Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New season

Shakespear­e Theatre to open Friday with The Winter’s Tale

- BY CAROL ROLF Contributi­ng Writer

Patrons are invited to the 12th season of the Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre, which will open Friday at the University of Central Arkansas in Conway and continue through July 8. This year’s theme is “transforma­tion.” The season includes The Winter’s Tale, Henry IV, Part 1 and Much Ado About Nothing, all by William Shakespear­e, and My Fair Lady, based on George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, with book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and music by Frederick Loewe.

Rebekah Scallet of Little Rock, AST producing artistic director, said all four shows feature characters that undergo major changes — some for the better and some, perhaps, for the worse.

“We have approximat­ely 100 cast and crew members coming together for these shows,” said Scallet, who is in her seventh season as AST’s artistic director.

The season will open at 7:30 p.m. Friday with The

Winter’s Tale outdoors on the lawn of McAlister Hall at UCA. Lerner and Loewe’s musical My Fair Lady will open June 15 in the Donald W. Reynolds Performanc­e Hall at UCA, and Henry IV,

Part 1 will open June 22, also at Reynolds. AST’s familyfrie­ndly adaptation of Much

Ado About Nothing will open June 28 at Reynolds and will also tour the state in June and July. Shows at Reynolds are presented onstage, with no reserved seating.

Following is a look at the season’s offerings and some of the actors appearing in the shows. THE WINTER’S TALE

Nisi Sturgis returns home to Conway to direct The

Winter’s Tale, which, Scallet said, is not done a whole lot.

“I love the story,” she said. “It’s one of Shakespear­e’s late romantic plays. It is a rarely produced Shakespear­e gem.”

Sturgis, who is a 1996 graduate of Conway High School and a 2000 graduate of UCA, is making her directoria­l debut with this play, although she has performed in several past AST production­s. Sturgis now lives in Urbana, Illinois, with her husband, Jordan Coughtry, who is also an actor, and their 4-year-old son, Owen.

The Winter’s Tale follows the story of King Leontes, who grows jealous of his wife, Hermione, leading him to make a series of terrible mistakes.

“I’m really excited about directing this show,” said Sturgis, who is a daughter of Peggy Sturgis of Conway and the late Harold Sturgis. “It’s amazing to get to come home and make art for the people who helped make me an artist.

“This play is like a memory play. … What can happen if we go down the wrong path? … Can we ever come back?” she said. “We have a wonderful youth ensemble that leads us through the story. They help us heal, help us remember. It’s like a contempora­ry fairy tale, dealing with truth and selfdoubt.”

Sturgis said that after reading the play several times, she had “images of shadows.”

She said she contacted Katie Campbell at the Arkansas Arts Center’s Children’s Theatre and Adam Frank of the UCA Honors College, who have both directed shadow-puppet plays. They helped design the shadow puppets that will be used in the play.

“I have a wonderful cast and crew,” Sturgis said.

Paige Reynolds of Little Rock, a UCA faculty member and AST’s dramaturgy supervisor, plays Hermione in The Winter’s Tale. “This has been one of my favorite Shakespear­e plays ever since I read it,” she said. “I always wanted to be in it but never knew if I would have the opportunit­y. I am so glad we are doing it this year.”

Reynolds, who has been involved with AST for 11 years, also plays two male characters in Henry IV, Part 1 and Mrs. Higgins in

My Fair Lady. Her 14-yearold daughter, Anna, is in

The Winter’s Tale’s youth ensemble.

Aidan Eslinger of Conway, the 12-year-old son of Nadia and Lamar Eslinger and a student at Carl Stuart Middle School, plays Mamillius, the son of Leontes and Hermione. This is Aidan’s first time to appear in a Shakespear­e play.

Other Conway students in this show’s youth ensemble — known as The Groundling­s Co., under the direction of Sharon Combs of Conway — include Bryton Butler, Josie Ghormley, Jackson Karl, Mallorie Keaton and Piper Wallace.

UCA student Latavian Johnson appears in this play, as well as in Henry IV, Part 1, and Augustine Nguyen, also a UCA student, appears in this play and in My Fair Lady.

UCA graduates Matt Duncan and Taylor Galloway appear in The Winter’s Tale, as well as in Henry IV, Part 1. The Winter’s Tale will be presented again at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and on June 17, 24, 28 and 30 and July 4 and 6. Every show is pay what you can, with a suggested donation of $15 per person. Vendors will be on-site to provide food and drinks, and several artists will be on the lawn displaying works for sale during these performanc­es.

HENRY IV, PART 1

“This is the story of Hal, the young prince,” Scallet said. “It’s a coming-of-age story. It features Prince Hal (Henry, Prince of Wales),

who prefers spending time in the tavern with his fat and jolly friend Falstaff to time spent in the castle with his father, the king (King Henry IV). It’s about Prince Hal’s relationsh­ip with Falstaff and with his father and which world the prince will be in.

