Gesualdo: Rebel or Rogue?
February 6, 2012 – 6:00 am | No Comment

Carlo Gesualdo was a prince and landholder in Venosa in southeastern Italy. Around 1588 his wife began an affair with a gentleman in the vicinity. In 1590 Gesualdo, found the pair in bed together, stabbed them both, and hung their corpses in front of his castle for all to see. The story was retold repeatedly by poets of the day in a sixteenth-century equivalent of headline news. Was Gesualdo really a renegade as well as a murderer? Was he even a “modernist” of his time?

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Home » Explore, Theater, Theater & Dance

UMS Announces 10/11 International Theater Series

Submitted by on March 25, 2010 – 2:00 am9 Comments

In conjunction with the Maly Drama Theater of St. Petersburg’s production of Uncle Vanya and World Theater Day on Saturday, March 27, UMS announces its 10/11 International Theater Series. The series will include five productions:

Susurrus

Written, directed,
and conceived by David Leddy
September 9 – October 3
Matthaei Botanical Gardens

Susurrus is a play without actors, without a stage, and with only one person in the audience — YOU. It is part radio play, part avant-garde sonic art, part lesson in bird dissection, and part stroll through nature. Audiences follow a map around the Matthaei Botanical Gardens as they listen to a recording on an iPod and headphones. The listener hears snippets about opera, memorial benches, and botany, which fit together into a mournful and poignant story of love and loss that is loosely inspired by Benjamin Britten and W.H. Auden’s collaboration on Britten’s opera, A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Susurrus was first presented to great acclaim and sellout audiences at Glasgow’s Botanic Gardens in 2006 and later mentioned by both The Guardian and The Scotsman as one of the top arts events of the year. It was one of the hits of last year’s Edinburgh Fringe Festival.  Times will vary, with groups of four admitted every 15 minutes.

Laurie Anderson’s Delusion

Friday, January 14 | 8 pm
Saturday, January 15 | 8 pm
Power Center

Laurie Anderson is one of America’s most renowned — and daring — creative pioneers. Recognized worldwide as a leader in the use of technology in the arts, Anderson is known widely for her multimedia presentations, casting herself in roles as varied as visual artist, composer, poet, photographer, filmmaker, electronics whiz, vocalist, and instrumentalist. At the heart of this new multimedia work, which was presented for the first time at the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad, is the pleasure of language and a fear that the world is made entirely of words. Conceived as a series of short mystery plays, Delusion jump-cuts between the everyday and the mythic, evoking a world filled with nuns, elves, rotting forests, ghost ships, archaeologists, dead relatives, and unmanned tankers. Employing a series of altered voices and imaginary guests, Anderson combines her signature violin pieces, electronic puppetry, music, and visuals, with the poetic language that has become her trademark to tell a complex story about longing, memory, and identity.

Martin McDonagh’s The Cripple of Inishmaan

Druid Theater Company

Garry Hynes, director
Thursday, March 10 | 8 pm
Friday, March 11 | 8 pm
Saturday, March 12 | 8 pm
Sunday, March 13 | 2 pm
Power Center

It’s 1934, and news is thin on the island of Inishmaan. Then word arrives that a Hollywood filmmaker is coming to a neighboring island to shoot a movie, and excitement ripples through the sleepy community. For Billy Claven, a crippled orphan, the film provides an opportunity to get away from his bleak existence. He auditions for a part in the film and, to everyone’s surprise, gets his chance. The Cripple of Inishmaan is “a break-your-heart, cruelly funny evening directed with an exhilarating ruthlessness and acted with a bracing lack of sentimentality.”  (The Guardian)  The second play in Martin McDonagh’s Aran Islands trilogy, it is infused with his trademark humor, rich with macabre cruelty, and teeming with eccentric island characters, from Billy’s “Aunt Kate,” who talks to stones, to gossip monger “JohnnyPateenMike,” who attempts to get his elderly mother to drink herself to death. Ireland’s acclaimed Druid Theater Company makes its UMS debut with this tour of its critically acclaimed 2008 production.

