All the Devils are Here:
How Shakespeare Invented the Villain
Staring Into the True Face of Evil
A black chair sits in the corner of our basement. Made of wood with cushioned seat and back, it is starkly simple, narrow and tall. It looks like an ancient throne because it was, truly, Macbeth's throne; it even has knife slashes in the back cushion where Macbeth stabbed at his late best buddy, Banquo, tearing through his throne's vinyl cushion and cracking its wood frame. That's how much Patrick Page was into Macbeth when he played the titular part in the Shakespeare Theatre Company's 2004 production. That throne my wife and I purchased at a props and costumes sale is not the only connection I have with Page and Macbeth, as revealed in Page's one-actor show, All the Devils are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain. The subtitle for Page's own play is instructive to his 90-minute show's substance. In a tour de force repertoire of performances featuring a canon's worth of villains, Page demonstrates how Shakespeare turned a stock theatrical character into real people. People like us. For the complete review, click here.
King Lear
The Eyes Have It
Somewhere in this mess of a house I live in hides my folder for the 2023 Shakespeare Theatre Company's production of William Shakespeare's King Lear starring Patrick Page in the title role. The folder contains, most importantly, my notes from the two performances I attended at the Klein Theatre: on opening night, sitting about ten rows back and to the far left; and three weeks later in my season subscription seats in the center of the fourth row. I can't reasonably write a full review of the Simon Godwin-helmed production without those notes. Relying on my memory is bound to lead to inaccurate reporting. However, some moments of Page's performance are seared indelibly into my brain: first, a scene in which he played me; last, a scene in which he played my wife, Sarah, who has Alzheimer's and now resides in a memory care center; and between those, a scene in which he played both Sarah and me.For the full review, click here.
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
(Abridged) [Revised] (Again)
Completing Shakespeare’s
Complete Works At Last (Again)
You’ve not seen all of Shakespeare until you’ve seen the Complete Works of William Shakespeare. That’s a rule I’ve derived from the times I mention seeing a Shakespeare play and oh-so-subtly brag that I've seen all 42 plays connected to Shakespeare’s pen. The reply I inevitably get is, “Have you seen The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)?” referring to the winking, satirical spin on the Bard’s works by Adam Long, Daniel Singer, and Jess Winfield of the Reduced Shakespeare Company. Well, I’ve finally seen it, the Again version, at the American Shakespeare Center’s Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton, Virginia, a venue perfect for such a semi-improvisational, audience-participation show. Furthermore, the cast comprised three of my favorite Shakespeareans. To read the full review, click here.
Shakespeare News
Epic Shakespeare's Histories Enterprise
Resurrected as You Tube Audio Production
Brave Spirits Theatre's ambitious staging of Shakespeare's eight-play War of the Roses history cycle—interrupted by Covid and the theater's subsequent closure—has been resurrected as an online audio production. Artistic Director Charlene V. Smith, who put years of creative effort into her Shakespeare's Histories enterprise, never gave up on bringing it to full fruition and created audio performances with much of the original casts. The productions will be streamed in 24 episodes for free on You Tube. For details, click here.
The Comedy of Errors
Pair of Deuces, 3 of Hearts
Equals a Winning Hand
Dromio prances onto the stage and launches into a high-kicking, body-twisting, hand-raising, disco-flavored song and dance. They are soon joined by the entire cast for a full-on dance number to conclude the Shakespeare Theatre Company's production of William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors. Foremost in my mind watching this finale is not the great production values of the show I'd just experienced, or the succinctly subtle acting choices across the talented ensemble, or the out-of-nowhere humor working in tandem with on-target Shakespearean verse readings. What I'm thinking is how the heck are Alex Brightman and David Fynn as, respectively, Dromio of Syracuse and Dromio of Ephesus still standing, let alone singing while dancing, given what they've accomplished physically and endured choreographically over the past 2:10 hour's traffic on the stage with only a 15-minute rest for intermission? To read the full review, click here.
Venus and Adonis
An Elizabethan Peep Show
Taffety Punk Theatre Company is a small but brightly shining gem in the Washington, D.C., theater scene, a richly talented acting company displaying a brilliantly inventive willingness to explore conceptual stagings of William Shakespeare’s works. This includes those narrative poems at the back of your edition of Shakespeare's Complete Works. Having staged The Rape of Lucrece in 2012, they have now undertaken Venus and Adonis, which could well have been Elizabethan porn. The two narrators, Tonya Beckman and Lise Bruneau, gave Shakespeare's vividly descriptive verses a cheeky resonance. For the review, click here.
