Tag: william shakespeare


“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

Rakestraw Books Presents Philippa Gregory to Benefit Cal Shakes

September 21st, 2011 — 4:16pm
Philippa Gregory

Author and historian Philippa Gregory

We are delighted to announce that our friends at Rakestraw Books will present “An Evening with Philippa Gregory,” a special literary event to benefit both California Shakespeare Theater and Wardrobe for Opportunity.

The evening’s guest of honor, historian and bestselling author of The Other Boleyn Girl, Philippa Gregory, will be talking about her new books: a novel, The Lady of the Rivers, and a work of nonfiction, The Women of the Cousins’ War. Gregory will also take questions from the audience and sign books for attendees. The evening’s festivities will include a special display of “costumes” lent by both Cal Shakes and Wardrobe, titled “Dressing for Success!”

WHEN: Wednesday, October 26, 7pm

WHERE: Diablo Country Club, 1700 Clubhouse Rd, Diablo

TICKETS: $40 each, including a copy of either The Lady of the Rivers or The Women of the Cousins’ War. To purchase tickets, please call Rakestraw Books at 925.837.7337.

MORE INFO: Click here.

 

Comment » | Weekly News

Cal Shakes Receives 2011-2012 “Shakespeare For A New Generation” Grant from NEA

June 14th, 2011 — 3:41pm

Shakespeare for a New Generation logoCalifornia Shakespeare Theater (Cal Shakes) today announced that it is one of 36 nonprofit, professional theater companies that will receive a grant of $25,000 to participate in Shakespeare for a New Generation from June 1, 2011 through May 31, 2012.  The National Endowment for the Arts, in cooperation with Arts Midwest, presents Shakespeare for a New Generation, bringing the finest productions of Shakespeare to middle- and high-school students in communities across the United States. This is the ninth year of the program, the largest tour of Shakespeare in American history.

“We are thrilled and grateful to have been chosen as recipients of this grant for the sixth year in a row,” says Cal Shakes Managing Director Susie Falk. “The NEA’s financial support is in and of itself extremely important to us, as it makes a substantial difference in our ability to bring Shakespeare to thousands of low-income students each year; but we also feel very heartened by the NEA’s repeated support, which we see as an endorsement of the value and impact of our program on children.”

Cal Shakes will present Student Discovery matinee productions of The Taming of the Shrew, directed by Shana Cooper, attracting at least 2,000 middle and high school students from 40 Bay Area schools. Accompanying pre- and post-performance workshops and residencies will serve up to 500 of those students, primarily from low-income communities. Cal Shakes’ annual fall Educator’s Night will combine complimentary tickets to a performance with a two-hour professional development workshop for teachers.

To date, more than 80 of the nation’s theater companies have taken part in the NEA’s Shakespeare program since its inception and participating theater companies have presented performances at 5,500 schools in 2,600 communities in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Click here for more information about Cal Shakes’ education programs.

For more information about Cal Shakes’ 2011 season, click here.

 

Comment » | 2011 Season, Artistic Learning, The Taming of the Shrew

Teen Nights Return!

April 19th, 2011 — 2:58pm

Popular Teen Night pre-show events return to our beautiful outdoor Bruns Amphitheater.

Titus Teen Night by Jamie Buschbaum

Participants in the Titus Andronicus Teen Night; photo by Jamie Buschbaum.

The pre-show events begin at 6:30pm and include:

  • Pizza and soda in the Upper Grove
  • Interactive, fun, pre-show engagement with a Cal Shakes teaching artist
  • A 7:30pm performance of the current production

Full details are below; please pass this information onto any educators or teens you know!

WHAT: Teen Night

WHEN: The Tempest Wednesday, June 6 and Thursday, June 14; Spunk Friday, July 13; Blithe Spirit Thursday, August 16 and Friday, August 24; Hamlet Friday, September 28 and Thursday, October 4

WHO: Students ages 13-18.

COST: $20 each.

TO PURCHASE: Contact Marilyn Langbehn, Marketing and PR Manager, at 510.809.3290 or groups@calshakes.org

SPECIAL INFO FOR STUDENT GROUPS OF 10 OR MORE:
We require that student groups be accompanied by adult chaperones at a ratio of one chaperone for every 10 students. Chaperones will be admitted at no charge; all other adults attending the event with the group may purchase tickets at a special discount rate of $33 each. To reserve tickets or for more information, contact Marilyn Langbehn, Marketing and PR Manager, at 510.809.3290 or groups@calshakes.org.


