The fall season is introducing a foreign influence. I know I'm getting a bit ahead of myself here, but my last entry mentioned England's excellence in the art and the Russian project I'm involved in. Well, fancy that. William Shakespeare's classic love story, Romeo and Juliet, will be staged here in the fall. Usually the department does put on historical plays of some sort, like last fall's The Crucible (set in Puritan Salem) and The Piano Lesson (set in 1930s Pittsburgh). Performing Shakespeare is something Towson hasn't embraced in several years and it will take this department one step further into our historical endeavors as we bring Elizabethan Italy to the stage.
Another new Russian play called The Polar Truth will be staged in the structure of a performance workshop by one of the department's graduate students.
These relations with Russian theatre artists has had remarkable impact in the past few weeks and it's already spread like wildfire into the department, and hopefully it will continue to delve further into crossing cultural boundaries in the future.
--DQ
This is interesting! I'm traveling to Russia in April, so I'm kind of interested in this. Maybe you could follow up with some posts reporting more information about these plays at TU, or how TU is going to reinterpret (or not?) R&J? An interview with Urnov or Freedman?
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely. John Freedman will be coming to my Russian Theatre and Politics class in a couple weeks, so I definitely have the opportunity to speak with him.
ReplyDeleteWhere will you be in Russia? If you're in Moscow and get the chance, go to the Moscow Art Theatre. It's marked by a seagull above its entrance because Chekhov's "The Seagull" was one of the first shows performed there.
If they brought Shakespeare to Towson, I'd sit in the front row. Of course Shakespeare for idiots would also be a welcome venue. I'm not sure I fully understand the man myself.
ReplyDeleteI like the structure of your blogs. Linking the reader to previous posts is a great idea!
I'm not sure any of us can truly understand him, Jack! He had a lot of ideas in his head.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the feedback!