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Please Note • all programs are strictly copyright of the university of rochester international theatre program. • programs are presented in the form given to the printer, thus page order is not consecutive. • recent programs are formatted to be printed on legal size paper (8.5 x 14) with a centre fold. join us next season! Under Milk wood by dylan thomas directed by nigel maister opening October 2015 Courage!* (a world premiere) yerma by federico garcia lorca directed by gisela cardenas opening december 2015 A new pop-rock music-theatre work based on bertolt brechts mother courage and her children adapted and directed by nigel maister original music by matt marks opening april 2016 * working title the first show of the fall ‘15 semester, dylan thomas's unique play for voices under milk wood is auditioning this semester! pre AUDITION! when: monday & tuesday, april 27 & 28 at 7pm where: Todd theatre what: prepare/perform anY poem of your choice no prior experience necessary get with the program the ur international theatre program the russell and ruth peck artistic director nigel maister production manager gordon g. rice administrator katie farrell technical director charles t. lawlor props master/production associate mary reiser costume shop manager nadine brooks taylor box office, front-of-house & concessions manager virginia monte cutter/draper sara jean gallagher hair & makeup assistant sarah goodman costume shop interns stephanie busch, caleb krieg & bonnie nortz assistant props masters halle burns, devin goodman, leah mould & nancy (fang ning) wang scene shop assistants julia cowan, travis kohler & david simm social media intern & pr assistant fernanda price publicity interns murie gillett, elizana-marie joseph, elizabeth pearson, maria sepulveda & caitlin thomas theatre intern devin goodman program information compiled by kat mccorkle URITP photographer keith walters URITP videographer xuan (amy) zhang production trailers by sam lerman URITP webmaster zachary kimball graphic, program & poster design i:master/studios at [email protected] www.rochester.edu/theatre like our page: toddtheatre / join our group: toddtheatre read our blog: toddtheatre.blogspot.com a note about the program follow us @toddtheatre visit our channel: www.youtube.com/ToddTheatre Program content is compiled by the production’s Assistant Director, Kat McCorcle, and edited by Nigel Maister. For a complete list of sources and works cited, please contact the Theatre Program. The UR International Theatre Program continually brings new, challenging, and exciting theatre to Rochester. We can’t do it without your support. Become a patron of the arts and a supporter of original work and fresh talent, by making a donation to the Program today. Even the smallest amount can make a difference. Call 273-5159 to find out how you can contribute... (and every donation is tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law.) ur supporting the arts our work has been supported by the following generous patrons and friends of the ur international theatre program: Hameed Ahmed ('11) - Walter Monteith Aikman - Christopher David & Melissa Apple ('92) Leah Barish ('12) - Stuart Jay Barish - Judith Bernstein - Stephen M. Bertetti - Thomas M. Bohrer ('85) Daniel Braden & Natalie Hurst - Leslie Braun - Kevin Brice ('12) - Kelsey A. Burritt ('13) Alan Carmasin ('67) - Lisa G. Chanzit - Donald Chew - Jessica Chinelli ('12) - Jill M. Cohen Lisa J. Cohen ('84) & Neil Halin -Timothy J. & Shelby M. Connell - Montoia Davis ('10) - Alison DeSantis Nina DeSoi ('12) - Margaret Wada & Michael Dumouchel - Lindsay Rae Dussing Eleanor Leba Eines - Andrew Eisman - Diane Faissler Randall Fippinger & the Frances Alexander Family Fund of the Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Charles Flowers - Bethany Gilboard ('80) - Gwen M. Greene - Edmund A. Hajim Christopher & Alissa Harrington - Frank A. & Linda E. Interlichia - Lydia Jimenez ('13) Christopher Justus - Jonathan & Marcie Kammel - Steven & Heidi Kasper - Karen E. Kennedy Zack Kimball - Taryn McKenna Kimel - Sheila Knopke - Adam Konowe ('90) - Sylvia B. Lee Jeffery Mantel - Daniel Mauro - Elizabeth McMaster (in memory of Katie McManus) - Mark R. Milner Karen Celeste Moculeski - Chandler Moran - Julia Nathan & Joel Loveless - Mitch Nelson Lawrence Nehring - David Paul Dominic Pascoe - Russell & Ruth Peck Diane Waldgeir Perlberg (‘77) & Mark C. Perlberg (‘78) - Giulia