450th anniversary of the birth of Shakespeare Celebrate all season long at the Stratford Festival and Forum

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Today marks the 450th anniversary of the birth of Shakespeare

 

Celebrate all season long at the Stratford Festival and Forum

 

 

 

April 23, 2014… The Stratford Festival is celebrating the 450th anniversary of the birth of William Shakespeare all season long, with five Shakespeare productions on its stages and a series of more than 20 special events at the Forum.

 

 

 

The 2014 season launches on May 26 with the opening of King Lear, directed by Artistic Director Antoni Cimolino and starring Colm Feore. Previews for this not-to-be-missed production begin on May 5.

 

 

 

For the first time in its history, the Stratford Festival is presenting two versions of the same Shakespeare play. A Midsummer Night’s Dream will be presented on the main Festival Theatre stage, directed by Chris Abraham and starring Stephen Ouimette, Evan Buliung and Jonathan Goad. It runs from May 16 to October 11. A second version, reimagined by director Peter Sellars, uses four actors – Sarah Afful, Dion Johnstone, Trish Lindström and Mike Nadajewski – to explore the multiple worlds of Shakespeare’s play. This production runs from July 11 to September 20.

 

 

 

Fresh from his hit Broadway productions of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night and Richard III, Tim Carroll returns to Stratford to direct King John, starring Tom McCamus and Seana McKenna, running from May 21 to September 20. Director Gary Griffin takes the helm of Antony and Cleopatra, starring Geraint Wyn Davies and Yanna McIntosh, running from August 3 to September 20.

 

 

 

April 23: Shakespeare Slam

 

 

 

Paul Gross, Steven Page and Hawksley Workman are headlining the Stratford Festival Forum’s Shakespeare Slam on Wednesday, April 23, at Toronto’s Koerner Hall. This celebration marking Shakespeare’s 450th birthday will be hosted by Artistic Director Antoni Cimolino, and will showcase the Festival’s 2014 season theme of Madness: Minds Pushed to the Edge.

 

 

 

Two teams of spirited debaters will square off on whether madness is inherent in the artistic process. On the one side are actor Paul Gross, famed for his portrayal of Slings and Arrows’ mentally overwrought artistic director Geoffrey Tennant, and Lisa Brown, founder and executive/artistic director of Workman Arts, which celebrates and promotes the work of artists living with mental-health and addiction issues.

 

 

 

Opposing them are Juno Award-winning musician, Festival composer and renowned troubadour Steven Page and the Festival’s resident Rhodes Scholar, the hilarious and erudite David Goldbloom, who, in addition to being past chair of the Festival’s Board, is the senior medical advisor for the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto and the chair of the Mental Health Commission of Canada.

 

 

 

Once they’ve hashed things over, the music begins! Hawksley Workman takes centre stage with his own brand of musical performance that is certain to leave you wanting more – which you’ll be able to find in Stratford, September 11 to 20, when he presents his Bacchae-inspired cabaret The God That Comes at the Forum.

 

 

 

Steven Page will also offer up one of his exuberant musical performances, featuring songs combining humour and pathos in a memorable exploration of the evening’s theme.

 

 

 

The event culminates in a truly joyous grand finale, featuring Slam headliners and members of the Festival company.

 

 

 

Shakespeare 450: A Celebration of the Bard

 

 

 

From August 16 to 20, the Stratford Festival Forum presents Shakespeare 450: A Celebration of the Bard, which features the following events, which serve as excellent complements to the productions on stage:

 

 

 

Shakespeare’s First Folio

 

August 16 and 17

 

For the first time ever, the Festival will have the only Canadian copy of the 1623 First Folio of Shakespeare’s works on display at the Stratford Perth Museum, courtesy of the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library at the University of Toronto.

 

 

 

The Secrets of the Shakespeare First Folio

 

August 16

 

Dr. Eric Rasmussen spent two decades studying the 232 surviving copies of the First Folio. While the only Canadian-held copy is on display, Dr. Rasmussen will share stories of those who have possessed, lost, stolen and treasured these priceless pieces of cultural history. 

 

 

 

Elizabethan Court Dance

 

August 16

 

Learn dances from the period and how they functioned in the social order. Instructor: Rebecca Harper.

 

 

 

Souls Under Pressure

 

August 17

 

Where is the soul in Shakespeare? Taking King Lear as their focus, Torrance Kirby and Paul Yachnin of McGill University ask what happens to the human spirit when people are pushed to the limits of endurance.

 

 

 

Shakesprov

 

August 18

 

How hard could it have been for one man to have written Shakespeare’s canon? In this fun, engaging workshop, led by notable improviser, Second City faculty member and Shakespeare enthusiast Marjorie Malpass, you will learn the keys to inventing your own Shakespeare play on the spot. Uncover the secrets of improvising in iambic pentameter. Play with imagery, invent words, find just the right insults – and discover the power of being your own bard.

 

 

 

Embodying Shakespeare’s Text

 

August 18

 

Explore and immerse yourself in the power of Shakespeare’s words. Led by Festival coaching staff and special guest artists, this three-hour workshop engages you in the processes our actors use to inhabit Shakespeare’s worlds.

 

 

 

Shakespeare’s History

 

August 19

 

Explore our playbill’s three examples of Shakespearean chronicle: King Lear (legendary), King John (historical) and Antony and Cleopatra (Roman) and how their interpretations reveal the playwright’s mind.

 

 

 

The Life and Adventures of Sam Wanamaker: The Man Who Built the Globe

 

August 19

 

This illustrated talk by Paul Prescott, of the University of Warwick, draws on previously unseen archival material to present key episodes in Sam Wanamaker’s extraordinary journey from actor to cultural entrepreneur as the visionary behind Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre.

