Shakespeare Santa Cruz
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Shakespeare Santa Cruz is a professional theatre Festival founded in 1981 and held annually on the campus of the University of California, Santa Cruz. Plays by Shakespeare and other great dramatists are performed indoors on the UCSC Theatre Arts Mainstage and outdoors in a redwood grove. Bringing in professional actors, directors and designers from throughout the country, the Company's season runs from July to early September and presents three or four plays that run concurrently in repertory six days a week (no performance on Mondays). With a mission to “cultivate the imagination, wit, daring, and vision that the greatest playwrights demand of artists and audiences alike," SSC seeks to present a festival of theatre which showcases contemporary approaches to directing, designing and acting. Since its founding, the company's artistic directors have been Audrey Stanley, Michael Edwards, Danny Scheie, Risa Brainin, and Paul Whitworth. Some of the rising theatre stars who have worked at SSC are: David Baker, Bryan Cranston, Maria Dizzia, Dan Donohue, Reg Rogers, Derrick Wolf[1] and Michael Stuhlbarg.
In 1997, Artistic Director Paul Whitworth introduced the SSC annual Winter Holiday season. In keeping with the tradition of Shakespeare Santa Cruz’s fresh take on the classics, the holiday shows are original musicals written for SSC by playwright Kate Hawley with music composed by Craig Bohmler and Adam Wernick. A fusion of the traditions of the British pantomime and the American musical, Cinderella, Gretel and Hansel, The Princess and the Pea and Sleeping Beauty are based on traditional fairy tales and appeal to audiences of all ages. The winter season performs in November and December.
In addition to the summer repertory season and the holiday show, Shakespeare Santa Cruz has two performance programs which seek to engage student actors with Shakespearean and other classical texts---the summer Fringe show and the Shakespeare to Go program. The Fringe show is an opportunity for the summer Company's acting interns to perform their own production in the Glen two nights each summer. Past productions include Lysistrata, The Antipodes, Fools in the Forest, and The Mock-Tempest. Shakespeare to Go is an educational outreach program - and recipient of National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) funding - featuring University of California Santa Cruz Theatre Arts students who tour local schools in the spring performing one-hour versions of one of the full-length plays to be featured in the summer repertory season. Additionally, Shakespeare to Go presents a limited number of free public performances.
[edit] Season History
- 1981
- 1982
- 1983
- 1984
- 1985
- 1986
- 1987
- 1988
- 1989
- Love's Labour's Lost
- Romeo and Juliet
- Once in a Lifetime (by George S. Kaufman & Moss Hart)
- 1990
- 1991
- 1992
- 1993
- 1994
- The Merchant of Venice
- Merry Wives of Windsor
- The Rape of Tamar (by Tirso de Molina)
- 1995
- 1996
- 1997
- As You Like It
- King Richard III
- The Forest (by Alexander Ostrovsky)
- Wind in the Willows (by Kenneth Grahame)
- 1998
- 1999
- Romeo and Juliet
- The Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Arms and the Man (by George Bernard Shaw)
- Cinderella (by Kate Hawley)
- 2000
- Cymbeline
- Love's Labour's Lost
- Kean (by Jean-Paul Sartre)
- Cinderella (by Kate Hawley)
- 2001
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Macbeth
- She Stoops to Conquer (by Oliver Goldsmith)
- Gretel and Hansel (by Kate Hawley)
- 2002
- Coriolanus
- Merry Wives of Windsor
- The Sea Gull (by Anton Chekhov)
- Gretel and Hansel (by Kate Hawley)
- 2003
- The Comedy of Errors
- Hamlet
- Private Lives (by Noel Coward)
- Emperor's New Clothes (by Brad Caroll)
- 2004
- The Taming of the Shrew
- The Tamer Tamed (by John Fletcher)
- Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (by Edward Albee)
- Lysistrata (by Aristophanes)
- The Princess and the Pea (by Kate Hawley)
- 2005
- Twelfth Night
- The Winter's Tale
- Engaged (by W. S. Gilbert)
- Cinderella (by Kate Hawley)
- 2006
- As You Like It
- King Lear
- Pygmalion (by George Bernard Shaw)
- Sleeping Beauty (by Kate Hawley)
- 2007
- Much Ado About Nothing
- The Tempest
- Playboy of the Western World (by J. M. Synge)
- Endgame (by Samuel Beckett)
- The Princess and the Pea (by Kate Hawley)
- 2008
- All's Well That Ends Well
- Romeo and Juliet
- Bach at Leipzig (by Itamar Moses)
- Burn This (by Lanford Wilson)
[edit] External links
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