Perucchio ('13) - Renato Perucchio James Phillips - Paul I. Pilorz - Laura J. Platt - Peter Plummer The family and friends of Nicholas S. Priore ‘83 Ronald Rettner - Mike Riffle - Matt Rodano - Kathleen Rose - Penina Rubin - Seth A. Rubinstein Andrew Ruffner - Mariko Sakita-Mozeson - James Schwartz - Dr. Rene, Iris & Robert Rene Sevigny Kay Shames - Aadika Singh - May T. Skinner - Robert & Roberta Sokol - Linda & Tom Sloan Joan Ross Sorkin - Nancy Rademan Stilwell - Evelyn Stock - Bruce Stockton ('11) - Jean Marie Sullivan Carl Talbot - Marian Todd - Eugene Vaynberg ('08) - Janice Willett - Cyd Rosenberg Weiss West Family Trust - Peter Winkelstein - Mark & Robin Young - Martin P. Zemel & Laura L. Fulton we urge you to join their ranks! Fill out the pledge form included in your program or visit us at www.rochester.edu/theatre/support.php the university of rochester international theatre program presents special thanks Applied Audio & Theater Supplies - Jim and Rita DeLucia - Tom and Peggy Lawlor This production has been made possible through the combined efforts of ENG 171 & 271 (Technical & Advanced Technical Theatre), ENG 173 (Intro to Stage Lighting and Sound), ENG 291 (Plays in Production) & ENG 360 (Special Projects: Theatre) Benjamin Ackerman - Fraol Bekele - Brandon Bogardus - Felipe Bomfim - Joshua Churchin - Jeremy Cooper Julia Cowan - Ella DeFalco - Fan Feng - Luiain Felemban - Andrew Fianu - Sarah Goodman -Michael Grady Robert Greendyke - Lancaster Hamilton - Sam Higgins - Justina Hauss - Emily Ivey - Talia Jaffe - Mia Koulopoulos Travis Kohler - Michael LaPorte - Renjun Li - Haotai Liu - Kat McCorkle - Bruce McKenty - Stephen Mitchell Manuel Navarro - Aurora Newman - Kedi Ni - Eric Nolting - Daniel Parker - Tori Powers - Robert Pringle Isaiah Pule - Feroz Rauf - Theodore Reiss - Hayden Schiff - David Simm - Miles Smith - Catherine Stevens Zach Tredenick - Rutain Wang - Steven Willis - Qingyi (Stacey) Yu The Taming of the Shrew by william shakespeare directed by matthew earnest set & costume design by will bezek lighting design by kyle grant sound design by anthony narciso voice & acting coaching by alexa scott-flaherty production staff production stage manager .......................................................................... nick potter assistant psm ........................................................................................... justina hauss assistant stage managers ................................................ matt ervin/run crew (rigging) ............................................................................... abdelrahman hassan/spot operator ............................................................................................................. emily ivey/lights ............................................................................... thomas marone/run crew (rigging) .............................................................................................. brian miers/spot operator ................................................................................... yasaman khademi rad/costumes .............................................................................................................. jay shim/sound ........................................................................................................ katie stevens/props master electrician ................................................................................... melissa becker assistant master electricians ............................................ andrew jones & dan parker audiovisual engineer .................................................................................. kyle meyers assistant audiovisual engineer .................................................................. adam parker assistant director .................................................................................... kat mccorkle this production was made possible, in part, by the ellen miller '55 endowment for theater productions The UR International Theatre Program wishes the following students who have contributed to the Theatre Program over the course of their academic careers and who are now graduating: good luck, godspeed, and many broken metaphorical legs in the years ahead. Stay in touch! Blanca Abney - Deema AlMohammed Ali - Megan Arnold -Vasyl Boychuk - Michael Breen - Lilly Camp Sergio Carrillo - Javier Dominguez - Antoinette Esce - Sara Frederick - Devin Goodman - Sarah Goodman Evelyn Hernandez - Sam Higgins - Seung Ho Lee - Samay Kapadia - Ryan Kelly -Maxwell Kinder - Travis Kohler Charles Lehner - Kathryn Loveless - Michael Mayor -Justina McCarty - Matthew McCormick - Shaquill McCullers Melanie Mendez - Michael Mobarak - Alex Montes - Leah Mould - Brandon Newton - Rachael O’Neill Antonio Ortega - Natasha Sacoto - Rachael Sonnet - Hannah Wiltse - Zoe Netter - Yiwei (Kelly) Zhou the taming of the shrew runs approximately 2 hours and 30 minutes with one 15 minute intermission please be advised that this production uses theatrical gunshots. the taking of photographs, video and/or audio recording of this performance by any means whatsoever is strictly prohibited W illiam Shakespeare is arguably the best known and most frequently performed English language playwright. Despite Shakespeare’s ubiquitous presence in high school curricula, college literature courses, and both professional and amateur theatres the world over, much of the Bard of Avon’s personal life remains shrouded in mystery. What we do know comes from the few records left at the time of his birth and professional work. Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England. Though the exact date of his birth is unknown, the church in Stratford-upon-Avon records a William Shakespeare born to John Shakespeare and Mary Arden, baptized on 26 April 1564. Scholars generally agree that he would have been born about three days earlier, and his birth is customarily celebrated on 23 April (the date, coincidentally, of his death in 1616). Shakespeare would have been educated until about sixteen years of age at the grammar school in Stratford, where (true to the fashion of the time) he would have found a curriculum heavy in Latin literature, learned through memorization, translation, and performance. At eighteen, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway, and the couple had a daughter, Susanna, followed by twins, Judith and Hamnet two years later. Shakespeare then disappears from the public record until 1592, when he is recorded as living in London, working as an actor and playwright. Shakespeare, it seems, was a modestly talented actor, but his playwriting drew the most attention-and royal patronage. Shakespeare, like many poets of his day, sought wealthy sponsors from among the upper class to fund his writing. In return, poets would dedicate works to their patrons, granting william shakespeare 1564 - 1616 “He was not of an age but for all time" Ben Jonson, “To the Memory of My Beloved the Author, Mr. William Shakespeare” them elevated status among the nobility during England’s Renaissance. Shakespeare’s first major patron was the Earl of Southampton, a wealthy young nobleman. Shakespeare dedicated both Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece to Southampton. Additionally, many Shakespearean scholars believe that Southampton is the subject of Shakespeare’s sonnets. Shakespeare later gained favor with both Queen Elizabeth and King James I. Queen Elizabeth allowed professional theatres to operate in London, and King James became a patron of Shakespeare and his theatre company, The Lord Chamberlain’s Men, which was renamed The King’s Men in 1603 in honor of James. Shakespeare continued to write until his death in 1616, on what could have been his 52nd birthday. Though the historical record of Shakespeare’s personal life is slim, we do know that he was well-regarded during his lifetime. As his friend and occasional rival Ben Jonson had it: Thou art a monument without a tomb And art alive still while thy book doth live And we have wits to read and praise to give. William Bezek (Scenic & Costume Designer) is a freelance artist from San Francisco, and resident designer for the Lunar Stratagem, a touring theater company based in West Virginia. Elsewhere: [glug], Can you forgive her?, Dead Letter Office (Huntington, West Virginia), I Ca$$ie…or the end of days (English Theater, Berlin Germany), poor little Lulu (Cleveland Public Theatre), The Underpants (Beck Center, Cleveland), Tigers Be Still (Dobama Theater, Cleveland), Emperor of the Moon (International Theatre Program, University of Rochester), and ¡Ay Carmela! at Spanish Rep, NYC. Will lives in NYC and in upstate New York. Kyle Grant (Lighting Designer) Select regional design credits: Jason Invisible, Elephant & Piggie's: We Are in a Play! ( John F. Kennedy Center); The Winter's Tale, Camelot (Texas Shakespeare Festival); A Few Good Men (Keegan Ireland Tour); Symphonie Concertante (Balanchine Trust), Kafka on the Shore (Spooky Action Theater), Urinetown The Musical, Oliver!, A Chorus Line, Oklahoma! (Cabrillo Stage). Other credits: Washington Ballet, Juilliard Schools of Dance & Drama, Washington National Opera, Martha Graham Dance Company, Trinity Rep, The Laramie Project Cycle (BAM, NYC), Stickfly (Bway, assistant to Beverly Emmons). He serves as resident lighting designer for Intermezzo Dance Company in NYC and lighting director for the American College Theater Festival in Washington DC. Upcoming: Occupied Territories, DC. www.kylegrant.net Anthony Narciso (Sound Designer) is a sound designer and audio engineer based in Orlando, FL. His work is frequently heard around the country at regional theaters and universities. He is currently the season sound designer for Orlando Repertory Theatre and was a part of the guest sound design staff at UCF for the Fall 2014 semester. In addition, Anthony is the Sound Department Head and Festival Sound Designer for the Texas Shakespeare Festival during the summer months. Recent credits include Cymbeline (Sound Designer/Composer), Macbeth (Sound Designer/Composer), Noises Off and My Fair Lady at the Texas Shakespeare Festival; The Borrowers (Sound Designer/Composer) and A Christmas Story: The Musical at Orlando Rep; Trevor at Theatre UCF; and Can You Forgive Her? at The Lunar Stratagem in West Virginia. Anthony holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Theatre Design and Technology from the University of Central Florida. Alexa Scott-Flaherty (Acting and Vocal Coach) is an actress, theatre artist and producer. She is a proud member of Labyrinth Theatre Company in New York City. There she has worked on new plays since 2003 with writers including Cusi Cram, John Patrick Shanley, Steven Adly Guirgis, Jose Rivera, Frank Pugliese, Melissa Ross, Eric Bogosian, Bob Glaudini, David Bar Katz, and many others. She has worked as an actress in New York at many theaters including The Public Theatre, SoHo Rep, and PS 122. She also worked as an actress with the Royal Shakespeare Company of London and The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C. Alexa is an adjunct lecturer at the University of Rochester. She is an alumna of Vassar College. artist bios Matthew Earnest (Director) Matthew’s many productions of new and classical plays, operas, and his own original works and literary adaptations have been seen in NYC, across the US, Europe, and in Africa. Originally from Texas, he is an associate artist at Germany’s English Theatre Berlin and at The REP/University of Delaware, and from 1995-2007 he was Founding Artistic Director of international touring company, deep ellum ensemble, based in NYC. Today, in addition to an active career as an independent director around the country, Matthew is Founding Artistic Director of The Lunar Stratagem, where he has written, directed, and choreographed [glug], Can You Forgive Her?, Dead Letter Office (a prelude to Bartleby the Scrivener), and I, Ca$$ie… or The end of days, among others. The more text-based of these pieces are published and available for purchase. Matthew was twice granted permission by the family of Bertolt Brecht to translate that playwright’s works for his own productions, and he has translated/adapted several other European dramatists as well, including Chekhov, Ibsen, and Büchner. Matthew was profiled in American Theatre magazine for his 2010 production of Wanderlust: a History of Walking, which he adapted from the bestselling non-fiction book by Rebecca Solnit, created with an Access to Artistic Excellence grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and premiered at Cleveland Public Theatre before being invited to the Ice Factory in NYC. Matthew’s US premiere of Madrid playwright Juan Mayorga’s Himmelweg (Way to Heaven) ran OffBroadway for nine months in 2011 after receiving The New York Times Critics’ Pick, and in summer 2014, Matthew was among a group of artists invited to Tijuana, Mexico to participate in TCG’s International Artistic Collaboration Forum. His NYC productions include: The Public Theater/Joe’s Pub, Gramercy Arts Theater, Teatro Círculo, Museum of Jewish Heritage, Ice Factory, Ontological-Hysteric Theater, Washington Square Church, Present Company Theatorium, Midtown International Theatre Festival, The Bridge Dance-Theater Series at WAX, KGB’s Kraine Theater, NY International Fringe Festival, Chelsea Arts Theater, One Dream Theatre, and NADA, Inc. His regional work