Calendar

Feb
8
Sat
The Winter’s Tale, The Old Globe
Feb 8 @ 12:30 am – Mar 16 @ 1:30 am

The Old Globe

February 8 – March 16, 2014

Directed by Barry Edelstein

[button target=”http://www.theoldglobe.org/tickets/production.aspx?performanceNumber=10454″]Buy Tickets[/button]

NPR calls Old Globe Artistic Director Barry Edelstein “one of the country’s leading Shakespeareans.” Now Edelstein’s work takes center stage in his Old Globe directorial debut with Shakespeare’s most enchanting masterpiece, featuring a powerful musical score written expressly for the production by acclaimed classical composer Michael Torke. The Winter’s Talesweeps breathtakingly from tragedy to comedy and along the way visits kings and queens, dancing shepherds, a most extraordinary statue, and one notoriously hungry bear, before it reaches its stunning, magical conclusion.

Apr
1
Tue
Richard III, Scrawny Cat Theatre
Apr 1 @ 5:15 am – Apr 26 @ 6:15 am

Scrawny Cat Theatre

1st – 26th April 2014

[button url=”http://scrawnycat.co.uk/richard-iii/” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Notorious villain, child murderer, hated despot. Richard III was evil, or so Shakespeare told us. But history tells another tale.

Who was he really? A dangerous tyrant or a dutiful king?

Who was the man found in the car park when all the stories are done?

Scrawny Cat Theatre Company’s unique, site specific production of Richard III will explore just that. Down among the foundations of The Rose Bankside – the theatre Shakespeare began his career in – puppets, music and physical theatre will bring history to life and let one of England’s most debated figures finally have his say.

Richard III, London, UK
Apr 1 @ 8:30 pm – Apr 26 @ 9:30 pm

Scrawny Cat Theatre

1st – 26th April 2014

[button url=”http://scrawnycat.co.uk/richard-iii/” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Notorious villain, child murderer, hated despot. Richard III was evil, or so Shakespeare told us. But history tells another tale.

Who was he really? A dangerous tyrant or a dutiful king?

Who was the man found in the car park when all the stories are done?

Scrawny Cat Theatre Company’s unique, site specific production of Richard III will explore just that. Down among the foundations of The Rose Bankside – the theatre Shakespeare began his career in – puppets, music and physical theatre will bring history to life and let one of England’s most debated figures finally have his say.

Apr
21
Mon
Crazy for You, Stratford, Ontario
Apr 21 @ 5:15 am – Oct 12 @ 6:15 am

Stratford Festival

April 21 to October 12, 2014

Directed by Donna Feore

[button url=”http://www.stratfordfestival.ca/OnStage/plays.aspx?id=63″ target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Sent to Deadrock, Nevada, to foreclose on a derelict theatre, banker Bobby Child falls for its owner’s daughter, Polly Baker. Can he reconcile the demands of duty and love – and his own dreams of dancing? “I Got Rhythm,” “Nice Work if You Can Get It” and “Someone to Watch Over Me” are just some of the gems in this dynamic musical’s dazzling score.

 

Apr
30
Wed
Alice Through the Looking-Glass, Stratford, Ontario
Apr 30 @ 5:00 am – Oct 12 @ 6:00 am

Stratford Festival

April 30 – Oct 12, 2014

By Lewis Carroll

Adapted for the stage by James Reaney
Directed by Jillian Keiley

[button url=”http://www.stratfordfestival.ca/OnStage/plays.aspx?id=63″ target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

Climbing through her living-room mirror, Alice enters a world of wonders populated by such fantastical characters as Humpty Dumpty, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Walrus and the Carpenter – and the fearsome Jabberwock. Children and adults alike will be delighted by this spectacular journey into the topsy-turvy realm of the dreaming mind.

 

 

 

May
5
Mon
King Lear – Stratford, Ontario Shakespeare
May 5 @ 6:00 am – Oct 10 @ 7:00 am

King Lear – Stratford, Ontario Shakespeare

by William Shakespeare
Directed by Antoni Cimolino

Festival Theatre

[button url=”http://www.stratfordfestival.ca/BoxOffice/calendar.aspx?id=85″ target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]

About the Play

An aging monarch resolves to divide his kingdom among his three daughters, with consequences he little expects. His reason shattered in the storm of violent emotion that ensues, with his very life hanging in the balance, Lear loses everything that has defined him as a king – and thereby discovers the essence of his own humanity.