Shakespeare gets a makeover in gender-bent “The Taming of the Shrew”
Theater lovers will not want to miss Brevity Shakespeare's gender-bent version of Shakespeare's play "The Taming of the Shrew."
Theater lovers will not want to miss Brevity Shakespeare's gender-bent version of Shakespeare's play "The Taming of the Shrew."
“The Girl Who Swallowed a Cactus” is the latest show from EMU’s Theatre For the Young Tour. Directed by MFA candidate Olivia Allen, the play follows a girl named Sheila and her friends in rural New Mexico. They get roped into conflict with animals and solve it with their ingenuity. The show is lively and funny, with strong messages around environmentalism and conflict resolution.
"Cause Play" is for all ages. It is the perfect play for children. It shows that students with imagination have superpowers.
EMU Theatre’s performance of “The Rocky Horror Show” opened on Feb. 14. A hilarious, satirical play that pokes fun at science fiction horror and explores queerness, the audience was encouraged to play along. As such, it was an immersive experience where the audience became a part of the show.
EMU Theatre's "Silent Sky" shows the meaningful truth behind women pursuing intellectual careers in the 1900s. It also conveys the beautiful message of how a determined woman discovered the Milky Way.
EMU Theatre's "Alice by Heart" included catchy melodies that were expertly sung and the background orchestra was quite good. This production was definitely worth seeing.
Although there are some obvious parallels between the play and the historical record, Cyrano de Bergerac was a real person, and the well-known play is a highly dramatized version of his life.
The play was created for neurodivergent audiences. The audience is the star of the show in this interactive story. The tour is put on by EMU’s Theatre for the Young program and will be traveling to various local places from March 8 to April 19.
Eastern Michigan University Theatre presents “A Wrinkle in Time."
This extended version of the fable will be shown at Sponberg Theater on Nov. 10 and 11. It is presented by the Theatre for the Young program which introduces theater as an artform to children.
Actors from EMU's Theater Program will bring words to life in a staged reading of Houdini on March 24, 26, and 27 in Detroit.
Eastern Michigan University’s Theatre Department will be performing Richard Bean’s slapstick comedy, One Man, Two Govnors this weekend in the Quirk Theatre. Nominated for seven Tony Awards, One Man, Two Govnors is the updated modern version of the 18th century Italian play, A Servant of Two Masters, written by Carlo Goldoni. Bean’s version opened at the National Theatre in London in 2011 where it became a hit success.
The creative thoughts of Eastern Michigan University students formed in the Theatre Department’s student written and student directed One-Act Festival in the Frank Ross Laboratory Theatre this week. From the early 1990’s to present day, the One Act Festival has served the talents of EMU students in the art of playwriting, directing and performing.
Bombs explode and sirens blare as a young girl runs into an abandoned house to take shelter away from the war-torn world around her.
One-person plays are rare and not many have received wide circulation or much acclaim. This may be due to one thing: no matter how good a play is, it will succeed or fail depending on the actors in it, and obviously, with a one-person show, all the responsibility falls on a single actor. This can be a tremendous amount of pressure; learning an unusually large number of lines, being onstage non-stop for sometimes two hours or more and perhaps most importantly, having no other actor to interact with and be supported by.
Stephen Sondheim is widely regarded as the grandfather of musical theatre. His career as a composer and lyricist has spanned nearly seven decades and his shows are some of the most beloved in the musical theatre repertoire: Sweeney Todd, Into the Woods, A Little Night Music, Follies, Sunday in the Park with George and many more. But, among performers, his work is also known as some of the more difficult to perform and sing because of its unpredictability, density and complexity.
Eastern Michigan University’s Theatre Department will continue their 2015-2016 main stage season with a one-week only performance of August Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize- winning play, “The Piano Lesson” opening this Wednesday in the Sponberg Theatre. “The Piano Lesson” is the fourth play in Wilson’s Pittsburgh Cycle, a collection of plays set in a different decade to reveal the African American experience in the 20th century. “The Piano Lesson” is a drama and comedy that takes place after the Great Depression in 1936 Pittsburg where a family heirloom, a piano with ornate carvings, becomes the center of an argument between siblings, Bernice and Boy Willie.
They say that comedy is harder to do than tragedy. Before last Friday night, I didn’t fully believe that, because when I’ve acted, I’ve found tragic or dramatic scenes to be more demanding.
Told through reading and performance, audio and visual components, the two-act play “Women’s SafeHouse” opened for the first time in America at Eastern Michigan University’s Frank Ross Laboratory Theatre in Quirk Hall on Monday night. “Women’s SafeHouse,” written by Turkish playwright, Tuncer Cucenoglu, depicts a modern tragedy about 11 women and their stories at a safehouse in Istanbul, Turkey where they fell as victims of violence and abuse.
Hailing from New Jersey and casted as the well-known sweet girl of Kansas was newcomer, Shanice Williams, who performed Thursday night in NBC’s The Wiz Live. With her plaid skirt and natural curly hair, Williams portrayed a new version of Dorothy.