Red Bull Theater's Revelation Readings Continue with Beaumont & Fletcher's THE MAID'S TRAGEDY Tonight
By: Tyler Peterson
Red Bull Theater's OBIE Award-Winning Revelation Readings series provides a unique opportunity to hear new and rarely-produced classic plays performed by many of the finest actors in New York.
Can what you don't know hurt you after all? Jacobean cross-dressing and bedroom badinage are in full force, as tragi-comedy becomes revenge play. A soldier returns home for a wedding only to find a big change in the bride. Very soon all hell breaks loose. Melantius is at first joyous to find his friend Amintor marrying his sister Evadne, but it doesn't take long for secrets to be exposed and friendships to turn bloody. Lust, wit, honor, betrayal and rage collide as each character plots their own schemes to right their wrongs. Tonight, see Beaumont & Fletcher's THE MAID'S TRAGEDY. Deborah Wolfson directs a cast that features Christian Conn, Quincy Dunn-Baker, Jen Eden, Jeremie Harris, Jennifer Ikeda, Colin Israel, Brian Morvant, Everett Quinton, Michael Raver, Jeanine Serralles, Zuzanna Szadkowski, Nick Westrate, Spiff Wiegand, Patrick Woodall, and more. With original music by Scott KillianThe Maid's Tragedy, probably written in 1610-11 for the Blackfriars Theater, presents a conflicted court with a corrupt absolute monarch at its center. The king-never named outside his title-abuses his royal prerogative with an almost cavalier attitude. His lust for an unmarried woman, paired with his own majestic authority, slowly poisons the morality of his court. The play reveals diverse consequences for his courtiers as they struggle to maintain loyalties to both royal absolutism and proper moral conduct. Critics' receptions of Beaumont and Fletcher have vacillated repeatedly over the centuries, from those who claim their plays are exonerations of absolute monarchy, reveling in excessive amorality, to those who claim their plays reveal a series of ironic and critical inquiries into the corruption of absolutism. The medieval and Renaissance doctrine of the divine right of kings asserted that kings received their right to rule directly from God, and thus only the Divine could hold kings accountable. King James I (reigned 1603-25) was a principal champion of divine-right doctrine; playwrights understandably measured their treatments of absolutism.
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EN EL TIEMPO DE LAS MARIPOSAS Repertorio (1/07-12/31) |
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International Human Rights Art Festival 30th Street theater (6/05-6/07) |
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Hadid 59E59 Theatres (7/10-7/21) |
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