Explore Dream Live
Please enter the following information:
EMAIL 
PASSWORD 
  Remember Me
 
  Forgot Password?
  Become a Member
  Close Window
Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment
Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment
27.0°F
-2.8°C
mytahoe | Tahoe.com
Explore, Dream, Live | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Search | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Find It | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Event Calendar | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Event Calendar | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment
Shakespeare Festival | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Plan Your Trip | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Get Outdoors | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment What To Do | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Tahoe Guide | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment Live Here | Tahoe.com | Lake Tahoe Hotels, Ski Resorts, Realestate, Lodging, Restaurants, and Entertainment
Swift Video Player, by Brightcove
tahoe.com video gallery
mytahoe member videos
tahoe.com photo galleries
mytahoe member photo galleries

You can add your own videos and photos to tahoe.com by becoming a member of mytahoe!


Planning a trip to Lake Tahoe? Want to know what's going on around the Lake? The Tahoe.com email newsletter will keep you in the know on the latest Lodging, Dining, Recreation and Special Events information, so you won't miss a thing. We'll be sending it out once a month, so you'll know just what to do when you're in the basin. Sign up today and let the good times roll!


<< BACK
Course heightens Tahoe Shakespeare festival experience
By By Tim Parsons, Lake Tahoe Action | Tahoe.com
mytahoe
COMMENTS E-MAIL
PRINTABLE
A little bit of homework can make the Shakespeare experience at San Harbor as wonderful as the spectacular beach venue.

Lake Tahoe Community College is offering a primer for this summer's Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival performances, “Much Ado About Nothing” and “Measure for Measure.” English Department ChairwomanMichelle Risdon began teaching the class a couple of summers ago.

“I would go to the plays at Sand Harbor, and while everyone was having a good time, I could hear people around me (asking questions about the play),” she said.

Each quarter-unit class consists of three meetings, including attending the performance at Incline Village.
“The first meeting is an introduction to the Renaissance, some tips on how to read Shakespeare because for some people, this maybe their first experience with the plays, so I give some tips on how to approach the language and some strategies for understanding it,” Risdon said.

The students have a couple of weeks to read the play before reconvening for a review and to discuss its meanings, issues and themes.

The festival often features two comedies, although last year it performed the historical “Richard III” and in 2007 a tragedy, “Othello.” Both of this year's plays are comedies, although “Measure for Measure,” which is rarely performed, is a black comedy, or what Shakespeare students call a “problem play.”

“The great thing about comedies is that they are really tragedies waiting to happen,” Risdon said. “They could be tragic, but things work out in the end. The tragedies have the same structure up to a point and then they take a tragic direction.”

“Much Ado About Nothing” is a more conventional Shakespeare comedy.
“There's a character who is feigning death, and that's always trouble in Shakespeare,” Risdon said. “When you pretend to be dead, people tend to want to kill themselves, too. So it could go bad, but it tends to work out in the comedies.”

Take the class

ENG 131 — “Shakespeare in Performance”
Where: Lake Tahoe Community College
Instructor: Michelle Risdon
n “Much Ado About Nothing,” June 29 and July 13. Performance July 15
n “Measure for Measure” July 6 and 20. Performance July 22
Credits: 0.25 units for each course


mytahoe PRINTABLE E-MAIL
advertisements