Comment » | 2012 Season, Artistic Learning, Monthly Newsletters, The Tempest, Weekly News

Season Artist Profile: Shana Cooper

April 19th, 2011 — 2:52pm

In the months leading up to our 2011 Main Stage season, we’ll be profiling the creative minds behind the season’s productions—Titus Andronicus, The Verona Project, Candida, and The Taming of the Shrew—in our e-newsletters. For our fourth and final  installment, we’re featuring director Shana Cooper, who returns to Cal Shakes—where she was once Associate Artistic Director—to help The Taming of the Shrew What follows is the full transcript of Cal Shakes’ phone interview with Shana. To sign up for our email newsletter, click here.

Photo of Shana Cooper by Erik Pearson.What show are you rehearsing right now? Where?

I’m working on Love’s Labor’s Lost at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Is that the first time you’ve directed at OSF?

It is. I worked on a production of Twelfth Night a few years ago with some members of their acting company in a found space downtown, in a parking lot. So it was more of an artistic enrichment project. But this is the first time I’m directing on the Main Stage.

I read a review of your Yale Rep production of Romeo and Juliet in the New York Times. It seems like it was a fun show to do that was received really well.

We had a good time working on it. It is definitely one of those incredibly difficult plays, not only because people know it so well but also because of how much it contains in terms of singing and dancing and one emotionally epic scene after another. Plus it’s a play that we have such a deep relationship to as an audience, and there are so many expectations. I loved working on it, but I’m actually really looking forward to doing it again. I feel like, in a lot of ways, I just learned what it is.

It had a pretty modern feel. How does that apply to the Shrew you’re doing with us?

I think there’s so much about the—for lack of a better word—love story in Shrew that feels very contemporary in terms of how complicated the questions of male-female relationships still are in our society. There are still so many questions about what sorts of compromise love requires, and how much of ourselves we’re willing to give over for love. And what do you gain and lose from that, especially in a world like ours that is still, in a lot of ways, a patriarchal world at its foundation. It’s one of the things I really love about the play; it’s so complicated and messy in the same way that love and partnership in our contemporary world are. Sometimes we feel like want to distance ourselves from The Taming of the Shrew because it has the reputation of being a misogynistic play, and these are issues that we’ve supposed to have gotten over. But I think the play is more nuanced than that. It’s absolutely a patriarchal world but there are also women in it with great power, and they’re just trying to sort out the difficulties of joining these two lives together, and the sacrifices you have to make in order to do that. And I think that is incredibly relevant.

You can’t talk about Shrew without talking about feminism and misogynist behaviors.. It’s always interesting to see how directors interpret those things, as well as trying to get a read on what Shakespeare was doing—was he a feminist?

I think if you look at Shakespeare’s plays and see the kind of humanist that he was, it’s undeniable that he has a tremendous understanding of women in terms of what kind of strong female characters he drew. I would say the same thing about his understanding of human beings and their differences on a humanist level that make me feel like he seems to be striving for some sort of understanding or at least questioning that judgment. So for me it’s hard to look at any of his plays, including Shrew, as a statement that women are made to love, honor, and obey their husbands and nothing else. It just doesn’t seem like the Shakespeare we know. But he does challenge us to look at our assumptions in this society about roles of men and women, and how complicated those relationships actually are. He doesn’t tell us a fairytale in this play.

What’s it like to come back to direct at Cal Shakes after holding the position of Associate Artistic Director so many years ago?

The space at the Bruns is one of the most magical, beautiful spaces in the country to work. Especially working on Shakespeare out there, there’s a way in which the natural elements become involved that feels very Shakespearean to me. It feels epic and relentless and dangerous and powerful and miraculously beautiful in the way that his work is. One of my favorite things about working at Cal Shakes was getting to spend all of that time in that beautiful space. It feels like a space made for Shakespeare because of the openness of it—when we talk about the Elizabethan theater, we talk about it as being an open-form space so that you’re really changing the environment or landscape or location through the imaginations of the audience without having to move huge pieces of scenery. I think that the Bruns is really a contemporary, natural kind of open-space in a way that I think is just perfect for Shakespeare.

Have you been back to the Bruns since the renovations?

I haven’t! Next week is my first trip. The other thing I learned while at Cal Shakes was what it means to be a truly great producer from Jonathan [Moscone]. It’s been interesting for me since I’ve left to see just how unique Cal Shakes is in the way that he supports the vision of directors and designers and what they uniquely have to bring to the table—the way in which he’ll make changes to the way that things work in order to support the artistic process. I was so young when I was there that I didn’t realize that was uncommon; I’m really looking forward to being back in that environment.

Subscribe now to get the best seats at the best prices for The Taming of the Shrew and the rest of our 2011 season.

 

Comment » | 2011 Season, Monthly Newsletters, Weekly News

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