“Robert Quinlan of Peoria, Illinois, directs this show, and AST favorite Dan Matisa of Bloomingto­n, Illinois, plays Falstaff, the same part he played in AST’s 2010 production of Henry

IV,” Scallet said. Ethan Hemphill of Conway appears as a member of the youth ensemble in this production. Henry IV, Part 1 will be presented at 7:30 p.m. June 22, 23, 26, 29 and 30 and July 5; and at 2 p.m. June 30 and July 8.

MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING

“This is our family adaptation of a work by Shakespear­e,” Scallet said. “It has a cast of just eight people and will be presented as a one-hour show. Enrico Spada of Bloomingto­n, Illinois, will make his directoria­l debut with AST for this touring production.

“Much Ado About Nothing

is a romantic comedy with the great Shakespear­e couple of Beatrice and Benedick at its center,” she said. “It will be performed onstage at Reynolds, along with stops at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonvill­e, the Winthrop Rockefelle­r Institute on Petit Jean Mountain, the Hot Springs Farmers Market, The Joint in Argenta and The Griffin in El Dorado.”

UCA graduate Sydney Stoner and Hendrix College graduate Michael Goodbar appear in this play. Shauna Meador, UCA graduate and UCA associate professor of theater, is the show’s costume designer.

Much Ado About Nothing

will be presented at 2 p.m. June 28 and July 3 and 5; and at 10 a.m. June 29 and July 4 and 7.

MY FAIR LADY

Scallet directs this classic musical that tells the tale of Eliza Doolittle, a flower girl who wants to transform her status by changing the way she speaks and goes to Professor Henry Higgins for assistance.

“This is the first time I have directed a musical,” Scallet said. “It’s a lot of fun. I’m finding out that it’s not a lot different from directing a work by Shakespear­e.

“The script retains so much of Shaw’s original language, along with Lerner and Loewe’s glorious songs. I’m thrilled to be able to bring it to life for Arkansas audiences.”

Clarksvill­e native Robert Frost of New York City is the musical director. He is quick to note that he is kidded a lot about his name.

“It’s a family name,” he said, smiling.

Frost, 26, is a 2009 graduate of Clarksvill­e High School and a son of Julie Hilliard Frost and John Frost of Clarksvill­e, both graduates of Hendrix College. Robert Frost has a degree in theater from Southweste­rn University in Georgetown, Texas, and studied at the National Theatre Institute at

the O’Neal Theatre Center in Waterford, Connecticu­t. He is now a freelance music director and an adjunct voice instructor at New York University.

“This is my first time to be involved with the Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre,” he said. “I am proud to be back in my home state. I’ve always loved My Fair Lady. I love these Golden Age musicals.”

Local actors [not already mentioned] in My Fair

Lady include Holly Ruth Gale of Russellvil­le, a music instructor at Arkansas Tech University, and Johnny Passmore of Conway, drama teacher at Conway Junior High School.

Local members of The Groundling­s Co. who are appearing in the musical include Zane Brewer, Isabelle Garrett, Jack Ghromley and Maddie Meek, all of Conway.

My Fair Lady will be presented at 7:30 p.m. June 15, 16 and 27 and July 1, 3 and 7; and at 2 p.m. June 24 and July 1, 4 and 7.

Other local actors involved in the Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre include Geneva Galloway, a UCA graduate, who serves as general manager; Zoe Allison, a UCA graduate, company manager; Ian Martin O’Dwyer, a UCA student, assistant company manager; and Sidney Kelley, Mikala Hicks, Micah Patterson and Jillian Gregory, UCA students serving as costume interns.

For tickets or more informatio­n on the Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre, call (866) 810-0012 or visit

 ?? MARK BUFFALO/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION ?? The 12th season of the Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre will open Friday outdoors on the lawn of McAlister Hall at the University of Central Arkansas in Conway with The Winter’s Tale, by William Shakespear­e. Queen Hermione, played by Paige Reynolds, UCA...
MARK BUFFALO/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION The 12th season of the Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre will open Friday outdoors on the lawn of McAlister Hall at the University of Central Arkansas in Conway with The Winter’s Tale, by William Shakespear­e. Queen Hermione, played by Paige Reynolds, UCA...
 ?? MARK BUFFALO/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION ?? Rebekah Scallet, Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre producing artistic director, takes time out from rehearsals to pose with Conway actor Johnny Passmore. Scallet directs this year’s non-Shakespear­ean play, the Lerner and Loewe musical My Fair Lady. Passmore...
MARK BUFFALO/RIVER VALLEY & OZARK EDITION Rebekah Scallet, Arkansas Shakespear­e Theatre producing artistic director, takes time out from rehearsals to pose with Conway actor Johnny Passmore. Scallet directs this year’s non-Shakespear­ean play, the Lerner and Loewe musical My Fair Lady. Passmore...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States