includes: Amphibian Stage Productions (Fort Worth), Daniel Arts Center (MA), The REP (DE), Texas Shakespeare Festival, Hilberry Rep (Detroit), Cleveland Public Theatre, Adirondack Theatre Festival (NY), Beck Center for the Arts (Cleveland), DStv Festival (Ethiopia), Dublin Festival Fringe (Ireland), Warehouse Theatre (SC), Burning Coal Theatre Co (NC), Stoneleaf Festival (NC), Stillwater Theatre (NC), Porthouse Theatre (OH), Theatre Outlet (PA), Shakespeare Festival of Dallas, Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck (NY), Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival, Kitchen Dog Theater (Dallas), FIT Festival (Dallas), Arlington Opera (TX), and Moonstruck Theatre (Dallas). Matthew has taught graduate and undergraduate students, led workshops, and directed productions at many universities, including Coastal Carolina University, Marshall University, University of Rochester, Ohio Northern University, University of North Texas, Meredith College, and Kent State University, where he was the 2008 Roe Green Visiting Director. A Drama League Directing Fellow, Matthew has created works with support from the NEA, ArtNY, and others, and he has been an adjudicator of new plays at the American College Theater Festival. Matthew’s many awards include the Berkshire Stage and Screen’s Best of 2013, Cleveland Scene Best Director, a Wilde Award (nomination), Outstanding Alumnus (UNT), BIFF (NY Fringe), Audience Favourite (Dublin Fringe), Dallas Theater Critics Forum Award, and the Dallas Observer’s Best of Dallas, among others, and his productions have been cited on Top 10 lists in major newspapers around the country. Matthew is a member of SDC, the labor union of professional theater directors and choreographers in America. He lives in Manhattan's East Village and in the Hudson Valley with artist and stage designer, William Bezek. www.matthewearnest.com “To me she’s married, not unto my clothes. Could I repair what she will wear in me as I can change these poor accoutrements, ‘twere well for Kate and better for myself.” Petruccio, III ii ll 116-119 “My tongue will tell the anger of my heart, or else my heart concealing it will break” Katherina, IV iii ll 79-80 cast Halle Burns ................................. Sly, Vincentio Ron Aulakh ................................. Hostess, Petruchio Lydia Jimenez .............................. Lord, Baptista, Servant, Haberdasher Devin Goodman ......................... Huntsman, Lucentio (later disguised as Cambio), Tranio, Servant Ian Von Fange ............................. Kate Alberto Carrillo Casas ................ Bianca, Grumio Kevin Bodhipaksha ..................... Gremio, Servant, Tailor, Widow Jonathan Wetherbee ....................Hortensio (later disguised as Licio), Curtis Elizabeth Scheuerman ................Servant, Biondello, Merchant love & marriage in elizabethan england M arriage in Shakespeare’s day was often seen as a business deal. Marriages could often improve a family’s social standing, and a woman from a wealthy family often brought a large dowry to the marriage. Men and women both had rigidly defined gender roles that influenced their role in the courtship process and the marital relationship. In a marriage, men were seen as the providers, while women were in charge of the children and servants. The Elizabethan courtship process was a long one, and a marriage was typically a public ceremony followed by a more private feast for the families of the couple. Before the couple could be married, they would need to be publicly promised to one another. First, they would hold hands in front of witnesses as their betrothal was announced, as Katherina and Petruccio do in Act II, Scene I. Then, a proclamation, called the “banns”from the Middle English word for proclamationwould be read in the couple’s home parish church on three consecutive Sundays (or other holy days, if applicable) prior to the wedding. Reading the banns was a chance for anyone with legal objections to the marriage, such as knowledge of a preexisting marriage contract or a vow of celibacy to “speak now or forever hold their peace”; otherwise, the marriage would continue as planned. In some cases, however, couples needed a more expedited marriage, and for a significant fee a marriage license and exemption from the banns could be provided. Shakespeare himself married Anne Hathaway in a more hurried fashion, as she was three months pregnant and he was a minor and needed his father’s consent. Though