Shakespeare Reader’s Theatre – Midsummer Night’s Dream

March 5th, 1-4 pm in the beautiful upstairs space of the Glen Ellyn Public Library will be our first Shakespeare Reader’s Theatre event in 2016. The GEPL will have some printed books available for participants, but folks are also welcome to download a copy onto their tablets or kindles.

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What is Shakespeare Reader’s Theatre? The works of William Shakespeare are beautifully written, but many aren’t aware of how much fun they are to read and to act. Everyone old enough to read Shakespeare is welcome to join us—everyone present will have at least some part in the work (and maybe two or three 😉 ). No experience or preparation is needed (though it can be helpful to watch some free performances of the plays beforehand). We’re there to have fun, stretch ourselves a little, and enjoy the Bard’s great work.

I found a site that shows the characters by number of lines:

Character Gender Lines
BOTTOM Male 255
THESEUS Male 235
HELENA Female 230
OBERON Male 225
PUCK Male 206
LYSANDER Male 179
HERMIA Female 164
TITANIA Female 141
DEMETRIUS Male 136
QUINCE Male 121
FLUTE Male 57
EGEUS Male 41
HIPPOLYTA Female 35
FAIRY Male 28
PHILOSTRATE Male 24
SNOUT Male 22
CHORUS Male 14
SNUG Male 14
STARVELING Male 11
FIRST FAIRY Male 8
MUSTARDSEED Male 5
PEASEBLOSSOM Male 4
COBWEB Male 4
SECOND FAIRY Male 2
MOTH Male 2
ALL FAIRIES Male 1
ALL MECHANICALS Male 1

As you can see, there are many parts (and we will share some of them during the timespan). Come on out to have fun, do something creative, stretch your boundaries, and reinvigorate your creative writing core. You don’t have to commit to the whole three hours—come join us any time during this span.

Shakespeare Readers Theatre – March 13, April 16 and April 24

The works of William Shakespeare are beautifully written but many aren’t aware of how much fun they are to read and to act. The Journey, the writing group associated with this Naperville region of National Novel Writing Month, has scheduled some sessions for folks to come out to read-through (no memorization required!) one of Shakespeare’s […]