 

 

 

The Playwright’s Crucible

 

August 19

 

As in Shakespeare’s day, watch a playwright contend with argumentative actors, demanding management and a temperamental director as they try to create his play before your eyes. Hosted by Joanne O’Sullivan.

 

 

 

Shakespeare on the Road.

 

August 20

 

Rev. Dr. Paul Edmondson, from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, and Drs. Paul Prescott and Susan Brock, from the University of Warwick, tell their story of reverse pilgrimage and shine a light on Shakespeare Festivals around North America.

 

 

 

Even more Shakespeare events

 

 

 

Special Shakespeare-themed Forum events – ranging from a talk by Camille Paglia to a screening of the new film Still Dreaming – will be offered at other times during the season, as well. These include:

 

 

 

Screening: Still Dreaming

 

June 28

 

A 2014 film directed by Hank Rogerson and Jilann Spitzmiller, makers of Shakespeare Behind Bars. Retirees in the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, N.J., and directors from New York’s Fiasco Theater stage A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

 

 

 

“I Have a Dream”: Peter Sellars and Guests

 

July 7

 

Martin Luther King’s words ring forward powerfully into the 21st century and back across human history where they meet, among other forebears and prophets, William Shakespeare. This seminar honours Shakespeare, the activist, and theatre, the catalyst.

 

 

 

How to Teach Your Children Shakespeare

 

July 12

 

Crazy for You playwright Ken Ludwig describes how he instilled a love of Shakespeare in his own children.

 

 

 

The Sonnet Man: Devon Glover

 

July 12

 

With the jagged rhythms of rap and the smoothness of rhythm and blues, New York hip-hop artist Devon Glover is set to inspire a new generation of Shakespeare lovers.

 

 

 

Lear’s Shadow: Contemporary Reflections on Diagnoses, Abuses and Testamentary Capacity

 

July 19

 

Does Lear suffer from dementia? Are his daughters guilty of elder abuse? Leading geriatric psychiatrists examine the play and its central character through the lens of their practice.

 

 

 

Dream a Little Dream

 

July 20

 

This drama workshop introduces 10- to 12-year-olds to the story and characters of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Using pieces from the Costume and Props Warehouse, participants then rehearse and present a scene from the play.

 

 

 

Reweaving Shakespeare’s Cosmology

 

July 23

 

This seminar explores Shakespeare’s “great chain of being” as it links to Buddhist cosmology, Islamic theology and indigenous spiritualities in the West and the East. With Peter Sellars and guests.

 

 

 

Sans Teeth, Sans Eyes

 

July 24

 

Susan Krauss Whitbourne, psychologist and professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, explores the basis for ageism in Shakespeare’s writing and how people today defy these stereotypes.

 

 

 

Apocrypha No More: Shakespeare’s Collaborative Plays

 

August 15

 

Scholars Eric Rasmussen and Will Sharpe, with Festival artists, explore issues of authorship, collaboration and attribution surrounding Shakespeare’s work.

 

 

 

Not with the Eye

 

August 20

 

A discussion on the aesthetics of gender – homosexuality, bisexuality and love – as portrayed on stage in Shakespeare’s time.

 

 

 

Masks, Madness and Shakespeare’s Sonnets

 

August 21

 

An entertaining and informative glimpse into aspects of the use of masks in the theatre and the “madness” of acting. Company members explore Shakespeare’s sonnets using character half-masks. Directed and compiled by veteran Canadian theatre director Guy Sprung in collaboration with master mask teacher Brian Smith, this informal airing is an innovative window on the power and poetry of Shakespeare’s sonnets.

 

 

 

Music, Such As Charmeth Sleep: Musical Interpretations of A Midsummer Night’s Dream

 

August 21

 

Musician and theatre scholar Lois Kivesto explores how composers such as Purcell, Mendelssohn, Britten and Henze have made this play their own.

 

 

 

Camille Paglia: The Dark Women of Shakespeare

 

September 20

 

Feminist and social critic Camille Paglia speaks about Shakespeare and misogyny – what is it about the mystery and ambiguity of women that so frightens men both then and now.

 

 

 

To purchase tickets to these events and productions, contact the box office at 1.800.567.1600 or visit www.stratfordfestival.ca.

 

 

 

Sustaining support for the Stratford Festival Forum is generously provided by Kelly & Michael Meighen and the T.R. Meighen Foundation. Support for the 2014 Forum is generously provided by Nandita & Julian Wise. Selected Forum events supported by Bell Let’s Talk.

 

 

 

Bell Let’s Talk is the host sponsor of the Shakespeare Slam.

 

 

 

The 2014 season of the Stratford Festival runs from April 21 to October 12, featuring King Lear; Crazy for You; A Midsummer Night’s Dream; The Beaux’ Stratagem; Man of La Mancha; Alice Through the Looking-Glass; Hay Fever; King John; Mother Courage and Her Children; Antony and Cleopatra; Christina, The Girl King; A Midsummer Night’s Dream: A Chamber Play; and more than 200 events in the Stratford Festival Forum.

 

 

 

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Stratford Festival 55 Queen Street PO Box 520 Stratford ON | N5A 6V2

 

Box Office: Toll Free 1.800.567.1600 Local 519.273.1600

 

stratfordfestival.ca

 

 

 

2014 Season | April 21 to October 12

King Lear | Crazy for You | A Midsummer Night’s Dream | The Beaux’ Stratagem
Man of La Mancha | Alice Through the Looking-Glass | Hay Fever | King John
Mother Courage and Her Children | Antony and Cleopatra | Christina, The Girl King
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, a chamber play

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