Shakespeare’s Richard III and

The Comedy of Errors

Propeller

Edward Hall director Power Center

The Comedy of Errors
Thursday, March 31 | 7:30 pm
Saturday, April 2 | 7:30 pm
Sunday, April 3 | 2 pm

Richard III
Wednesday, March 30 | 7:30 pm
Friday, April 1 | 7:30 pm
Saturday, April 2 | 2 pm
Sunday, April 3 | 7:30 pm


Propeller’s production of The Taming of the Shrew, 2008

Edward Hall — son of the English theater director Sir Peter Hall —brings his theater company Propeller to Ann Arbor for the first time with four performances each of two Shakespeare plays: Richard III and The Comedy of Errors. Propeller evolved out of Hall’s first Shakespeare play for the Watermill Theater in the mid-1990s. His all-male company mimics the theater Shakespeare’s of time, and the company mixes a rigorous approach to the text with a modern physical aesthetic. Hall says, “I want to rediscover Shakespeare simply by doing plays as I believe they should be done: with great clarity, speed, and full of as much imagination in the staging as possible. I don’t want to make the plays ‘accessible,’ as this implies that they need ‘dumbing down’ in order to be understood, which they don’t.” The two plays will be presented in repertory, with the same cast members performing both plays.

Subscription information and brochures will be mailed in early May.  The remainder of the UMS 10/11 season will be announced on Wednesday, April 7.

We’d love to hear from you!  What theater productions of the past have been the most memorable?  What are you most looking forward to in the 10/11 season — or beyond?

Categories: Explore, Theater, Theater & Dance

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About

Sara Billmann has served as UMS's Director of Marketing & Communications since 1996. A former UMS intern, she celebrates her 20th UMS season this year.

9 Comments »

  • avatar Guy Sanville says:

    Very much enjoyed the Uncle Vanya. Really, great. Beautifully executed.Thanks for bringing them in. Less then excited about the "performance art" offering next season. My experience has been that performance artists have more problems than talent. Looking forward to the plays. Guy Sanville Artistic Director Purple Rose Theatre Company

    • avatar mozart says:

      Why are you "reviewing" before you have seen????? Doesn't seem an informed approach, especially for a "professional". The shoe on the other foot…..

      • avatar bjblackmamba says:

        It might just be me, but it doesn't seem like a 'review', as you say. It was just a general statement about performance artists and everyone is entitled to their own opinion, hopefully based on their experiences, which it was qualified to be.

    • avatar Chris Hazlett says:

      I must say, I think this categorical condemning of performance art is very unfortunate. I am so grateful to UMS for bringing experimental and unclassifiable artists to Michigan, and impressed by their willingness to combine those offerings with more traditional productions. It seems that they understand the importance of innovative artists like Laurie Anderson to America's cultural life. I trust that audiences will not be so narrow minded as to dismiss Ms. Anderson's performance outright so that they can take the risk to form their own opinions.

      -Chris Hazlett

  • avatar Tim Grimes says:

    The Cripple of Inishmaan is a beautiful play and I was lucky enough to see the Druid Theater Company production in 2008 in New York at the Atlantic Theater Company. Thanks UMS for bringing this to Ann Arbor!!

    Tim Grimes

  • avatar jessamyn says:

    What exciting offerings next year! I very much hope that we'll be given the choice of picking two of them for a make-your-own subscription series. (I would pick one of the Shakespeare plays and the Cripple of Inishmaan, myself) We subscribed for the first time last year because the two-performance package, with Uncle Vanya and Love's Labour's Lost, was exactly what we could commit to at the beginning of the academic year.

    • avatar sarabill says:

      Thanks for your comment, jessamyn. The Theater Series will include all five productions, but you'll be able to pick and choose individual events through the Monogram Series if you're not interested in all of the theater offerings. You'll receive a special renewal packet in early May that will outline all of the options for you.

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