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a guide to Aquila Theatre’s production of the play by William Shakespeare Probably composed in 1595 or 1596, A Midsummer Night's Dream is one of Shakespeare’s earliest comedies and the Bard's original wedding play. Most scholars believe that Shakespeare wrote A Midsummer Night's Dream as a light entertainment to accompany a marriage celebration; and while the identity of the historical couple for whom it was meant has never been conclusively established, there is good textual and background evidence available to support this claim. At the same time, unlike the vast majority of his works (including all of his comedies), in concocting this story Shakespeare did not rely directly upon existing plays, narrative poetry, historical chronicles or any other primary source materials, making it a truly original piece. Most critics agree that if a youthful Shakespeare was not at his best in this play, he certainly enjoyed himself in writing it. The main plot of Midsummer is a complex contraption that involves two sets of couples (Hermia and Lysander, and Helena and Demetrius) whose romantic cross-purposes are complicated still further by their entrance into the play's fairyland woods where the King and Queen of the Fairies (Oberon and Titania) preside and the impish folk character of Puck (also known as Robin Goodfellow) plies his trade. Less subplot than a brilliant satirical device, another set of characters—Bottom the weaver and his bumptious band of "rude mechanicals"—stumble into the main doings when they go into the same enchanted woods to rehearse a play that is very loosely (and comically) based on the myth of Pyramus and Thisbe, their hilarious home-spun piece taking up Act V of Shakespeare's comedy. A Midsummer Night's Dream contains some wonderfully lyrical expressions of lighter Shakespearean themes, most notably those of love, dreams, and the stuff of both, the creative imagination itself. Indeed, close scrutiny of the text by twentieth-century critics has led to a significant upward revision in the play's status, one that overlooks the silliness of its story and concentrates upon its unique lyrical qualities. If A Midsummer Night's Dream can be said to convey a message, it is that the creative imagination is in tune with the supernatural world and is best used to confer the blessings of Nature (writ large) upon mankind and marriage. SYNOPSIS Theseus (the Duke of Athens) announces he will marry Hippolyta, the queen of the Amazons in four days. He hears Egeus' complaint that his daughter Hermia refuses to marry his chosen suitor, Demetrius, since she's in love with Lysander, whom Egeus dislikes. Theseus declares Hermia must marry Demetrius, or choose between death and joining a nunnery. Lysander instructs Hermia to flee to the forest with him, so that they can travel to his aunt's house to marry. Hermia's friend, Helena, the scorned lover of Demetrius learns of this and decides to inform him of the plan in a bid to win him back. Demetrius, however, loves Hermia. Meanwhile, Quince, Bottom, Flute, Starveling, Snug, and Snout organize a play to be performed at Theseus' wedding. In the forest, Oberon (the King of the Fairies) argues with Titania (the Fairy Queen) that he should have her orphan child as his page. Titania objects, asserting she is queen. They bicker that Oberon loves Hippolyta and Titania loves Theseus. To procure the boy, Oberon orders the fairy Puck to obtain a flower from Cupid that causes one to fall in love with the first being seen upon waking. Oberon plans to give it to Titania, to distract her with false love while he snatches the boy. When Demetrius and Helena appear, Oberon also instructs Puck to anoint Demetrius with the flower so he'll love Helena rather than Hermia. Oberon then anoints Titania with the flower. In the forest, Lysander and Hermia lie down to rest. Puck, thinking Lysander is Demetrius, anoints him with the flower as well. Helena appears and awakes Lysander, who immediately falls in love with her. In the forest, the troupe of players discusses the logistics of their play. Puck appears and transforms Bottom’s head into that of an ass (donkey). The actors flee, but Titania awakes and falls in love with Bottom and orders her fairy servants to attend to him. Puck observes that Demetrius chases Hermia, yet she accuses him of murdering Lysander, and realizes he gave the flower to the wrong man. Oberon tries to remedy this by anointing Lysander with the flower so he'll fall in love with Helena, and he does. However, now both men love Helena, while she