Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Hit Irish version of MSND -- set in a nursing home

A Midsummer Night’s Dream review – Bard's comedy moves into a nursing home

4 / 5 stars 
 
Abbey, Dublin

Theseus is a doctor and Puck’s potion is administered by drip in an inventive production that strikes a fine balance between comedy and pathos 
 
Possibilities of transformation … Andrew Bennett and Des Nealon in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the
 
Possibilities of transformation … Andrew Bennett as Bottom and Des Nealon (Tom Snout) in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Abbey theatre, Dublin. Photograph: Ros Kavanagh
The residents of a nursing home may be physically restricted in Gavin Quinn’s inventive production, but their imaginations run free. The cheerily bright care-home setting is an inspired choice for a work that plays with ideas of escapism and the possibilities of transformation. From the opening scene, where doctors, carers and residents dance a conga among the zimmer frames and wheelchairs, the balance between comedy and pathos is finely judged.

With Theseus (Declan Conlon) as the all-powerful doctor in charge of their fate, the possibility of abuse of the elderly residents is hinted at. When Egeus threatens his delicate mother Hermia with death if she doesn’t marry a fellow resident, Demetrius, he is supported by Theseus initially. Here Egeus is in the role of bullying son rather than father, and Hermia’s vulnerability is palpable. Later, when Bottom is reunited with the Rude Mechanicals after his forest escapade, their joy seems mixed with relief that he is still alive. At their age, nothing can be taken for granted.

From a superb ensemble cast of 18 actors, some performances stand out: Gina Moxley’s baffled Helena, fending off the attentions of Lysander, played with irrepressible skittishness by John Kavanagh. Dan Reardon cuts a very cool figure as Puck, David Pearse is deadpan as Peter Quince, and Andrew Bennett’s sunny-tempered Bottom makes the often-tedious play-within-the-play genuinely funny.


Abbey theatre's A Midsummer Night's Dream
 
Gina Moxley (Helena) and Barry McGovern (Demetrius) in Abbey Theatre’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Photograph: Ros Kavanagh
Apart from small adjustments, Quinn takes a faithful approach to the text, adding some dance sequences and sonnets. Rather than deconstructing the play, as he has successfully done for his own Pan Pan theatre company, he incorporates inventive and telling details.

The magic potion dispensed to the lovers by Puck is medication administered by a drip, or with oxygen masks. While Aedín Cosgrove’s striking lighting design – manipulated with x-ray machines by Oberon and Puck – creates abstract moonlit images, the characters never leave the institution, but carry their pillows and duvets around with them. As the effects of the potion wears off, the lovers awake to the sound of canned sitcom laughter and reach for the walking sticks that had mysteriously vanished in their forest frolics. Whatever desires or “most rare vision” they have had will have to wait until the next night’s dream.

Monday, February 23, 2015

MSND by Britain's Shit-faced Shakespeare Coming to Somerville in April-May 2015

    

Shit-faced Shakespeare ®

Image result for Shit-faced ShakespeareShit-faced Shakespeare is the deeply highbrow fusion of an entirely serious Shakespeare play (Midsummer Night's Dream)  with an entirely shit-faced cast member.

Side-splitting, raucous and completely interactive, the show has been running since 2010 and has already entertained over 30,000 eager theatre goers across the UK. Having successfully completed multiple sell-out runs of the Edinburgh and Brighton Fringe festivals. Now the production is coming to Boston!

With a genuinely drunken professional actor selected at random every night, no two shows are ever the same and audiences can even dictate when the actor gets to drink more to prevent unwanted sobriety.

Shit-Faced Shakespeare seeks to introduce a new generation of theatre-goers to the works of the Bard by reviving the raucous, interactive and vibrant nature of Elizabethan theatre with a very modern twist - reminding them as we go to always enjoy Shakespeare responsibly.

 Shit-faced Shakespeare by the numbers:

· 6 Years old and still 0 deaths
· Over 150 professional show performed
· More than 1,400 cans and over 375 bottles of beer consumed on stage
· Times the Dawson's Creek theme tune has been drunkenly sung: 37
· Approximately 4,450 Units of alcohol drank in preparation for shows
· 29 individual nipples displayed on stage ( 62% of them male)
· £179.90 worth of Domino's pizza ordered during a single show (it was 2 for 1 Tuesday...)
· Number of prosthetic limbs used during sword fights: 1

"Genuinely hilarious" - Guardian
"The funniest show at the Fringe" - Daily Star
"Very rock 'n' roll" - Times

“Is this a stagger I see before me?...You’re Bard!” Sun

Shit-faced Shakespeare


WHAT:
Shit-faced Shakespeare
by Magnificent Bastard Productions
produced by Gabriel Kuttner and Daniel Berger-Jones, in association with
 Cambridge Historical Tours

Cast:

Lewis Ironside :: Puck / Lysander
Stacey Norris :: Helena / Hermia
John Sebastian Borelli :: Demetrius
Beth-Louise Priestley :: Hermia
Saul Marron :: Lysander / Demetrius


An adaptation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream By William Shakespeare & The Company with additional material by Lewis Ironside;



When:
Previews: April 10th, 11th, 12th, & 14th
Opening: Wednesday, April 15th at 7:30pm
Runs through May 1, 2015; 

Where: Davis Square Theatre
255 Elm Street
Somerville, MA
(617) 684-5335
Tickets: shitfacedshakespeare.eventbrite.com
Facebook :: Twitter
For More Information: www.shit-facedshakespeare.com
* * *
For all publicity related inquiries:
Laura Sullivan at Drive Public Relations + Consulting :: laura@driveprc.com or 617.286.2064