The Curtain Theatre, Mill Valley’s own  company of Shakespeare players, is returning for its 24th  summer production with one of the Bard’s most beloved comedies. 

A Midsummer Night’s Dream has always lived up to its name, a mad dash into delusion that transforms all who experience it.  A quartet of lovers leave the court of Theseus and Hippolyta, evading a blocking parent and unjust law. They enter the realm  of the contending fairy rulers, Oberon and Titania, and  supernatural sidekicks that include Robin Goodfellow, better known as Puck.  

Hoping to give love a helpful push, Puck applies a magic  charm–to the wrong lovers. Tradesman Nick Bottom the Weaver, in turn, gains a new head that the goddess Titania cannot resist. More conjuring and confusion ensue. 

Every Jack eventually gets the proper Jill, but Bottom and his rustic band first offer up their questionable acting skills to the court. “I will hear that play,” responds Theseus. “For  never anything can be amiss/When simpleness and duty tender it.” 

Director Michele Delattre recalls Midsummer as one of the first plays she encountered as a child. “Over subsequent decades  I have found it moving in entirely new ways,” she says. “What  stands out is Puck’s final message: that theatre is a sort of  communal dream that can transform characters and audiences, and  mend all things.” 

Live acoustic music is a hallmark of Curtain productions. This year’s repertoire has an Irish lilt to it, featuring  traditional jigs and reels as well as original melodies by Don Clark and Hal Hughes. Clark (guitar, octave mandolin) leads a  four-piece band that includes Hughes (fiddle), Michele Delattre (concertina) and Jo Lusk (flute). Actors Evan Winet and Gaby  Schneider add violin and viola. 

The set is once again the work of Steve Coleman, whose  magical designs exploit the natural beauty of Mill Valley’s  unique amphitheater in the redwoods. For a special performance on Saturday August 17, the show will move from the stage into the redwood groves. 

Jody Branham returns as costumer, as does Peter Bradbury as  dramaturg. Doyle Ott guides actors on movement; Skylar McMorrow serves as choreographer; J.J. Van Name is text coach; Kim  Bromley is producer; and Diane Pickell-Gore is stage manager. 

Cast: Heather Cherry (Titania), Maggie Del Castillo  (understudy), Maya Dostal (Helena), Grisha Driscoll (Demetrius),  Allison Eames (Starveling/Mustardseed), James Frankle (Flute),  Glenn Havlan (Bottom), Thomas Hutchinson (Snug), Rachel Kaiulani  Kennealy (Puck), Helen Kim (Quince), Ofeibia Laud-Darku (Snout/Peaseblossom), Mary Murphy (Cobweb/Amazon), Cassie Nesbit (Hermia), Thomas Peterson (Egeus), Tom Reilly (Oberon), Gaby  Schneider (Moth/Oatcake), Marianne Shine (Hippolyta), Zane  Speiser (Lysander), Evan Winet (Theseus).  

The Curtain Theatre, founded in 2000, is dedicated to performing the world’s best plays in one of the Bay Area’s most  beautiful settings. Its free outdoor productions in Old Mill  Park are designed for first-time viewers as well as long-time  theatre buffs.  

Old Mill Park Amphitheater is behind the Mill Valley Public  Library, at 375 Throckmorton Ave. Further information is  available at curtaintheatre.org (along with downloadable  photos), and facebook.com/curtaintheatre.org.  

info@curtaintheatre.org 

MORE INFO.

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