The Carnegie Pulseabout the carnegie pulse | advertise | contact | subscriptions | join 
newsart & cultureopinionseventsclassifiedscourse schedule

home  >  art & culture  >  shakespeare’s complete abridged works or how to make bill turn in his grave  >  

   MORE ART & CULTURE

  
Spice Island not-just-a-Tea House is a Student’s Dream
Feb 10 4:33 pm

  
Orient Kitchen is Baum Boulevard’s Secret Gem
Feb 10 4:32 pm

  
CMU Travels to the Time of King Arthur
Dec 7 1:26 pm

  
Who to Satire? Guys or Dolls?
Dec 5 12:27 am

  
Good pizza on campus?
Dec 4 3:37 pm

  
Zenith is at the Pinnacle of Vegetarian Food
Dec 2 11:38 pm

  
La Feria: the Best Peruvian Restaurant in Pittsburgh
Dec 2 11:37 pm

  
Why is CMU cool?
Nov 27 11:03 am

  
Shakespeare’s Complete Abridged Works Or How To Make Bill Turn In His Grave
Nov 27 11:02 am

  
“The xkcd Guy” waxes eloquent
Nov 27 11:01 am


Shakespeare’s Complete Abridged Works Or How To Make Bill Turn In His Grave
Nov 27, 2007 11:02 am | by Nakul Gupta

            Scotch 'n' Soda, CMU's student run theatre group, has a tradition of hosting special performances during Homecoming Weekend. If I were to state that this year's homecoming play was a serious, perceptive adaptation of the entirety of William Shakespeare's work, I would be utterly off the mark. The play that I watched on Friday, the 26th of November, was an uproarious parody of all of Shakespeare's works (plays, poems, and all) condensed into a few hours.

This brilliant play was conceived, and first enacted, by the Reduced Shakespeare Company. SnS' adaptation of this play was directed by Shaun Swanson, a Sophomore Physics and Mechanical Engineering major, and was on the whole smoothly executed. For the most part, I was laughing myself hoarse with the rest of the audience; however, there were times during the lengthyplay when the jokes became forced and the play almost descended into mediocrity.

One of the most noticeable aspects of the play was that the entire SnS crew (not just the three actors) was involved in demolishing the fourth wall. The fourth wall is the name given to the imaginary barrier between the actors and the audience, which usually prevents the actors from directly addressing the audience. Audience participation was a huge part of the performance. In one scene, the actors coerced an audience member to play the part of Ophelia, Hamlet's love interest, and then had the rest of us enact the parts of her ego, super-ego and id. Needless to say we were all thoroughly entertained.

It would be negligent of me not to mention the actors in this high-energy routine. The three actors (just three!), who played characters ranging from Titus Andronicus to the ghost of Hamlet's father, were Julie Brown, a Senior English major, Stephen Chan, a Freshman Business major and Joshua Patent, a Freshman in the Science and Humanities Scholars program. It's often been said that humor is the hardest form of creativity to get across to the audience, but these three performers were able to accomplish just that.

The production did have some flaws. The scene when two of the actors ran away leaving the third to entertain the audience was boring. The mannerisms and actions of the lone actor in this scene were very clichéd and provided the dullest point in an otherwise excellent performance. These sorts of troughs in the continuity of the play (far and few as they were) could have been edited to shorten the running time, which would have made this review seem less like a review and more like a fan boy prattling on about his favorite play of all time. Having thus been inducted into the humorous world of SnS productions, I'm looking forward to more of the same next year.



 talkback to the pulse
No comments have been posted, yet. Be the first to post!
Share your opinion with other Pulse readers. Login below or register to begin posting.

Email address:
Password:



    story tools
  Discuss
  Print

  DID YOU KNOW?
  • Carnegie Mellon has more to offer than you think. Each week we'll reveal another hidden treasure.
  • UC Pool Closed Until June 12
  • There's new stuff in the UC basement
  EVENTS    more
  • Hands on: Photoshop Elements Program
    Wed 6:30 pm, Silver Eye Center fo...
  • Concert with Bodega
    Sat 7:30 am, The Hillman Center f...
  MOST READ STORIES
  • Pepsi Pouring Rights Agreement: The Facts
  • Mr. SigEp Crowned Mr. Fraternity for Second Year in a Row
  • Nakama: the Best Restaurant in Pittsburgh?
  • Spice Island not-just-a-Tea House is a Student’s Dream
  • La Feria: the Best Peruvian Restaurant in Pittsburgh
  • Orient Kitchen is Baum Boulevard’s Secret Gem



  email: tcpulse@andrew.cmu.edu     ::     phone: 801.848.4812     ::     fax: 801.848.4812     ::    
  mail: The Carnegie Pulse | Carnegie Mellon University | University Center, Box 78 | Pittsburgh, PA 15213     ::    
  (c) Copyright 2004 The Carnegie Pulse, Carnegie Mellon's first exclusively online student-run news source. campus mirror | RSS