Connecticut Repertory Theatre (CRT) will present William Shakespeare's Othello, October 7 - 17 in the Nafe Katter Theatre on the Storrs campus. For tickets and information, call 860-486-4226 or visit www.crt.uconn.edu.
Iago has a plan. Passed over for promotion by his commander, Othello, this sinister soldier weaves an increasingly tense web of revenge meticulously, maliciously, brilliantly. At once a love story and a psychological thriller, Othello exposes how one man's envy can wreak havoc in an entire community. A magnificent meditation on trust, jealousy, love and passion, Othello remains strikingly resonate 400 years after it was written, which is why it is one of Shakespeare's most produced plays today.
Race, class, and gender are at the forefront of Othello. Othello, a black man marries Desdemona, a white woman, and is chosen by the nation to lead it in time of peril. He appoints Cassio, a distinguished scholar to be his Lieutenant. This decision infuriates Iago, a soldier in Othello's army, who believes he deserved the promotion. It is Iago who, overcome by humiliation and jealousy for his lack of promotion, manipulates all those around him with the hope of Othello's demise and his own triumph. Iago immediately sets a plan into motion that will destroy Othello's happy new life. Iago wins Othello's trust, he tricks Cassio into abolishing his own reputation, and quickly becomes Othello's lieutenant. Desdemona, innocent through all of this, tries to reconcile the friendship between her husband and Cassio. Her actions help Iago's case and when Emilia, Iago's wife, gives Iago Desdemona's handkerchief, Othello's first gift to her. Now Iago has all the proof he needs to turn Othello's doubt into pure jealousy and rage.
Director Dale Rose said, "The rehearsal process is absolutely thrilling as we are working with two pairs of Othellos and Iagos who will perform on alternate evenings, each pair brings unique insight and understanding to events and revelations that makes this play one of the great tragedies of all time." Artistic Director
Vincent J. Cardinal said Othello is "a gripping story in its time, it speaks vitally to America today as it grapples with race, political power, hatred, sexism, jealousy, war on a foreign soil and human frailty in the halls of power."
THE CREATIVE TEAM
Dale Rose (Associate Artistic Director, Director) directed the previous CRT productions of The Exonerated, Pericles, Arabian Nights, Restoration Comedy and As You Like It and All In The Timing for the summer 2010 Nutmeg Series. Professor Rose is the Director of Performance Studies for the departmental MFA and BFA Pre-Professional Actor Training Programs; he comes to UConn from Tampa, Florida where he served as Director of the School of Theatre and Dance at the University of South Florida. Previously, he was the Director of Performance Training at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Under his leadership the program received recognition by U.S. News and World Report as one of the top 20 Graduate Theatre Programs in the country. In the 1980's Mr. Rose was the Master Acting Teacher at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. He has taught professionally in New York City at the
Warren Robertson Theatre Workshop, The
George Morrison Studio space and The Actors Center. Mr. Rose was Artistic Director of the Shakespeare Festival of Dallas where, among others, he directed
Earle Hyman in King Lear and
Morgan Freeman in Othello. He was Artistic Director of the Plaza Theatre where he worked with
John Goodman,
Mariel Hemingway and
Zakes Mokae. Again in Dallas, he was a co-founder of Stage #1. He began his professional directing career as founder and Artistic Director of the Alice People Theatre in Tampa. Known for its cutting edge productions, the company was the first to produce the works of playwright
David Mamet outside of Chicago. As an American Cultural Specialist for the U.S. Information Agency and later for the State Department, he taught in Jerusalem, on the West Bank, in Barcelona and Athens.
The Creative team includes: Jennifer Corcoran, Scenic Designer; Mark Novick, Lighting Designer; Natalie Abreu, Costume Designer; Erin McKeon, Sound Designer; Greg Webster, Fight Choreographer; and Dassia Posner, Dramaturg.
Photo Credit: Kim Bova
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