Calendar

Jun
10
Tue
Othello, Hudson Valley Shakespeare
Jun 10 @ 6:45 am – Aug 31 @ 7:45 am

Hudson Valley Shakespeare

June 10 – August 31, 2014

Directed by Christoper V. Edwards Othello

[button target=”http://hvshakespeare.org/content/2014-season-shows” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Newly married to Desdemona, is appointed leader of a major military operation. Iago, passed over for promotion by Othello in favor of the younger Cassio, persuades Othello that Cassio and Desdemona are having an affair, with devastating consequences.

The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Hudson Valley Shakespeare
Jun 10 @ 7:00 am – Aug 31 @ 8:00 am

Hudson Valley Shakespeare

June 10 – August 31, 2014

Directed by Eric Tucker

[button target=”http://hvshakespeare.org/content/2014-season-shows” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Shakespeare’s gleeful, yet provocative, examination of friendship and young  love features jealous lovers, a cross-dressing heroine, a hysterical clown–and the best role for a dog ever!

 

Jun
20
Fri
Julius Caesar – Shakespeare’s Globe, London
Jun 20 @ 4:45 am – Nov 2 @ 5:45 am

Julius Caesar

by William Shakespeare

Directed by Dominic Dromgoole

[button url=”https://tickets.shakespearesglobe.com/” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

FRIENDS CLOSE, ENEMIES CLOSER

When Caesar returns to Rome from the wars a virtual dictator, Brutus and his republican friends resolve that his ambition must be curbed – which in Rome can mean only one thing: the great general must be assassinated. But once the deed is done, the idealistic conspirators must reckon with the forces of a new power bloc, led by Mark Antony and Caesar’s nephew Octavius. When their armies close at Philippi, will Caesar’s ghost be avenged?

Opposing dictatorship and republicanism, private virtue and mob violence, Shakespeare’s tense drama of high politics reveals the emotional currents that flow between men in power.

This production will employ Renaissance costumes and staging.

 

Jul
22
Tue
King Lear, Shakespeare in the Park
Jul 22 @ 7:00 am – Aug 17 @ 8:00 am

Shakespeare In The Park

July 22 – August 17, 2014

Directed by Daniel Sullivan
John Lithgow as Lear

[button url=”http://www.shakespeareinthepark.org/about#!tickets-support/c1nlx” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Revenge, rage, grief and delusion thunder upon the Delacorte as Tony® and Emmy® Award winner John Lithgow takes the stage as one of theater’s great tragic heroes, KING LEAR. Tony winner Daniel Sullivan directs Shakespeare’s classic drama about a King who loses everything—including his mind—when he disowns his favorite daughter, and finds himself betrayed in return.

Aug
6
Wed
King Lear, Shakespeare’s Globe
Aug 6 @ 6:45 am – Dec 6 @ 7:45 am

Shakespeare’s Globe Theater

From 6 August (touring UK and USA)

[button target=”https://tickets.shakespearesglobe.com/selecteics.asp”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Old King Lear, weary of royal duties, proposes to break up his kingdom and divide it among his three daughters. But this rash generosity is cruelly repaid and Lear discovers too late the false values by which he has lived – and, in turn, the suffering common to all humanity.

Its tempestuous poetry shot through with touches of humour and moments of heart-rending simplicity, King Lear is one of the deepest artistic explorations of the human condition.

 

Aug
30
Sat
The Comedy of Errors – Shakespeare’s Globe, London
Aug 30 @ 4:45 am – Dec 7 @ 5:45 am

The Comedy of Errors

By William Shakespeare

Directed by Blanche McIntyre

[button url=”https://tickets.shakespearesglobe.com/” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Take one pair of estranged twin brothers (both called Antipholus), and one pair of estranged twin servants (both called Dromio), keep them in ignorance of each other and throw them into a city with a reputation for sorcery, and you have all the ingredients for theatrical chaos. One Antipholus is astonished by his foreign hospitality; the other enraged by the hostility of his home town. The Dromios, caught between the two, are soundly beaten for obeying all the wrong orders.

Basing his plot on a farce by Plautus, Shakespeare caps the mayhem of his Roman original to build up a hectic tale of violent cross-purposes, furious slapstick and social nightmare.

This production will employ Renaissance costumes and staging.