believes both are false. Hermia arrives and Helena accuses her of conspiring with the men to tease her. Oberon, realizing Puck has caused these problems, orders him to make a thick fog to separate the four people and force them into a deep sleep, so the spell can wear off. He then awakes Titania and transforms Bottom back to a human. Oberon and Titania then make up and love each other again. In the woods, Theseus, Hippolyta, and Egeus appear and awake the four. Demetrius and Lysander inform the men of their love for Helena and Hermia (respectively). The lords agree to let them marry. Separately, Bottom awakes and remembers the night's occurrences. At dinner, they all hear Quince's ten word, tedious, brief, tragical play. In it, Thisby (played by Flute) and Pyramus (played by Bottom) whisper their love through a chink in a wall (played by Snout). They vow to meet at Ninny's tomb, but a lion (played by Snug) attacks Thisby. Pyramus arrives and finds her scarf, assumes she's dead, and kills himself Thisby arrives to find him dead, and kills herself. After the play, at midnight, all go to bed, then the fairies appear and frolic. Cast of Characters the court Theseus duke of Athens, engaged to Hippolyta Hippolyta warrior queen of the Amazons Philostrate master of revels at Theseus’ court Egeus father of Hermia the lovers Hermia daughter of Egeus, loves Lysander Lysander in love with Hermia Demetrius in love with Hermia Helena in love with Demetrius the fairy kingdom Oberon king of the fairies Titania queen of the fairies Puck (Robin Goodfellow) Oberon’s servant Peas-blossom fairy Cobweb fairy Moth fairy Mustard-Seed fairy the mechanicals Peter Quince carpenter, manager of the acting company Nick Bottom a weaver Francis Flute a bellows mender Tom Snout a tinker Snug a joiner Robin Straveling a tailor ____characters in the interlude Pyramus Thisbe Wall Moonshine Lion Did You Know...? Rock guitarist Steve Hackett of Genesis produced a classical adaptation of the play in 1997. Felix Mendelssohn initially wrote the infamous Wedding March for an 1843 Prussian production of Midsummer in Potsdam. Two moons of Uranus discovered in 1787 are named Oberon and Titania after the Fairy King and Queen in the play. Have people always enjoyed A Midsummer Night’s Dream for the same reasons? How have critics from different eras reacted to the play? Here is a sampler box of diverse responses from the seventeenth century to today. a timeline of critical responses 1677 1662 The most insipid ridiculous play that I ever saw in my life. Samuel Pepys Poets may be allow’d the…liberty, for describing things which…exist not, if they are founded on popular belief: thus Midsummer Night’s Dream is to be defended. 1710 John Dryden [A Midsummer Night’s Dream] can never bear the Test of the Rules. The time is by Theseus... fixt to at least four Days… But it does not appear that there is any more time spent in the Action than one Day and one Night, and a piece of a Day, and a part of one Night. William Gildon 1770 1817 [Shakespeare’s genius] never appears with so much strength…as when he bursts into the ideal world and presents to our view the characters and offices of supernatural beings… All that is the finest in the play is lost in the representation. The ideal can have no place upon the stage. Where all is left to the imagination (as is the case in reading) every circumstance…has an equal chance of being kept in mind…The boards of a theatre and the regions of fancy are not the same thing. William Duff William Hazlitt 1951 1904 The greatest of Shakespeare’s…plays… The amazing symmetry… The events in the wandering wood…are not merely melancholy but bitterly cruel and ignominious. …[One of] the lightest and…most purely playful of Shakespeare’s plays…[The] world of sense…is but the surface of a vaster unseen world in which the actions of men are unaffected or overruled. G.K. Chesterton Howard Goddard Chesterton, G.K. The Common Man. New York: Sheed and Ward, 1950. Copyright © Sheed and Ward. Reprinted by permission. Goddard, Howard C. The Meaning of Shakespeare, Vol. II. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1960. Copyright © University of Chicago. Reprinted by permission. 