When
Jul 6, 2008 6:30 pm (Sunday)
Where
Who
No performers specified
(suggest a performer)
We check all performers, so don't try any funny business!
Sorry, no results found.
That performer has already been added to this event.
What
All's Well That Ends Well Rounding out the summer repertory is All's Well That Ends Well. One of the Bard's least-produced plays, it is an exemplary counterpoint to Macbeth, one of...
Start the conversation
Event details
Description
All's Well That Ends Well
Rounding out the summer repertory is All's Well That Ends Well. One of the Bard's least-produced plays, it is an exemplary counterpoint to Macbeth, one of Shakespeare's most well-known plays.
Largely lumped into a group of plays that scholars call the 'problem plays,' the problem is not with the dialogue; the problem is that the play does not fall into any neat and tidy category. All's Well, for example, has elements of romance and elements of comedy, but it's neither. It has plenty of drama, but it's not completely a serious play. It has elements of Shakespeare's historic and tragic plays. There's even a bit of sex farce. We don't know what to call it. That's the problem - but only for file clerks.
Bertram, a young braggart soldier who dreams of military greatness and who places social station above virtually everything else, sets off to serve the King of France. Simply put: he's a snob. Beautiful Helena, a young woman who serves Bertram's mother has fallen passionately in love with Bertram. Secretly, she follows him to Paris.
A dying king is miraculously cured by Helena, whose father was a famous physician. Overjoyed at being alive, the king allows Helena to choose anyone in the kingdom to marry and, of all people, she chooses the truculent Bertram. He is forced to consent to the marriage but decides that he would rather die in battle than stay married to Helena and so flees to Florence to fight in the Italian wars.
Playing out from that point in typical Shakespearean fashion - boy hates girl, girl is determined to get boy, boy is played for a fool, girl triumphs in the end - we're derailed along the way with some of the Bard's greatest comic writing in a witty, wry story that, in the end, turns out to have been a fairy tale all along.
All's Well That Ends Well will be directed by MSIP Artistic Director Joel Jahnke.
Mailing Address:
PO Box 174120
Bozeman, MT 59717
Phone: 406-994-3901
Fax: 406-994-4591
http://www.montana.edu/shakespeare
Directions:
Shakespeare in the Park will be performed at Baker Lake Amphitheater.
Rounding out the summer repertory is All's Well That Ends Well. One of the Bard's least-produced plays, it is an exemplary counterpoint to Macbeth, one of Shakespeare's most well-known plays.
Largely lumped into a group of plays that scholars call the 'problem plays,' the problem is not with the dialogue; the problem is that the play does not fall into any neat and tidy category. All's Well, for example, has elements of romance and elements of comedy, but it's neither. It has plenty of drama, but it's not completely a serious play. It has elements of Shakespeare's historic and tragic plays. There's even a bit of sex farce. We don't know what to call it. That's the problem - but only for file clerks.
Bertram, a young braggart soldier who dreams of military greatness and who places social station above virtually everything else, sets off to serve the King of France. Simply put: he's a snob. Beautiful Helena, a young woman who serves Bertram's mother has fallen passionately in love with Bertram. Secretly, she follows him to Paris.
A dying king is miraculously cured by Helena, whose father was a famous physician. Overjoyed at being alive, the king allows Helena to choose anyone in the kingdom to marry and, of all people, she chooses the truculent Bertram. He is forced to consent to the marriage but decides that he would rather die in battle than stay married to Helena and so flees to Florence to fight in the Italian wars.
Playing out from that point in typical Shakespearean fashion - boy hates girl, girl is determined to get boy, boy is played for a fool, girl triumphs in the end - we're derailed along the way with some of the Bard's greatest comic writing in a witty, wry story that, in the end, turns out to have been a fairy tale all along.
All's Well That Ends Well will be directed by MSIP Artistic Director Joel Jahnke.
Mailing Address:
PO Box 174120
Bozeman, MT 59717
Phone: 406-994-3901
Fax: 406-994-4591
http://www.montana.edu/shakespeare
Directions:
Shakespeare in the Park will be performed at Baker Lake Amphitheater.
| 0 |
people
watching |
You're not signed in.



Leave a comment after signing in or joining.