frowned upon, marriages like Will and Anne’s weren’t uncommon. Many couples engaged in sex once they were betrothed (or even before) and many brides were pregnant when married. Thus, the marriages between Katherina and Petruccio, and even more so Bianca and Lucentio, though not typical, would not have been unheard of in Shakespeare’s time. Humans have hunted with falcons or other birds of prey since 2000 BCE. Falconry gained popularity in Europe during the Renaissance and was seen as a symbol of high status. After social change brought on by the French Revolution in the 1800s, and as concern for the environment rose during the 19th and 20th centuries, falconry has fallen somewhat out of favor, though the sport is still practiced. “Another way I have to man my haggard, to make her come and know her keeper’s call: that is, to watch her, as we watch these kites that bate, and beat, and will not be obedient.” Petruccio, IV i ll 182-185 falconry women The theatre in Shakespeare’s day had a decidedly mixed reputation. While Queen Elizabeth I and King James were patrons of Shakespeare’s theatre company, and allowed the theaters to operate, members of the Church of England saw theatre as a corrupting influence and regarded actors as unsavory characters. All public theaters were closed in 1642 by the Puritan Parliament. Marriage in Elizabethan England aimed primarily to produce heirs for the family, especially in the upper classes. Only sons could inherit, but in the event that a family had only daughters, the eldest daughter would inherit – but usually her share of her family’s wealth would go to her husband as a dowry. Baptista promises large sums of money and land to Petruccio to take Katherina off his hands, and Petruccio in return promises a large “jointure” (a portion of land, goods, and/or money promised to a woman after marriage in the event that she became a widow). Once married, the wife would move to her husband’s home and become part of his family, where she became the head of his household. While men were expected to be the breadwinners and provide financially for their families, women would be in charge of managing the household accounts, overseeing the servants, and caring for the children. Women in Shakespeare’s time did not have the same access to formal education as their male counterparts. Lower-class women would have very little, if any, schooling. Upper-class women, like Bianca and Katherina, would be educated by tutors in their home or the home of a friend of the family. A woman’s primary duty was to care for her husband and children and manage the home, so her education would usually focus on music, dancing, keeping the household accounts up to date, and some Latin and Greek. “Tranio, since for the great desire I had to see fair Padua, nursery of arts, I am arrived for fruitful Lombardy, the pleasant garden of great Italy” Lucentio, I i ll 1-5 padua Padua is a city located in Northern Italy. Traditionally, its founding is dated at 1183 BCE. During Shakespeare’s lifetime, Padua was ruled by the Venetians, and was noted for its university. Humoral theory was an important part of medical philosophy during Shakespeare’s time. Hippocrates and his contemporaries in Ancient Greece theorized that the human body was composed of four substances called humors. These were black bile, yellow bile, blood, and phlegm. When their humors were balanced, a person was mentally and physically healthy. However, excesses of one or more humors would negatively affect a person’s health and temperament. Diet and lifestyle could also affect the balance of humors in the body. Grumio refuses to give Kate meat because red meat was believed to be “choleric”, or causing an excess of yellow bile (and therefore inducing anger). the humors the lute Shakespeare is well known not only for his plays, but for his clever use of language. The Bard is not an undeserved title, as Shakespeare coined a number of phrases that we still use today, and many English words were first written in Shakespeare’s scripts. Some noteworthy quips from The Taming of the Shrew are Katherina and Petruccio’s exhchange in Act II Scene I: “Asses are made to bear, and so are you. / Women are made to bear, and so are you.” and the use of the word “pedant” to describe an overly particular, overbearing, and scholarly character, was first printed in The Taming of the Shrew. The lute is a small stringed instrument that is played by plucking the strings, similar to a guitar. The lute