The Texas Repertory Theatre Company in A Midsummer Night's
A Midsummer Night’s Dream may very well be Shakespeare’s most accessible play, and is certainly a “gateway” Shakespeare play. Considered a “wedding” play, Midsummer found the bard in a dreamy, lyrical mood. Interlocking plots, misapplied love potions, and a dive into the supernatural world give Midsummer its enduring charm. Winters is not so interested in doing “anything” in terms of outrageous treatments that come in and out of Shakespeare fashion. “The sheer musicality of the language makes this play magnificent enough,” says Winters. “There’s no need to rewrite or rework Shakespeare.” Winters returned to the root theme of the play, that “love wears multiple hats.”
Jackie Coleman plays Hippolyta and Titania and assisted in staging the movement for the play. On loan from
Jesse Dreikosen designed a set that depicts two separate worlds, the highly structured, ruled-by-law
Hardly a year old, The Texas Repertory Theatre Company is fast becoming known as the little theater company than can. With a slick black box that gives off an off-Broadway vibe, ample parking, a something-for-everyone first season, what’s not to like? With the motto “believe,” this team of directors, actors, designers (many who studied at the University of South Carolina) have a dream that a professional theater company can and will thrive in Northwest Houston. They’re the first professional theater company in the area, although several successful professional theater companies exist outside of other major cities across the nation. The idea is to go where people are and theater is not. So far, it seems to be working. Garnering favorable notices on the first two shows, Midsummer is sure to be another feather in their cap.
Artistic Director, Craig Miller, is full of hope about bringing Shakespeare to the suburbs. “Shakespeare wrote this play about things that never change in humanity: the heart, the mind, and the tangled mess they make of each other. Anyway you slice this beautiful 400+ year-old play, it inevitably falls out in this wonderful examination of that glorious grey area between logic and love,” says Miller. “We deal with it everyday of our lives. Love is essential. However, it is almost never logical.”
The Texas Repertory Theatre Company presents William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Previews begin on May 3rd and 4th at 7:30 pm, and opens on May 5th -May 27th, 8pm, at