The Columbus Dispatch

Double Shakespear­e kicks off 2022 season

- Michael Grossberg

Actors’ Theatre of Columbus will present two Shakespear­ean works and two other classic plays next summer during its 41st season, including a collaborat­ion on one of August Wilson’s acclaimed African American dramas.

“Whether they examine family, community or government, all these plays question what our responsibi­lities are when the power structures we live within fail,” Artistic Director Philip J. Hickman said.

All four 2022 production­s – with cast sizes limited to 10 or fewer actors for enhanced safety through social

separation onstage and backstage, plus other health precaution­s to be announced as needed next May – will be presented outdoors at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays in the Schiller Park amphitheat­er:

h “Hamlet,” May 26 to June 19: The tragic drama, widely viewed as Shakespear­e’s greatest play and presented here in a shorter version based on the First Quarto text, revolves around a Danish prince haunted by the recent death of his father and suspicious of the new king.

h “A Tale of Two Cities,” June 23 to July 17: The drama, first staged profession­ally in 2013, was adapted in 1935 by British playwright Terence Rattigan (“The Winslow Boy”) and British actor-writer John Gielgud (“Arthur”) from Charles Dickens’ 1859 bestsellin­g novel about courage, sacrifice and resurrecti­on in struggles for survival and justice during the late-1700’s events leading up to the French Revolution and Reign of Terror.

h “Queen Margaret,” July 21 to Aug. 14: Jeanie O’hare’s 2018 British drama, initially announced for 2020 before the pandemic canceled that season, was adapted from Shakespear­e’s history cycle to focus on a young queen who matured into the ruling force in the chaotic War of the Roses.

h “King Hedley II,” Aug. 18 to Sept. 4: The company will collaborat­e with PAST Production­s Columbus to present the Greater Columbus premiere of August Wilson’s Tony-nominated 2001 Broadway play about an ex-con trying to rebuild his life in 1985 in Pittsburgh. A 2000 Pulitzer finalist, this is the ninth play in Wilson’s 10-part cycle about African Americans in each decade of the 20th century.

Admission is Pay What You Will, or $25 for reserved seating with advance online purchase. Call (614) 444-6888 or visit www.theactorst­heatre.org.

mgrossberg­1@gmail.com @mgrossberg­1

 ?? KYLE LONG PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Philip J. Hickman, artistic director of Actors’ Theatre on opening night of “Much Ado About Nothing,” in May.
KYLE LONG PHOTOGRAPH­Y Philip J. Hickman, artistic director of Actors’ Theatre on opening night of “Much Ado About Nothing,” in May.

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