1964 1971 The dream is the most erotic of Shakespeare’s plays. In no other tragedy, or comedy…is the eroticism expressed so brutally. Jan Kott 1998 …[The] borders between dream, drama, and waking reality deliquesce…Nothing has a definite, invariable, statis shape…Oberon and Puck are analogous not only to playwright and players but to the audience as well. Shakespeare visualized an ideal summer… Bottom is amiably innocent, and not very bawdy. [He is] gentle, mild, good natured… Unfortunately, every production of [the play] that I have been able to attend has been a brutal disaster… James Calderwood Harold Bloom 2003 Timely and pleasing… this ‘Dream’ soothes the eye and tickles the funny bone. New York Times critic Lawrence van gelder praises Aquila Theatre’s production Kott, Jan. Shakespeare Our Contemporary. Trans. Boleslae Taborski. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1966. Copyright © Doubleday & Company, Inc. Reprinted by permission. Calderwood, James. L. “A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Art’s Illusory Sacrifice.” From Shakespearean Metadrama by Calderwood. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1971. Copyright © University of Minnesota. Bloom, Harold. Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human. New York: Riverhead Books, 1998. Copyright © Harold Bloom. Reprinted by permission. Up until the early 20th century, Dream was notorious for elaborate over-the-top staging featuring enormous casts. In 1914, Harley Granville-Barker removed both the music of Felix Mendelssohn, opting for Elizabethan folk music instead, as well as the huge casts. Complex sets were replaced with a simple system of patterned curtains, while the fairies were originally portrayed as golden robotic insectoid creatures based on Cambodian idols. This simplicity and emphasis on directorial imagination (save for the robotic insects) have dominated subsequent stagings of Dream. Modern Midsummer After he fled Germany, Max Reinhardt staged a spectacular outdoor version of Midsummer at the Hollywood Bowl in 1934. The shell of the theatre was replaced by a “forest” planted in tons of dirt hauled in especially for the event, and a trestle was constructed from the flanking hills to the stage. The cast featured Mickey Rooney and Olivia de Havilland while the dance corps included Katherine Dunham and Butterfly McQueen with the music of Mendelssohn. Warner Brothers even signed Reinhardt to direct a filmed version, which was Hollywood’s first Shakespeare event since the Taming of the Shrew in 1929. In 1970, Peter Brook created a landmark production of Midsummer with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Brook staged the play in a blank white box in which masculine fairies engaged in a variety of circus tricks, and he also introduced the subsequently popular idea of doubling Theseus/Oberon and Hippolyta/Titania, suggesting that the world of the fairies mirrors that of the mortals. Brook’s production has inspired directors to allow their imaginations to run wild, between the repressive setting of the human palace and the unrestrained, sexual and terrifying wood. Brook’s Midsummer has become something of a Holy Grail in Shakespeare production study as it was enormously innovative, changing Midsummer staging forever, and is now nearly impossible to find (the staging was never filmed in its entirety). a Shakespeare timeline 1564. Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, England, the eldest son of John and Mary Arden Shakespeare. 1578. Completes seven years of education at local grammar school. 1582. Marries Anne Hathaway. 1583. Daughter Susanna born. 1585. Twins Hamnet, and Judith are born. 1592. Moves to London. Writes Henry VI - Part I, his first play. 1595. The Lord Chamberlain’s Men, his acting company, has great artistic and financial success. 1596. Hamnet dies at age 11. 1597. Buys New Place, the grandest house in Stratford. 1599. The open-air Globe Theater, the home of many Shakespeare’s plays, opens in London. 1600. As You Like It is written. 1603. Queen Elizabeth I dies. King James I is crowned. The Chamberlain’s Men becomes The King’s Men, playing about 12 performances each year at court. 1609. The King’s Men begin performing indoors at Blackfriars Theater. 1610. Retires and moves to Stratford. 1613. Henry VIII, his final play, is written. 