Posted by David Kopel:
Two Gentlemen of Verona, at the Colorado Shakespeare Festival:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_19-2009_07_25.shtml#1248131224


   The [1]Colorado Shakespeare Festival's production of Two Gentlemen of
   Verona, which opened Sunday night, might be summarized by a line from
   Dickens: "It was the best of times. It was the worst of times." That
   is, the audience loved it, and I couldn't stand it.
   [2]Two Gentlemen was the first of Shakespeare's comedies,
   incorporating many elements that he would use in later works. Each of
   the two gentlemen friends is pursuing a romance, but things get
   disordered and complicated. One of the girlfriends disguises herself
   as a man, and learns some unpleasant truths about her beloved. There
   is a clownish servant whose main job is double-entendres. Everybody
   ends up in a forest, and then everything turns out alright, with the
   miscreants forgiven, virtue rewarded, and romances properly resolved.
   A straightforward performance of a Shakespeare play is unthinkable
   these days, so every producer has to think up a novel interpretation.
   Here, TGV is turned into a play-within-a-play. We watch a "rehearsal"
   of TGV, with the characters wearing partial costumes on top of their
   street clothes, using rough props, and moving about a
   partially-constructed set.
   On a physical level, this works very well. The incomplete costumes and
   set are intriguing.
   The problem is the script of the outer play. First all, it consumes a
   huge amount of time, necessitating enormous cuts in TGV. The cuts
   seriously impede the development of the main characters, so that their
   various emotional changes over the course of TGV sometimes seem to
   have little or no basis.
   Second, the replacement of so much Shakespearean dialogue with the
   dialogue from the outer play is a very bad trade. The outer
   play--whose plot is a conflict between the director and two
   actors--could easily be a mediocre and instantly-forgotten television
   situation comedy.
   As a mixture of sit-com and Shakespeare, the outer play does not come
   close to the elegance, wit, or good jokes of the Gilligan's Island
   productions of [3]Hamlet or [4]Cleopatra. Indeed, it's not even as
   good as the Hey Arnold [5]episode where the class puts on Romeo &
   Juliet.
   When TGV itself is actually allowed to go forward, the performances
   are solid and engaging. Unfortunately, the frequent intrusions of the
   outer play into the "rehearsal" break the dramatic momentum of a very
   good play, and jolt the audience back into a lousy play.
   "Over the top" is a mild description of the production�s frequent use
   of banal jokes and other simplistic devices. Act II (just before
   intermission) and the play itself both end with "The Hokey Pokey." And
   in this performance, The Hokey Pokey really is what it's all about.
   The play that you will see is not really Two Gentlemen of Verona. The
   experience is akin to watching Masterpiece Theater on a television set
   which automatically switches to a bad episode Hee Haw at random
   intervals.
   There�s obviously an audience for such a production, since the preview
   night audience adored the show, laughing heartily and applauding with
   gusto.
   In any case, this year�s TGV is not the norm at the Colorado
   Shakespeare Festival, which more typically stages actual productions
   of the play whose name is on the ticket, and which almost always
   produces at least one outstanding play every summer.
   This summer, the other plays in repertory at the CSF�s two stages at
   the University of Colorado at Boulder are Hamlet, Much Ado about
   Nothing (set in Barcelona in 1934), and To Kill a Mockingbird.

References

   1. http://www.coloradoshakes.org/
   2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Two_Gentlemen_of_Verona
   3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Producer
   4. 
http://www.tv.com/gilligans-island/angel-on-the-island/episode/10120/recap.html
   5. http://www.tv.com/hey-arnold!/school-play/episode/55052/summary.html

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