(News Release)
Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario -- Artistic Director Jackie Maxwell said the Shaw Festival’s 2013 season introduces new and provocative conversations for its 52nd
season. In a playbill rich with culture clashes, magical
transformations and dazzling ideas, The Shaw continues its theatrical
exploration of the mystery and beauty of contemporary life.
Presented
on four distinct stages in Niagara-on-the-Lake, the Shaw Festival’s
2013 playbill features ten productions including one of Shaw’s most
brilliant plays, a newly commissioned rewrite of one of his later
pieces, two Tony Award-winning musicals, the Festival’s first Tom
Stoppard play and much more.
Commenting on the robust season, Ms. Maxwell noted: “The
2013 playbill features a season of plays which speak to one another on
many levels. I’ve always believed that seeing one piece in the context
of another generates wonderful conversations, both between the plays and
certainly amongst our audiences!”
On the Festival Theatre stage: Two Shaw Festival premieres and a Wilde return
The Shaw Festival’s successful re-envisioning of major musicals, like past seasons’ My Fair Lady and Ragtime, has led to the selection of Guys and Dolls — a beloved musical with a delightful book and a memorable score. Polish director Tadeusz Bradecki, well known to Shaw audiences, will bring a new point of view to this revered classic. Also on the Festival stage is Enchanted April, the Tony Award-nominated stage adaptation by Matthew Barber of Elizabeth von Arnim’s bestselling novel. Artistic Director Jackie Maxwell
will direct this charming story about renewal and the rediscovery of
love and hope as grey post WWI London gives way to the glories of
Northern Italy. The final production on the Festival stage continues the
rich relationship The Shaw has with Oscar Wilde as the Wilde wit returns in Lady Windermere’s Fan. This glittering masterpiece will be directed by Peter Hinton, who directed the critically acclaimed 2011 production of Andrew Bovell’s When the Rain Stops Falling.
Examination and exploration of Shaw continues in the intimacy of the Royal George and Court House Theatres
After an eight year hiatus, Major Barbara
returns — this time to the intimate setting of the Royal George
Theatre, where it has never been staged before — and will be directed by
Ms. Maxwell, whose last foray into the works of Shaw was the celebrated
production of St. Joan in 2007. The re-examination of Shaw’s later, more complex plays also continues with the rethinking of Shaw’s Geneva — a still pertinent tale of international co-operation and the lack thereof. Canadian playwright John Murrell (Waiting for the Parade, 2004) has created an exuberant adaptation re-titled Peace in Our Time: A Comedy,
that still maintains the provocative ideas of Shaw’s original work,
giving us a dazzling world where politics meets the Marx Brothers! Ensemble member Blair Williams will direct this balletic extravaganza at the Court House.
The Light in the Piazza and Lunchtime at the Court House Theatre
Also at the Court House Theatre is the deeply moving Craig Lucas/Adam Guettel musical The Light in the Piazza
– a six-time Tony Award-winning musical about a romance between a young
American woman and an Italian man that hits some unexpected and
disturbing obstacles. Ensemble member Jay Turvey, who created a stir with his stylish production of Trouble in Tahiti
this past season, will direct. The ever popular Lunchtime will once
again be presented at the Court House Theatre and features a duo of
short plays, Susan Glaspell’s Trifles and Eugene O’Neill’s A Wife for a Life, which examine the stresses of marriage from two very different points of view.
Our Betters and Faith Healer at the Royal George Theatre
Sharing the Royal George’s stage with Shaw’s Major Barbara, is W. Somerset Maugham’s Our Betters. Morris Panych returns to The Shaw to direct
this smart, provocative comedy about free-spirited American social
climbers who travel to Britain in search of aristocratic husbands — a
new Maugham treasure for the many people who loved our productions of
Maugham’s The Circle and The Constant Wife. Also on the Royal George stage is Brian Friel’s Faith Healer,
a play that centres on a charismatic but deeply flawed “healer” and the
night that changes his life. Talented young west coast director Craig Hall makes his Shaw directing debut with this fascinating drama.
Contemporary programming continues in the Studio Theatre: Stoppard work to make Shaw debut
The Shaw’s Studio
Theatre continues to be a home to contemporary Shavians, and this
season, welcomes one of the world’s most celebrated jugglers of
brilliant ideas, Tom Stoppard. In his play Arcadia a
mysterious love story is played out in the past, then revised in the
present with poetry, algebra and landscape gardening all playing a part.
This theatrical dazzler, with a heartfelt centre, will be directed by
Shaw’s Artistic Associate Eda Holmes.
Specific details regarding casting and creative/production teams will be confirmed at a later date.
2013 season ticket on-sale dates to note:
- Members’ Special Priority Booking Period: November 3, 2012 to November 30, 2012
Telephone, in-person, online, fax and mail orders will be accepted beginning November 3 according to level of Membership.
- General Public: January 12, 2013
Fax, mail and online beginning January 9
By phone and in-person beginning January 12
Shaw Festival’s 2013 Season at a Glance*
Production
|
Author(s)
|
Director
| Stage |
Guys and Dolls (1950)
|
Book by Jo Swerling & Abe Burrows, music & lyrics by Frank Loesser. Based on two short stories by Damon Runyon.
|
Tadeusz Bradecki
|
Festival
|
Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892)
|
Oscar Wilde
|
Peter Hinton
|
Festival
|
Enchanted April (2003)
|
Matthew Barber, adapted from the novel by Elizabeth Von Arnim.
|
Jackie Maxwell
|
Festival
|
Peace in our Time: A Comedy (2012)
|
Adapted from the Bernard Shaw play Geneva (1938) by John Murrell.
|
Blair Williams
|
Court House
|
The Light in the Piazza (2003)
|
Book
by Craig Lucas, music & lyrics by Adam Guettel. Based on the novella by
Elizabeth Spencer.
|
Jay Turvey
|
Court House
|
Lunchtime:
Trifles (1916) and A Wife for a Life (1913)
|
Susan Glaspell and Eugene O’Neill
|
TBC
|
Court House
|
Major Barbara (1905)
|
Bernard Shaw
|
Jackie Maxwell
|
Royal George
|
Our Betters (1915)
|
W. Somerset Maugham
|
Morris Panych
|
Royal George
|
Faith Healer (1979)
|
Brian Friel
|
Craig Hall
|
Royal George
|
Arcadia (1993)
|
Tom Stoppard
|
Eda Holmes
|
Studio Theatre
|
*Subject to change. Current as of September 24, 2012.
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