SHAKESPEARE HIGH Opens March 9th

By: Feb. 28, 2012
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Cinema Guild will present the U.S. theatrical premiere of Shakespeare High.  Directed by Alex Rotaru, executive produced by Kevin Spacey and featuring Spacey, Richard Dreyfuss, Mare Winningham and Val Kilmer, Shakespeare High is an award-winning documentary about teens improving their lives through theater. 
 
Winner of Best of the Fest at the Palm Springs International Film Festival and an official selection of the Tribeca Film Festival, Shakespeare High opens on Friday, March 9th at New York's Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center (144 West 65th Street, New York, NY - (212) 875-5600) with a national release to follow.  
 
At home many of them face poverty, gangs, drugs, and a lack of role models. But in their high school drama programs, a diverse group of SoCal teens finds a chance to create a better life. Following several students as they prepare for and compete in the 90th Drama Teachers Association of Southern California Shakespeare Festival, this uplifting documentary voices the dramatic personal stories of a cross-section of youth from the Los Angeles area who find redemption, camaraderie, and a creative outlet on the stage and in the classroom. 

Director Alex Rotaru's portrait of promising and dedicated students and their teachers features interviews with DTASC alumni including Richard Dreyfuss, Val Kilmer, Mare Winningham, and executive producer Kevin Spacey. A galvanizing film that reminds us of the positive impact of performance education on impressionable youth, Shakespeare High offers a powerful message in support of the arts at a time when budget cuts facing many schools put the future of these curricula in peril. (Synopsis courtesy of Tribeca.)
 
Alex Rotaru was born in Bucharest, Romania, to actress Maria Rotaru and playwright Eugen Rotaru. After an early career as an award-winning teenage actor, he fell in love with science, earning a Bachelor of Science degree in Physics, first in his class, from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  He interrupted his PhD studies in Physics to get an MFA in film from USC. He has directed the documentaries They Came to Play and Kids With Cameras, and is prepping his first narrative feature.
 

Vote Sponsor


Videos