was arguably the most popular instrument during the Elizabethan era, especially among courtiers and the upper class. Many plays would include songs and musical accompaniment was quite common in the theatres. other notable shrews: folktales, allusions, and adaptations S hakespeare’s plays, perhaps more than those of any other playwright, have been adapted and re-adapted. Many modern texts allude to Shakespeare’s plays, but the Bard did his fair share of borrowing from other stories as well. “Taming” folktales-when a headstrong, argumentative woman is subdued by her husband-are common in many traditions, and the motif of woman tamed by marriage is even more ubiquitous. Shrews in Greek history, such as Socrates’ nagging wife, Xanithippe, would have been familiar to Shakespeare. Fast forward a few thousand years, and an English ballad called A Merry Jest of a Shrewd and Curst Wife Lapped in Morel’s Skin for Her Good Behavior becomes quite popular. This folksong describes a quarrelsome woman whose husband punishes her by beating her and then wrapping her in the salted skin of his horse, Morel. Shakespeare would most likely have been familiar with the ballad, and though the coercion of Kate in Taming is much more psychological and considerably less physically violent, the pattern is similar, leading many scholars to believe that Shakespeare could have at least partly been inspired by A Merry Jest. The subplot of Bianca and her lovers most likely is a reference to George Gascoigne’s play, Supposes, where a woman is wooed by three suitors and must choose one. The pranks played on Sly are slightly harder to pin down a definite source for, but oral tradition and folktales often featured beggars being elevated to higher social status, either through mistake or trickery. The Arabian Nights features such a story, and some scholars believe that Shakespeare may have been familiar, at least by word of mouth, with those tales. The Taming of the Shrew itself has also been the basis of numerous adaptations, the most famous Shrew, n1: Any of the small insectivorous mammals, belonging to the genus Sorex or the family Soricidæ, much resembling mice but having a long sharp snout; a shrewmouse. n2: A person, esp. (now only) a woman given to railing or scolding or other perverse or malignant behavior; freq. a scolding or turbulent wife. (Oxford English Dictionary) of which is Cole Porter’s musical, Kiss Me, Kate. Kiss Me, Kate is also a play-within-a-play, and follows the story of the backstage intrigues of four actors as they sing, dance, flirt, and fight their way through a musical adaptation of The Taming of the Shrew. Songs such as “I’ve Come to Wive it Wealthily in Padua”, “Where is the Life That Late I Led?”, and “I Am Ashamed That Women Are So Simple” are direct references to the text of Taming of the Shrew. Kiss Me, Kate continues the themes laid out in Taming such as performance versus privacy, the importance of costuming and appearances, and the necessity to make sacrifices for the people we love. Of the many film adaptations, two of the most famous are the version starring Elizabeth Taylor (and her then husband, Richard Burton, directed by Franco Zeffirelli) and the more recent 10 Things I Hate About You (starring Heath Ledger, Julia Stiles, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt). Kat McCorkle: You’ve acted in and directed a number of Shakespeare’s plays. What drew you to The Taming of the Shrew? Matthew Earnest: I’ve always loved Kate, her intelligence, her anger, her dissatisfaction with the status quo. She’s always seemed like someone I would know, a very contemporary figure flailing about in an old, conservative world. Her brilliance is that she realizes, through the mentorship of the only person who has ever really loved her, Petruchio, that it is possible to reimagine herself and find happiness, and that the violence she has always used to get what she wants is not necessary. KM: What do you think are the biggest takeaways for a modern audience experiencing Taming of the Shrew? ME: Primarily, that one can create the world in which one wants to live. That world won’t be perfect, nothing ever can be, but you don’t have to be a rebel all your life, or a victim. You can be the protagonist in your own story. KM: The Taming of the Shrew can rub some people the wrong way, to put it lightly. What has been most challenging about working on this production? ME: The same thing that’s hard about doing any Shakespeare play-that most people already know it and think of it as holy writ, or worse, that their own interpretation of it is definitive, and the only possible way to read definitive and the only the play. My job as a theater maker is to respond, very personally, to a piece of writing. Many hundreds of thousands of people have directed The Taming of the Shrew, so why should anyone come to see mine? I believe that the theater is about an audience walking in someone else’s shoes for a few hours-this is what creates conversation a conversation with director matthew earnest and provokes thought and empathy-but it isn’t possible if the audience isn’t willing to have their assumptions challenged, or if they’re not willing to let someone else control the narrative for a few hours. This is increasingly difficult in our era of reality TV, DVR, smartphones, Google Earth, etc. KM: If you could pick William Shakespeare’s brain for an hour over lunch, what are some questions you’d love to ask him? ME: They’re quite gossipy, I’m afraid! Do you feel like you succeeded? Did you ever regret leaving your marriage and kids, or anything else? Did you ever love another man? KM: Do you have any advice for young actors or directors approaching a Shakespearean production? ME: Lesson #1: Make it about you. Lesson #2: Make it about you. Lesson #3: Make it about you. S hakespeare, like most playwrights of his day, would have been familiar with commedia dell’arte, a type of physical, improvisation-based theatre that originated in Italy during the late fifteenth century, and which later gained popularity throughout England and France. The commedia dell’arte troupes are considered some of the first professional theatre companies, and many went on to considerable fame in Italy, France, and England. In Winifred Smith’s The Commedia Dell’Arte: A Study in Italian Popular Comedy, she notes that “a commedia was always in part the transitory creation of the individual actors who played it”. Professional improvisational actors would work within a specific scenario or plot outline and add their own personal touches, dialogue, and slapstick humor. The scenarios often centered on a pair of young lovers opposed by some twist of fate. They would be helped, in comic fashion, by a troop of servants, called the Zanni, who provided the bulk of the jokes and commentary. Other scenarios would draw on folktales or Greek drama, but the actors would often add in snide remarks based on local politics or recent events. Most actors would be masked, and wear elaborate costumes to fit the stereotypical characters they embodied. Actors would also practice improvising small bits of comic action or dialogue, or lazzi (from the Italian for joke or witticism), and add them into the scenario to fill time or get more laughs out of the audience. Some actors would become famous for being able to a perform a particular lazzo, which their audiences would expect from them even though it often had nothing to do with the plot or the scenario. In Taming of the Shrew, many of the characters are based upon stock characters from the commedia. Gremio, Bianca’s elderly suitor,is a perfect example of the stock character, Pantaloon—a rich yet foolish old man who is hoodwinked comedy and comedia dell'arte in shakespeare According to an essay by Jennifer Meagher for the Metropolitan Museum of Art on commedia dell’arte, “the earliest known company formed in Padua in 1545, and by the turn of the seventeenth century troupes such as the Gelosi, Confidenti, and Fedeli enjoyed international celebrity”. by the young lovers (Inamorati or The Straights) and their servants. Shakespeare drew upon the commedia dell’arte for inspiration for many of his other comedies, including Twelfth Night and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Unlike in Shakespeare’s theatre, women would occasionally take the stage in commedia troupes, as a maid or noble lady. Another off-shoot of the commedia dell’arte that is still alive and well today, especially in England, is the Punch and Judy puppet show. Punch’s character is based upon one of the Zanni, Pulcinello-a thuggish and belligerent character. These commedia-inspired puppet shows arrived in England in the early 17th century, and quickly became popular street entertainment. Punch and Judy continue to be well-known characters to this day, just as the shrewish Kates, the Pantaloons, and the Harlequins make their entrances in theatres the world over, loudly making their voices heard.