A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM

The Court Theatre, Bernard Street, Addington, Christchurch

31/05/2014 - 21/06/2014

Production Details



China! China! China!… comes to Addington  

The Court Theatre presents A Midsummer Night’s Dream in a unique conception – half the company is Chinese from Beijing.

“This is a magical production that will challenge and provoke. It’s experimental and full of risk” says Philip Aldridge, Chief Executive at The Court.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is Shakespeare’s first masterpiece and his greatest comedy,” says visiting director Joseph Graves from Peking University’s Institute of World Theatre and Film who is in Christchurch to direct this collaboration with The Court Theatre.

Graves invites audiences to experience this unique theatrical event which brings together talented Chinese actors alongside some Court Theatre favourites. Joining the cast are six actors from the National Academy of Singing and Dramatic Art (NASDA) in Christchurch.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is often described as one of Shakespeare’s most accessible plays. Pranks, schemes and earthy comedy abound and it has cast its spell over audiences for centuries.

The play is about a dream, Nick Bottom’s dream – a lovable, gentlemanly, if decidedly hair-brained fellow who embodies the decent everyman. He is just as at home in the rude demanding world of the workman as in the fantastical world of fairies and theatres.

Audiences will have a chance to hear Shakespeare in a fresh new way. The Chinese actors are working in English and in many cases this will be a third language for them.

The international theme continues behind the scenes with costume designs from American designer Joel Ebarb and stage lighting designed by Shego Wang from Beijing; set and sound design are by Derek Miller and Ryan Hopper from Indiana.

The show runs for three weeks in Christchurch after which it transfers for a season in Beijing. This builds on the hugely successful collaboration in 2012 between The Court and The Peking Institute when Man in a Suitcase similarly played at The Court and subsequently in Beijing.

“Forget any ideas about previous Shakespeare you have seen, let go of any judgement,” says international actor Colin McPhillamy, who will play Peter Quince in this production. “Find out what there is to admire in these young performers and enjoy, as we the actors do, the contact with another culture coming half way to meet us.”

At The Court Theatre 31 May – 21 June 2014
Show Times:
6:30pm Mon & Thu; 7:30pm Tue, Wed, Fri, Sat;
2:00pm Matinée Saturday 7 June.
Tickets $55-$21
Book at www.courttheatre.org.nz 

Show Sponsor: Christchurch International Airport Ltd 


Cast:
Peter Quince - Colin McPhillamy;
Snug - Rutene Spooner;
Nick Bottom - Tom Trevella;
Francis Flute - Guy Langford;
Tom Snout / Wall - Dan Bain;
Robin Starveling - Stephen Papps;
Theseus - Damien Avery;
Hippolyta - Bianca Seinafo;
Philostrate - Adam Spedding;
Egeus - Tim Bartlett;
Hermia - Kangnan (Nan) Zheng;
Lysander - Xinyu (Steve) Tong;
Demetrius - YiFan (William) Nie;
Helena - Song Yi Wang;
Puck - Dan Ni Zhao;
First Fairy - Rebekah Head;
Oberon - Shi (Sebastian) Li;
Titania - Yao (Karen) Ding;
Peasblossom - Joshua Johnson;
Cobweb - Nicholas Goudie;
Moth - Jessica Brien;
Mustardseed - Emily Burns.

Crew:
Director - Joseph Graves;
Set Designer - Derek Miller;
Costume Designer - Joel Ebarb;
Lighting Designer - Shego Wang;
Sound Designer - Ryan Hopper;
Properties Manager - Anneke Bester;
Wardrobe Manager - Sarah Douglas;
Stage Manager - Cally Castell;
Workshop Manager - Nigel Kerr;
Production Manager - Mandy Perry.

Special Acknowledgements: PKU Institute of World Theatre and Film, Purdue University Department of Theatre, NZ Centre at Peking University, Asia NZ Foundation, the National Academy of Singing and Dramatic Art (NASDA), Canterbury Museum.



