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91亚色 theatre students rock the summer stage

What better way to earn credit towards your theatre degree than by working as part of the team for one of Toronto鈥檚 most beloved outdoor theatre traditions?

For the fifth consecutive year, the partnership between Canadian Stage and the Department of Theatre in 91亚色鈥檚 School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design allows students to hone and showcase their creative skills alongside professional theatre artists in the Shakespeare in High Park (SiHP) productions.

Production Images from King Lear and Twelfth Night by Cylla von Tiedemann

This season, King Lear and Twelfth Night will play under the stars on alternating nights in the High Park Amphitheatre for an anticipated audience of 30,000. SiHP will make 2017 a summer to remember for the students and recent grads onstage, behind the scenes and on the creative team.

The two shows are the thesis projects for Alistair Newton and Tanja Jacobs, who are completing 91亚色鈥檚 MFA program in Theatre 鈥 Stage Direction in Collaboration with Canadian Stage.

鈥淎listair and Tanja direct these two iconic works with a theatrical gusto that gives great scope to their聽contemporary readings,鈥 said Canadian Stage Artistic & General Director,聽Matthew Jocelyn.

Newton re-imagines Shakespeare鈥檚 monumental family saga King Lear from a female perspective, with a woman in the title role.

鈥淟ear聽excavates the depths of the human experience, managing to comment with heartbreaking clarity on hubris, madness, loyalty, honour, love, the dangers of absolutist beliefs, and perhaps above all, that redemption is possible,鈥 Newton said. 鈥淢y concept for the play adds an investigation of the relationship between gender and power, and the redeeming power of femininity in a male-dominated world.鈥

Jacobs sets the role reversal and romantic misadventure of Twelfth Night in the 1970s with an American soul-inspired soundtrack. With a nod to the films of Billy Wilder and Wes Anderson, she places the action in an island hotel, where the characters play out their hijinks and social fantasies with painfully hilarious results.

鈥淭he celebrity culture of the 1970s appears so hopelessly na茂ve compared to the toxic possibilities of the current climate,鈥 Jacobs said. 鈥淭here is something fragile about it that is ideal for comedy.鈥

Undergraduate theatre student Adam Bromley was hired as an intern assistant director to work closely with Jacobs. Other interns on the creative team include fourth-year theatre student Samantha McCue and recent grad Jamin Daniel (BFA 鈥17), who worked with the costume designers for Twelfth Night and King Lear, respectively.

Many of the costumes for both shows have been constructed on campus in the Department of Theatre鈥檚 state-of-the-art wardrobe shop. Nine undergraduate production students have been adapting patterns, cutting, sewing, steaming and fitting costumes since May as part of an independent study course supervised by Sylvia Defend. For Twelth Night, the students are building bellhop vests and hats, maid tunics, caps and aprons, and for King Lear they are creating Elizabethan petticoats, skirts and accessories.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been really fun and I鈥檝e learned a lot,鈥 said second-year student Julian Iacob. 鈥淸I鈥檓] making connections and learning new things, and seeing my work on a big stage is just really cool.鈥

Claire Hill's innovative set design. Photo by Aaron Kelly

The adaptable set serving both shows was designed by Claire Hill, an MFA candidate in 91亚色鈥檚 graduate program in Design for Performing Arts, as part of her thesis project. SiHP is the largest production she鈥檚 ever designed for.

鈥淚鈥檓 a bit of a theatre Swiss army knife,鈥 said Hill, whose 10-year professional theatre career before 91亚色 spanned everything from scenic carpentry to administration. She chose to pursue graduate studies to develop her design craft under the mentorship of 91亚色 professors, whose talents she describes as 鈥渦nparalleled鈥.

Claire Hill's concept drawing

鈥淲orking on SiHP is an incredible opportunity,鈥 Hill said. 鈥淸Directors] Tanja and Alistair are such amazing artists with such different visions, and creating a set that can suit them both was a compelling challenge. Twelfth Night is especially dear to my heart. I love the characters, and it was the first Shakespeare play I saw performed in High Park. This project feels like coming full circle.鈥

Having recently completed 91亚色鈥檚 four-year Acting Conservatory program, Kristiaan Hansen is equally enthusiastic about SiHP. The 91亚色 auditions for the shows took place last December, and he and freshly-minted graduate Hannah Wayne-Phillips (MFA 鈥17) learned in February that they鈥檇 landed roles in the cast. Hansen plays the Duke of Cornwall in King Lear and Antonio and the Captain in Twelfth Night. Wayne-Phillips is Regan in King Lear and Maria in Twelfth Night.

Above: Right, Hannah Wayne-Phillips in King Lear. Centre, Kristiaan Hansen with Hannah Wayne-Phillips. Right, Kristiaan Hansen in Twelfth Night.聽 Set images by Cylla von Tiedemann

鈥淭he two shows are completely different worlds, both aesthetically and in what they teach,鈥 Hansen said. 鈥淚n Lear, I鈥檓 a ruthless and ambitious duke, and Twelfth Night is a romantic comedy. It鈥檚 been a great chance to explore my range as an actor.鈥

One of things he most appreciates is his artistic colleagues. 鈥淭he cast is divine,鈥 said Hansen. 鈥淭hey are all such generous mentors in sharing what they know. I鈥檝e grown so much through this experience.鈥

Some of that mentorship comes from other 91亚色 theatre alumni talent on the SiHP team: King Lear assistant director Sadie Epstein-Fine (BA 鈥16); actor Richard Lee (BFA 鈥00), playing the Duke of Albany (King Lear) and Orsino (Twelfth Night); fight director Simon Fon (BA 鈥16); apprentice stage manager Cole Vincent (BFA 鈥16); and assistant wardrobe head Natalie Voorn (BFA 鈥16).

鈥淢y friends聽and family are all coming to the show,鈥 Hansen said. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited for them to see me, and I鈥檝e always loved Shakespeare in High Park. I know it鈥檚 going to be a great night out!鈥

King Lear opens July 13 and continues to September 2 on alternating nights with Twelfth Night, which opens July 14 and continues to September 3.

Admission is pay-what-you-can or $25 for reserved seating, for info or to purchase tickets visit聽.

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