1616. Dies in Stratford. William Shakespeare is considered one of the greatest writers of all time and the greatest of all English dramatists. Scholars and readers alike have marveled that one man could have such a comprehensive understanding of the human psyche. He understood lovers, tyrants, kings and queens, servants, clowns, the lucky, the jealous, and the powerful. He wrote 38 plays, including tragedies, comedies, romances, and histories in addition to 154 sonnets and other poetry. He created a pantheon of unforgettable, timeless and complex characters. Shakespeare set his plays all over the world. Yet, it appears that he never traveled out of his native England nor had a terribly eventful life. He culled and conjured his characters, his plots and his settings in part from books and his great fund of general information but most of all from his inspired imagination. Often, genius goes hand in hand with a colorful, and sometimes tortured life. However, it appears from the few remaining relevant documents that this giant among dramatists lived a rather prosaic, undramatic life. Shakespeare did not possess a vivid personality: his friends found him genteel, even selfeffacing. He was also extremely practical, a sober man of business. Perhaps his genius had not had time to waste in the real world, so William Shakespeare put all his passion and drama into his work, both as an actor and a playwright. The Romantic poet and critic Samuel Coleridge called him “myriad-minded.” He had a gift of insight unsurpassed and the ability to get inside the hearts and minds of all manner of men and women. Although Shakespeare's plays were performed at other venues during the playwright's career, the Globe Theatre in the Southwark district of London was the venue at which the Bard's best-known stage works were first produced. The Globe was built during Shakespeare's early period in 1599 by one of his long-standing associates, Cuthbert Burbage. The original Theatre stood until June 29, 1613, when its thatched roof was set ablaze by a cannon fired in a performance of Henry VIII and the Globe burned to the ground. The Globe was reconstructed in 1614, with tiles replacing flammable straw on its partial roof. In 1642, however, a quarter-century after Shakespeare's death, a new, Puritanical and decidedly anti-theater regime assumed power in England and closed down all of the country's theaters. Two years later, the site was leveled to make room for tenement housing. Shakespearean Theatre We have the names of 26 “Principal Actors” of Shakespeare’s company at the Globe, including Richard Burbage, brother to Cuthbert, who was the foremost tragedian of the Elizabethan stage. His roles included Hamlet, Lear, Othello, and Richard the III. Prior to the Globe’s opening in 1599, Will Kemp was the leading comic actor of the Chamberlain’s Men. He played the servant Peter in Romeo & Juliet, (probably) Bottom in Midsummer and (possibly) Falstaff in the Henry IV plays. Later, Robert Armin joined the Chamberlain’s Men and became legendary through his wordplay in the roles of Touchstone in As You Like It, Feste in Twelfth Night and the Fool in King Lear. Shakespeare’s name also appears in cast lists, and although there is no indication of the roles that he played, tradition ascribes him two parts: the Ghost of Hamlet’s Father and Adam, the loyal, aged servant in As You Like It. It seems that Shakespeare’s acting was subordinate to his work as a both a playwright and producer. …rich and poor alike rubbed elbows in this “microcosm or little world of man” …capacity between 2000 and 3000 spectators …most performances happened during the day because there was no artificial lighting …actors had to shout their lines because the stage was “open-air” …no background scenery, although costumes and props were utilized …no curtains and no stagehands besides the actors themselves …surrounded by a pit where “one-penny” spectators stood and a gallery with seating for “two-penny” goers …adjacent “tiring” house where costume changes were made Shakespearean Vocabulary changeling a child exchanged for another by the fairies cheek by jowl side by side con to memorize or to learn by heart a dear expense worth the trouble Fates the three sisters Clotho, Lachesis and Atropos who spin and snip the threads of human life favors tokens of love Furies the fierce, vengeful goddesses of Greek mythology give me your hands applaud! gleek to jest or to scoff hempen homespuns clothes made from rough hemp fabric, worn by the Mechanicals lingers postpones lob country bumpkin lodestars guiding stars make all split to cause a stir or bring the house down moused torn or bitten Phoebe a Greek goddess believed to be the moon puppet Helen is calling Hermia a short and dwarfish woman spotted morally deficient or sinful tear a cat to rant translated transformed or changed turns to a crow seems black by comparison waggish playful or mischievous wanting lacking wood mad your wrongs do set a scandal on my sex your actions do cause me to behave in an unladylike manner Activities and Discussion Questions Discuss what you know about A Midsummer Night’s Dream. What do you think it’s about? The play is one of Shakespeare’s comedies – what makes it a comedy? How