The Tragedy of Macbeth
Putting On the Putin
When Joel Coen released The Tragedy of Macbeth in 2022, did he know he had filmed a biopic of Vladimir Putin? When Denzel Washington turned his calculating Macbeth into a regicidal despot in one pivotal scene, was he channeling the Russian dictator raging at Volodymyr Zelensky’s government? When William Shakespeare wrote Macbeth in 1606, did he have the war in Ukraine in mind? The first two questions, probably not, but I can definitively answer that last question. Shakespeare portrayed human nature in all its dimensions, dimensions that haven’t changed in 500 years. That’s the thrilling yet unsettling relevancy of Shakespeare’s composition emerging out of the darkness of Coen’s film. Even with textual cuts bringing his movie in at 108 minutes, Coen unpacks Macbeth’s universal truths in traditional and novel ways. For the complete review, click here.
Macbeth
War’s Tomorrow
Look at the face. As you walk through the door on your way to the theater, you pass a soldier—British, American, or from some other 2024 army—hanging out by a burned-out car. As you take in the whole battle-scarred landscape, be sure to look at the soldier’s face: a face we’ve seen in photographs from the American Civil War through two World Wars, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and into Ukraine and Palestine. Minutes later you’ll see another such battle-weary soldier’s face, though one familiar to you not as a soldier but as one of the supreme Shakespeare actors of our time, Ralph Fiennes, playing Macbeth in the Shakespeare Theatre Company's production in Washington, D.C. Listen to that face as it takes you into his mental chambers where you will vividly see what is in the minds behind the faces from Antietam to Afghanistan. To continue reading this review, click here. (This review updated upon second viewing with clarifications and correction of scene order.)
Addendum: Filmed Version:
Shakespeare Theatre Company filmed this production and screened it at Harman Hall, May 17-19. My review of the film version has been attached to the bottom of the production review.
In Memoriam: Carol Adele Kelly. 1931-2024
A Love of Words, Words, Words
My tribute to Carol Kelly, Shakespeareances.com's copy editor since the website's inception in 2011, became an in memoriam this morning, April 7, 2024. Carol was 94 years old. Cause of death was gall bladder cancer. Upon learning of her prognosis in February, I visited her in Cincinnati, Ohio. Following that visit (I would visit her again one last time a couple weeks later), I wrote this tribute to my teammate, an outstanding grammarian, a good comrade, a special mother, a most-loved grandmother, and a constant inspiration for me the past 18 years—ever since I tried to fire her. For the full tribute, click here.
Pericles
A Quadruple-Quality Life
“All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players," William Shakespeare wrote in his play As You Like It. "And one man in his time plays many parts”— parts meaning roles, which, theatrically, are individual persons. Turn that conceit around, and you could say many parts make up one man. As we grow older, our individual selves combine to create an increasingly complex but unified whole self that is greater than the sum of its parts. Shakespeare addresses this redirection with his late-career play Pericles. At least, that’s the metaphor Fiasco Theater teases out of this much-maligned play in their fascinating production at Classic Stage Company in which four men each play one part of Pericles. To read the full review, click here.
Desperate Measures
Riffing on a Problem Play's Problems
Desperate Measures, Peter Kellogg's and David Friedman's M-rated Disneyesque musical comedy set in the 19th century American West, is "inspired by"—but not an adaptation of—William Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. Important distinction. Yet their work, while using rhyming couplets for its spoken script, makes its most significant contribution to Bardology by virtue of just six lines in Shakespeare's play through which their "inspired by" gushes. That premise may merely be highfalutin Shakesgeek navel-gazing though, as the musical is fun in itself with its uniquely rich characters, clever humor, and catchy tunes that Constellation Theatre Company delivers in a well-acted, well-sung production at the Source Theatre in Washington, D.C.To read the full review, click here.
A Commedia Romeo and Juliet
Fools Revisit a Landmark Production
One of my great rewards doing Shakespeareances has been experiencing the connection between William Shakespeare and commedia dell’arte, the masked and hyperphysical street theater tradition that originated in early 16th century Italy. I owe this discovery to the Washington, D.C., Faction of Fools, theater company and their landmark 2012 production of A Commedia Romeo and Juliet. The images of that production have romped through my memory ever since and returned in present flesh as Faction of Fools remounted the show at the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop in January. With some script adjustments and two casts, it's a twin bill with threefold delights. For the complete review, click here.