October 16 at the Bruns Amphitheater. Get your tickets now, before it sells out!

Comment » | 2011 Season, The Taming of the Shrew, Weekly News

SHREW Cast and Creative Team Announced

August 15th, 2011 — 3:28pm


California Shakespeare Theater concludes its 2011 season with Shakespeare’s most biting romantic comedy, The Taming of the Shrew, playing at the Bruns Amphitheater September 21 through October 16.Shana Cooper, former Cal Shakes Associate Artistic Director whose production of Love’s Labor’s Lost is currently playing at Oregon Shakespeare Festival, directs.

The Taming of the Shrew

In Shakespeare’s hard-edged comedy, no suitor can win lovely Bianca ’til her older sister, “Katherine the Curst,” is married off as well. Director Shana Cooper makes her Cal Shakes directing debut with a dynamically physical production that explores Shakespeare’s quintessential battle of the sexes through the lens of a commercially driven, high-fashion, pop-art society.

“I’m moved by the brave clarity Shakespeare brings to questions of love in Shrew,” says director Shana Cooper. “He captures the complications, costs, and–when we’re lucky–the sublime rewards of relationships between men and women. The explorations of love in Shrew feel intensely modern, for this is a world where you get to choose what role to have love play in your life. How much are you willing to compromise for that love? What do you gain through that compromise and how much of yourself might you lose?”

“I’m so proud and honored to have Shana directing here,” says Cal Shakes Artistic Director Jonathan Moscone. “She’s one of our country’s most daring and innovative young theater artists, and I am so happy she will be coming back to her artistic home, where she began in 2000 as the assistant director on the first production of my tenure, which was, coincidentally, The Taming of the Shrew.”

Making their Cal Shakes’ debuts are Slate Holmgren (film and television: Everwood, Dragon Hunter, Shadowhawk on Sacred Ground; stage: Twelfth Night at the Public Theatre; Passion Play, The Master Builder at Yale Rep ) as Petruchio and Erica Sullivan (film and television: There Will Be Blood, A Coat of Snow, Crossing Jordan;stage: A Woman of No Importance at Yale Rep, Sylvia at Long Wharf) as Katherine. Others in the cast include Cal Shakes Associate Artists Danny Scheie (Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night’s Dream) as Gremio and Tailor, Dan Hiatt (Uncle Vanya, Nicholas Nickleby) as Grumio and Vincentio, and Joan Mankin (A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Uncle Vanya) as Pedant and the Widow. Also appearing are Alexandra Henrickson (Proserpine in Candida) as Bianca, Dan Clegg (The Verona Project) as Tranio, Rod Gnapp (The Pastures of Heaven) as Baptista, Nicholas Pelczar (Titus Andronicus, Macbeth) as Lucentio, Liam Vincent (Candida, Titus Andronicus, Twelfth Night) as Hortensio, and Theo Black (Hamlet at Pacific Rep, ) as Biondello.

The design team includes: Scott Dougan (set design), who has designed sets for productions at Oregon Shakespeare Festival and Yale Rep, and whose 1800-square-foot art installation at the Urban Farm at the Battery in Battery Park, New York will be on display through 2013; Katherine O’Neill (costume design), founding member of New House Theatre, and costume designer for Romeo and Juliet and Ghost Sonata (Yale Rep), and The Whale Play (NTH); York Kennedy (lighting design), who created the lighting for Cal Shakes’ CandidaThe Pastures of Heaven, and Uncle Vanya, among others, and whose work has been seen across the country from A.C.T. to Yale Rep; and Cal Shakes Associate Artist Jake Rodriguez (sound design) whose soundscapes have appeared in numerous Bay Area productions, and who designed the sound for Cal Shakes’ production of Nicholas Nickleby. Others on the artistic staff of Candida are Erika Chong Shuch (movement),Dave Maier (fight director), Philippa Kelly (dramaturg), Cal Shakes Associate ArtistNancy Carlin (vocal/text coach), Corrie Bennett (stage manager), and Laxmi Kumaran (stage manager).

Shana Cooper; photo by Erik Pearson.

Shana Cooper (director) is the recipient of a 2010 Princess Grace Award.  Recent directing credits include Love’s Labor’s Lost at Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Romeo and Juliet at Yale Repertory Theater, the Black Swan Lab, a new play workshop series at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Three Sisters (The Studio/New York), and A Lie of the Mind (American Conservatory Theater MFA program).   Shana is a founding member of New Theater House, where directing credits include new work, The Whale Play by Victor I. Cazares, as well as classics, Twelfth Night (in collaboration with actors at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival).   Other directing credits include Oklahoma! at the Hangar Theatre (associate director), The Ghost Sonata and Richard III at Yale School of Drama, and productions at Willamette Repertory Theatre, Sonoma Repertory Theatre, Cal Shakes Student Company, Washington Shakespeare Festival, Amherst College and Willamette University (Guest Artist), and Magic Theatre’s Young California Writer’s Project. Ms. Cooper was the Associate Artistic Director of the California Shakespeare Theater from 2000-2004, and cofounded New Theater House with Yale School of Drama Alumni in 2008.  Awards include the Julian Milton Kaufman Memorial Prize in Directing (Yale School of Drama), Drama League Directing Fellow, TCG Observership Grant, Phil Killian Directing Fellow (Oregon Shakespeare Festival), Jack O’Brien Directing Fellow, and G. Herbert Smith Presidential Scholarship.  Ms. Cooper earned her MFA in directing from the Yale School of Drama.\

Single tickets for The Taming of the Shrew range from $35-$66, with discounts available for seniors, students, persons age 30 and under, and groups. Prices, dates, and artists subject to change. For information or to charge tickets by phone with VISA, MasterCard or American Express, call the Cal Shakes Box Office at 510.548.9666. Additional information and online ticketing are available at www.calshakes.org.

 

Comment » | 2011 Season, The Taming of the Shrew, Weekly News

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