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Daniel Oliveri and puppeteer Fern Skeen prepare for an initial dress rehearsal as the beloved Puck and Bottom.
[Courtesy of Heather Kelley]
“ShakesFear” is an immersive and interactive medley of scenes from some of Shakespeare’s most iconic plays. Throughout the 45-minute-long production, the audience is led through the perimeter of the Mary Rippon theater by some of Shakespeare’s most beloved characters. It’s the production’s first-ever run at CU, and hopefully, not its last.
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Jude Stivers and Marisa Dinsmoor as Shakespeare and the Jailer’s Daughter. [Courtesy of Heather Kelley]
“He has become kind of a diamond and caviar playwright in some respects,” said Rich. “I’m really interested in the theater that’s trying to present Shakespeare in a more populist way.”
Rich said that throughout his many years producing this show, Shakespeare “purists” have approached him, worried that he might be desecrating these storied works of fiction by presenting them antithetically to the way they were meant to be performed. Rich said the opposite is, in fact, true, and that he is paying homage to William Shakespeare by repeating the same process Shakespeare did hundreds of years ago: taking long-beloved stories and making them his own.
“[Shakespeare] was adapting his classical stories, excellent plays and historical narratives for his contemporary audience,” said Rich. “So to me, it feels like in the spirit of what Shakespeare would have wanted– to do the same thing with his plays. And I’ve had purists push back against that. But my response is, who’s really the purist?”
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Scenic Designer Bruce Bergner and Technical Director Jordan Feeler survey the progress being made by the CU Theatre Design Tech Management students in the nighttime hours of the Mary Rippon Theater. [Courtesy of Jonathan Spencer]
“I feel like a lot of people are put off from Shakespeare because of experiences that they’ve had in their high school English class,” said McEnhill. “I think being able to see these characters in these stories in this kind of mismatch of Shakespeare really gets you intrigued.”
The show is truly immersive. As the audience is walking through the sets, they are bombarded by a spectacle from every angle. Cast members like CU sophomore Marie-Antoinette Banks hope that the audience can learn through their tangible interactions with the characters.
“They’re a part of the stories that we’re telling,” said Banks. “ShakesFear doesn’t exist without the audience. I hope it makes Shakespeare just maybe the slightest bit more accessible.”
Whether you’re very familiar with the near-dozen plays featured in “ShakesFear” or a total newcomer, there’s something in the show for everyone. The costumes and scripts are generally true to the originals, except for the fake blood and costume wounds that each cast member is sporting throughout the duration of the show. The sets are spectacular; each one is unique and surprisingly intricate. In several scenes, there is some incredible puppet work, with set pieces that could easily scale to more than twenty feet tall. The scenes are all from different plays, but some characters are intermingled into different scenes, making for a seamless pastiche of stories. Even if you don’t understand the Elizabethan language, the spectacle itself is enough to make the ticket worth the price.
“ShakesFear” is open at the Mary Rippon Theater through Sunday, Oct. 16. Tickets are available through CU Presents here.
Contact CU Independent Arts and Entertainment Editor Lauren Hill at lauren.hill-2@colorado.edu