is it like other Shakespearean comedies? Do you like Shakespeare? Why or why not? Before seeing the play, have students brainstorm a list of the types of characters, situations, emotions, themes, locations and images they think might be included in a play called “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” What are some other possible titles for the play? Why do they think Shakespeare chose the title he did? Have the students adjust the list as they read the play, or after they have seen the production. “The course of true love never did run smooth,” Lysander laments in the opening act of Midsummer. He’s not the only one who finds that love can be difficult, even painful at times. Can you think of examples, either from your own life or other stories, of a difficult or frustrating experience with love? A Midsummer Night’s Dream is believed to have been written between 1594 and 1596. What was going on in England during this time? Around the world? Create a timeline of major events and important figures and discuss how they might have influenced Shakespeare’s writing. Though Shakespeare lived and wrote in Elizabethan England, several of his plays—including A Midsummer Night’s Dream—are set in ancient Greece and Rome. Why do you think he chose these settings for so many of his stories? What about the cultures and time periods might have inspired him? Cite specific examples in Midsummer of ancient Greek references. Choose two love relationships in the play A Midsummer Night’s Dream to compare and contrast. How do these relationships change throughout the play? What is Shakespeare trying to communicate through these characters? Why do you think he included them in his play? Use text from the play to support your argument. Write a review of Aquila’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Describe what it was like to watch the play, but be sure to write about more than just the story told by the play. Think about how the play tells its story. Make the experience of watching the play come alive for your reader by writing about several of the play’s elements, including costumes, lights, props, and music, as well as how the actors performed in their roles. Let the audience decide for themselves if the play is worth seeing. Lover Diagram: Confused by all of the love relationships in this play and how they change? Map it out! Create a diagram of the four lovers (Hermia, Helena, Lysander and Demetrius) as well as Oberon, Titania and Bottom. Using pictures and arrows, map out who loves whom at the beginning of the play, in the middle (following Puck’s mischief) and at the end. Aquila has performed Shakespeare in over 47 states, including off-Broadway in New York City and at international festivals. Shakespeare by Aquila The Aquila Theatre Company was founded in London in 1991 by Peter Meineck and has been based in New York City since 1999. Aquila presents a regular season of plays in New York, at international festivals and tours to approximately seventy American towns and cities a year. The name “Aquila” means “eagle” in Latin. Aquila has a very particular mission to make classical theatre accessible and relevant to everyone. Peter Meineck manages to modernize plays while keeping true to the spirit of the original text. Encounters with works of art can change people, causing them to view the artwork and the world in a new way. In addition, artworks do not immediately reveal all that is there to be seen. Perception of artworks can be compared to peeling the layers of an onion – they can be seen on many levels and from many perspectives. As You Like It 2009-2010 Twelfth Night 2005 Comedy of Errors 2008-2009 Othello 2004 Julius Caesar 2007-2008 A Midsummer Night’s Dream 2003 Romeo & Juliet 2006-2007 Much Ado About Nothing 2006 Hamlet 2005-2006 The Tempest 2001-2002 King Lear 1999-2000 Macbeth 1996 The White House The Supreme Court Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington DC La Jolla Playhouse Shakespeare Festival/LA NYU Skirball Center Lucille Lortel Theatre Baruch Performing Arts Center New Victory Theater East 13th Street Theatre Clurman Theatre, Theatre Row 45 Bleecker Manhattan Ensemble Theatre Clark Studio Theatre at Lincoln Center Shakespeare Festival in Globe Neuss, Germany Edinburgh Festival, UK Festival of the Aegean, Greece The Bermuda Festival Shakespeare Fesztival, Gyula, Hungary Shakespeare Festival in Gdansk, Poland The aquila theatre company 4 washington sq. north, #452 new york, ny 10003 Telephone – 212-992-9642 Fax – 212-995-4352 Email – [email protected] Website - http://www.aquilatheatre.com