From the Ward Museum for Waterfowl Art in Salisbury to the Academy Art Museum in Easton to the Church Hill Theatre in Queen Anne’s County, Maryland’s Eastern Shore has a wide and talented arts scene. The Shore even has its own Shakespeare company! Now in its 10th year, Shore Shakespeare Company was founded by two local actors, Avra Sullivan and Chris Rogers.
The company presents works from the classical theater repertoire, with an emphasis on plays by William Shakespeare. Each summer, the company produces one play that tours the Shore, giving outdoor performances in a several communities. Past shows have included Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer’s Night Dream, and Macbeth. The company also conducts workshops and presents scenes from classical plays in local schools.
This year, Shore Shakespeare Company is presenting Measure for Measure. The show opened over Labor Day weekend at Adkins Arboretum and played last weekend in Oxford. The final stop will be at Wilmer Park in Chestertown for three performances, Sept. 16-18. First up is an open rehearsal — with full tech and costumes — starting at 6:30 pm Friday. Then there will be a 6 pm performance on Saturday, Sept. 17, followed by a 2 pm matinee on Sunday, Sept. 18. All three performances are free and open to the public. Audience members should bring a chair or blanket and may also bring a picnic.
Below is an excerpt from the program notes of the play’s director, Greg Minahan.
“In our fictitious city of Vienna, Duke Vincentio is in a pickle. For too long he has been lax in enforcing the laws of the land. Now his city is awash in vice, particularly of the bawdy sort. With bawds and pimps ruling the roost, Duke V. departs for Poland and leaves the sanctimonious Angelo to clean up the mess. Predictably, heads begin to roll and power commences to corrupt.
“Designated one of Shakespeare’s problem plays for falling somewhere between comedy and tragedy, Measure for Measure is both serious in content and absurdist in tone, timely in its subject matter and timeless in its portrayal of humanity. As such, it is a tale of balances: between justice and mercy, punishment and instruction, deception and strategy, truth and seeming. Everyone is masked and no one is only what they seem. In a word, it is Shakespeare.
“Absent our friend, tech wizard, and co-founder Chris Rogers, Shore Shakespeare Company is going back to its roots with a small unit set and minimal sound and lighting, relying instead on concept and theatricality. We like to think that this is the way ol’ Will did it himself.
“So, bring your peanuts and sit close.
“The Bard is alive and well on the Eastern Shore!”
In addition to directing, Greg Minahan is an actor, singer, and dancer who has performed on Broadway in musicals including CATS! and Peter Pan. He created original theater pieces for New York City school children, earning an award for his multi-cultural holiday shows. Since his move to the Eastern Shore, Minahan has appeared in numerous shows, portraying Herod in Jesus Christ Superstar at Church Hill Theatre and Macbeth in Shore Shakespeare’s production of Macbeth.
Jane Jewell is a writer, editor, photographer, and teacher. She has worked in news, publishing, and as the director of a national writer's group. She lives in Chestertown with her husband Peter Heck, a ginger cat named Riley, and a lot of books.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk