FALL 2023 Production

 

Our Town

by Thornton Wilder

Directed by Professor Wind Dell Woods

Created by American playwright Thornton Wilder in 1938, Our Town was described by Edward Albee as "the greatest American play ever written".  The fictional American town of Grover's Corners between 1901 and 1913  is observed through the everyday lives of its citizens.  Frequently performed, this production will feature a new and innovative approach to a pillar of American Theatre.

Our Town is a play that works to bring into relief the value of life through the small events and encounters of the everyday. There is a sobering simplicity or sincerity to the play which is augmented by its meta-theatrical and minimalist aesthetics. The fictional town of Grover’s Corner is represented on and through a nearly empty stage, no curtain nor scenery. For me, Wilder seeks to trace the forces of life beyond the brick and mortar which often remain the only testament of human living. In doing so, he validates the plain beauty and cyclerity of everyday life events. In our own time, in our own town(s) and cities similar events take place that mark similar subtly beautiful attempts at living. More and more, however, the ubiquitous presence of portable technology designed to enhance communication and bring us closer together often leave us feeling more distracted and disconnected. How can we seek out connections and communal spaces that are unmediated by technology? How might leaving aside the technical accoutrements of this advanced capitalist world alter and enhance how we see each other, the world, ourselves together in the world? Taking a turn with Wilder, this production seeks to strip away the adornments and get down to the scaffolding of a theatrical event in hopes to catch a glimpse of the vital forces behind the structural forms. Wilder asserts that “our claim, our hope our despair are in the mind—not in things, not in ’scenery.’” Returning to the bones of this thing called theatre requires us to rediscover our ability to imagine and sharpen our skills of using play as a way of practicing how to live fuller and freer lives. 

Performances:

Oct 27, 28, Nov 2, 3, 4 - 7:30 p.m.

Nov 4 - 2 p.m.

Norton Clapp Theatre 

For Tickets: https://ups.universitytickets.com/w/event.aspx?SeriesID=14 

 

Directors' Lab

A festival of scenes selected from Full-Length Plays and directed by Students of Theatre 313: Directing Class. The festival features a diverse range of material and approaches that feature the exciting work of your directors and actors, FREE Admission!

Mon/Tues - Dec 4, 5 - 7:30pm

Norton Clapp Theatre

 

 

Spring 2024 Production

Measure for Measure 

by William Shakespeare

Directed by Professor Sara Freeman

Measure for Measure is an edgy, debate-worthy play where Shakespeare explores the paradoxical way that restrictive policies produce unintended results, often exactly the opposite of the results they were trying to produce. The main character, Isabella, faces impossible choices brought forth by leaders who enforce abstractions and allow double standards for themselves. Her conflict with Angelo leaves her brother's life hanging in the balance. It's a play concerned with purity, mercy, good social order, and the liberty of conscience. I'm ready to find out what happens when we strip the play down to its essence and see how it uncomfortably and brilliantly resonates with our era of backlash and confusion about prohibitions and bans, both on ideas and reproductive rights; the effects of policing and the nature of safety; and the freedom to live and love with self-determination.

 

Performances:

Feb 23, 24, 29, Mar 1, 2 - 7:30pm;  Mar 2 - 2pm

Norton Clapp Theatre

 

Senior Theatre Festival: April 11-13

Our capstone experience in the major and something that sets our department apart from many others. This festival is collaboratively curated and produced by the senior theatre major class and presented in an intimate setting in-the-round on the Norton Clapp stage. The plays are often diverse and ambitious, featuring a large number of our students (both majors and non-majors).

 STF 2024- 

Truth be Told by William Cameron

Directed by Ryan Bennett ‘24

Featuring Alice Noble ‘24 (as Kathleen) and Canela Roey ‘24 (as Jo)

Truth Be Told by William Cameron seeks to understand loss in a world of sensationalized tragedy. The play features two characters, Kathleen (played by Alice Noble) and Jo (played by Canela Roey). One year before the play begins, Kathleen’s son opens fire in his workplace, killing fourteen people before taking his own life. Now, Jo, a journalist, is sitting down with Kathleen to learn her perspective on her son and the tragedy he committed. This provides a zoomed-in lens on Kathleen’s relationships with the memories of her family, the community her son turned on, and those weaponizing kindness to take advantage of her isolation and grief. This grounded, visceral play is bursting with tension surrounding hard conversations about our humanity, the complexities of motherhood, and the political nature of truth. If hurt people hurt people, how can we heal? Between objective facts and subjective experiences, how can we construct an understanding of the whole truth? How do we nurture and care for the people around us so they know they are loved?

Content Warnings: Heavy Discussion of Gun Violence, Discussion of the loss of a child,
discussion of abuse, and discussion of suicide.

Performances: 

April 11th | 7:30pm
April 12th | 7:30pm
April 13th |2:00pm & 7:30pm

Norton Clapp Theater | Located In Jones Hall