Monday, March 18, 2019

Production Notes :: College Theatre Festival Papers

Production NotesPreface The slides and video that are shew on this web site are recordings of a production of footprint for notice mounted at the College of the Holy Cross in the subside of 1996. In February, 1997, the production was re-mounted at Brandeis University as part of the American College theatre Festival. The following nones formed the conceptual basis for the production. First Response In the final months of the twentieth century, Measure provides us with a searing allegory close a society that is divided severely along economic and companionable lines. The ubiquitious moral rot of Shakespeares play parallels our contemporary world. The semipolitical and social hypocricy of rulers who smear power for personal gain while criticizing and punishing the lower classes comes beneficial out of the evening news. Some issues of the play hit home harder right away and in a radically different manner then they would choose in Shakespeares day. Ideas such as sexual ha rrassment and immorality connote wildly different things to a contemporary audience, particularly in light of new-fashioned current events. Talking Points I. Measure for Measure is a play just closely power--political, economic, and sexual power--and how these three interrelated phenomena intersect with catastrophic consequences when they are abused by an inadequate leader. But it is essential to note that the play is not against the use of power per se, because the entire crisis is instigated by the failure of a rightful(prenominal) ruler to exercise properly his responsibilities of office. Indeed, the entire arc of the play is about how this ruler--Duke Vincentio--learns about the nature of power and the necessity of its public demonstration. It can be argued that, in many respects, the play is a primer about telling leadership and mustiness be viewed as a humanistic revision of Machievellis The Prince. II. Political power must be exercised correctly and sexual desires m ust be pursued properly. Without sex there is no propagation of the species and without political restraint there is no maintenance of the social order. Political indebtedness cannot be avoided and neither can the fundamental need of humans to fornicate. Without restraint, however, the pursuance of these intersecting fundamental drives will undermine the stability of society. Measure for Measure argues that political power must be exercised in a principled manner and sexual intercourse must occur under the guarantee of marriage. III. A recurring theme in the plays of Shakespeare is the nature of effective leadership.

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