Transporting dreams

Review by Lindsay Clark 01st Jun 2014

The prospect of international collaboration is always exciting for the theatre, which is always finding new ways to make things work, to engage that audience, to flesh out that script, to meet that budget in the best possible way. Thus – and especially for those who saw the 2012 production of Man in a Suitcase from the same director and collaboration – the glorious romp of A Midsummer Night’s Dream brings the baggage of anticipation. That is not always a useful business and indeed the “open mind and an open heart” approach, counselled by Artistic Director Ross Gumbley in his programme note, is the only way to come to this production. 

Setting aside the familiarity of this favourite romantic mix-up and the range of interpretations many of us will have come across (such as the feminist reading of the way women in the play are treated or the way power and status operate), what is the fresh perspective Joseph Graves offers us and with what success? 

The dream and the bed are at its heart, underpinning design choices as well as the shaping of the play. Bottom’s Dream begins and ends the scene arrangements. The “Are we all met?” piece wherein the wonderful Mechanicals set up their own play, is what we see first, instead of the pomp of Theseus and Hippolyta. In place of the accompanying grand ducal music which often announces the court, we have a chorus of tradesmen’s tools at work, led by the eerily beautiful sound of Bottom’s saw, making music, not cutting wood.

The visual scene is similarly enterprising. At its centre is a grand wooden bed /stage /bank which will move about and furnish every location. The actors are spaced not as a natural group, but already well spread – each in his own dream perchance? – which makes Bottom’s “Masters, spread yourselves” seem the instruction of a man who is already out of touch with what the rest of the company is doing. 

It is an ambitious approach then, well supported by Derek Miller’s set design and splendid lighting (long shafts from above or low at the sides) from Shego Wang. Ryan Hooper’s clever sound design and a carefully neutral costumes from Joel Ebarb complete the work of an harmonious creative team. The reverie, at once familiar and fantastical, is realised in fresh terms. 

A special note in the programme should alert the audience to the huge challenge faced by the seven Chinese actors who play the lovers as well as Oberon, Titania and Puck. For many, we are told, English is their third language. But given audiences cannot – should not? – be relied upon to read a programme, or even buy one, the heavily accented language and staccato delivery are likely to pose a problem. They do, however, bring a strangely surreal quality to the dialogue, not incompatible with the whole dream experience, and the fragmented rhythms are to some extent resolved by bold physical moves.   

Oberon (Shi Li) commands real authority and imbues the role with an exotic and slightly sinister presence to considerable effect. Similarly, the wild energy and distinctive voice of Puck, played by Dan Ni Zhao, creates a fresh note for a role so often seen as merely that of mischief maker. 

The stand out scene, though, belongs to the same Mechanicals who initiate the play. The Tragical Comical tale of Pyramus and Thisbe, where their own ideas of entertainment are given free rein, is an uproarious success.

Colin McPhillamy embodies the bumbling anxiety of the Peter Quince director role, struggling to have his cast meet the grand occasion of multiple nuptials which brings the romantic plot to a happy conclusion. Dan Bain is plain speaking Tom Snout, Wall. Stephen Papps has the tricky Moon role given to Robin Starveling and Guy Langford, gorgeously bewigged as Francis Flute playing Thisbe, is attacked by Rutene Spooner, a gentle Snug playing fearsome Lion. Together they are are a comic delight.

That leaves Tom Trevella in the key role for the production, that of Bottom the weaver of the stuff of dreams. Playing Bottom playing the most gallant Pyramus, Trevella is in full rant, interspersed with even funnier reassurances to the Duke. As the tradesman who is given a donkey’s head and becomes the love object of Titania, queen of the fairy world, he is robust and inventive. Most appealingly of all he is able to project sincerely the Everyman role which matches Joseph Graves’ vision for the play.

Not Shakespeare of this society or that, but Shakespeare which claims our universal human need to stretch our imaginations and let the dreams take us to brave new places.

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