Summer Shakespeare returns to Fort Worth
Theatre department stages "Twelfth Night" and "Romeo and Juliet" using TCU students, professionals.
by Kathryn Hopper and Rick Waters '95
TCU theatre students Daniel Fredrick and Kelsey Milbourn play the lovers in Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet.” The actors appear in “Twelfth Night” as well.
When Fort Worth lost its summer Shakespeare festival several years ago
it was a tragedy, but thanks to TCU’s theatre department, perhaps it’s
now all’s well that ends well.
Summertime Shakespeare returns to
Fort Worth tonight as the theatre department stages a preview
performance of "Twelfth Night." (Tomorrow night is the preview
performance of "Romeo and Juliet.") Shows will be performed in rotating
repertory, running through June 28 in TCU's air-conditioned Buschman
and Hays theaters. They'll use the same cast, so you can see the same
actor playing Romeo one night and Sir Andrew Aguecheek the next, for
instance.
The festival will use professional and student actors
and designers. For the first two years, it is funded by a $250,000
Vision in Action grant from TCU. Organizers hope to be self-sufficient
by 2011.
T.J. Walsh, associate professor of drama, said he and
colleagues saw an opportunity when the university’s VIA effot promised
to fund initiatives that embodied the university’s mission statement,
including connecting TCU to the community.
“We wanted to bring
together our students and area professionals to give something really
special to the community — a Shakespeare festival that’s done right,”
Walsh said, who is serving as artistic director. Harry Parker, chairman
of the theatre department, is managing director.
Ticket prices are around $20 and available on the festival’s Web site www.trinityshakes.org.
“I
know some people will miss being outside like the old festival was, but
they won’t when it starts pouring rain right after the opening scene,”
Walsh said. “Besides, we’ll offer a more intimate setting of 200 or so
people — it’s the way Shakespeare should be seen.”
Walsh says
he's excited that the festival allows TCU students to work alongside
professional actors. Of the 18 actors of the inaugural company, 10 are
students and eight are professionals. Students also make up much of the
15-person production crew.
“For our students the benefits are
enormous,” said Walsh. “For one thing, they’ll be paid. We’re paying 40
to 50 people through the festival and in this difficult economic time,
that’s a big impact. Plus, our actors will have to go toe-to-toe with
very talented professionals. It’s going to be a challenge for them to
step up.”