ĆŪĢŅapp Theatre Company weaves together dark and light for its 2015-16 season
For its 2015-16 season, has elected to explore the light and dark sides of Shakespeare, beginning with a clownish twist on āKing Lear.ā
āItās the 400th anniversary of Shakespeareās death this year,ā said , professor of communication arts and sciences. āI wanted to do something to celebrate that and think about what heās brought into culture.ā
Serious clown business
So, Sandberg wrote an adaptation of āKing Learā that explores the tension between comedy and tragedyāusing clowns. The opening scene will reveal a troupe of clown performers who discover a box that contains the script to āLear,ā which they then will act out using props and costumes.
āKing Learā is about an old king on the brink of madness who decides to divide his kingdom among his daughters, giving the largest portion to the one who loves him most. When his youngest daughter fails to express her love to his satisfaction, he disowns her, setting in motion the events of the play.
Sandberg said the clowns will represent the human condition and will be present throughout the play.
āWeāre doing it in the style of the white clown, which is a French kind of clowning,ā Sandberg said. āWe brought in an expert to train us in clowns. Itās a very interesting concept that Iāve been thinking about for a long time.ā
āWho thinks of āKing Learā with clowns?ā asked Emily Wetzel, a senior theater major and member of CTC. āStephanie Sandberg does.ā
Striking a tough balance
Sandberg said the clown idea, in keeping with the theme of dark and light, was meant to strike a balance with the suffering that makes āKing Learā so heavy, without downplaying the serious subject matter.
āI want it to be very entertaining,ā she said. āOftentimes, āLearā is so bleak that people donāt consider it entertainment. Because weāre bringing this clown style to it, I think itās very entertaining as well.ā
āItās very entertaining but itās also enlightening,ā Sandberg said. āComedy comes out of the human condition. Out of laughing at ourselves during trouble. Thatās what makes something funny is the trouble in it.ā
Wetzel, who will play King Learās eldest daughter Goneril, said she is interested to see how the balance between light and dark will play out.
āI think the biggest challenge for me is finding that balance between the humor of the clown and the despair of the story,ā Wetzel said. āBecause it would be really easy to go one way or another, to make it all about the clowning, or all about Lear.ā
āOne of the reasons [Sandberg] chose āKing Learā is because it deals a lot with really deep issues of sorrow and grief and the human condition,ā Wetzel said.
Public performances of āKing Learā are at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 12-14 and 19-21.
Mid-season play
During interim, ĆŪĢŅapp will put on a play called āYou Make a Difference,ā written and directed by , professor of communication arts and sciences.
The play is an entertaining, educational piece about three friends who are bullied in school but who rise above with a small band of supporters and a āYou Make a Differenceā campaign.
The public performance of āYou Make a Differenceā is at 7 p.m. on Jan. 27, 2016.
Spring play
Freeberg also will direct Shakespeareās comedy āLoveās Labourās Lost,ā with a surprising twist: The production is set in the northern backwoods of Alaska.
Public performances of āLoveās Labourās Lostā run at 7:30 p.m. on April 21-23 and 28-30, 2016.
Tickets for all concerts may be , in person at the ĆŪĢŅapp Box Office or by calling 616-526-6282.