The Powers that Be said this was going to be a hot summer, and so far there's no lie detected. I wonder, will we ever look back from a more temperate time and say, "Well that one was a scorcher, I'm glad the weather settled down at last" - or will we look back one day from a burning world and remember fondly the old reasonable days of Heat Domes and long sweltering days without a break? "Remember back in 2024 when we used to complain about all those days when we thought it was really hot? Ha, how precious, what were we thinking!"
On Saturday we're opening A Midsummer Night's Dream in a park on the Upper West Side for a couple of weekends, and then we'll move indoors for a couple of weeks in the theater in August. It's a joy doing Shakespeare outside in the summer, and also a battle with the elements. We're hoping for rain to behave and leave us dry, and for the heat to have some mercy. Wish us luck!
This is an old key, recently revealed. It should be good, but these days who knows. If you have any trouble with it, please let me know. Enjoy!
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Break a leg at the Delacorte Theater!
Shakespeare in the Park is one of the highlights of summer in the city when I lived in NYC.
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We're actually a much smaller company than Shakespeare in the Park - there's a lot of Shakespeare in various parks in the summer in the city, which gives me some hope for the world. We'll be in a Community Garden on 89th Street, unamplified and without the benefit of an actual stage (or backstage, or dressing rooms). In the past I've also done Shakespeare in Riverside Park, and in other areas of Central Park - I did a production of Titus Andronicus there last summer, at Summit Rock near 85th Street. And over last weekend I saw a terrific production of Midsummer Night's Dream, very different from ours, up in Marcus Garvey Park, presented by the Classical Theatre of Harlem.
The Delacorte is closed this summer for renovations.
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Ah! thanks for the info.
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