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For most, donning a tie or suit coat and spending time and money

at a live play is akin to swimming in gasoline before lighting a

match. But The Idaho Shakespeare Festival, an annual event held off

Warm Springs Avenue, is currently putting forth its 27th season and

the event booklet boasts “50,000 patrons… each

season.”

So the question becomes, simply put, why? Why would thousands

spend an extravagant sum of money to attend a play that they could

purchase at Barnes and Noble for $12.95 and 37 cents in gas? Anyone

who has ever suffered through a live play in a sweaty high school

auditorium knows that an easy chair beats the pants off of the

hard-backed swing thrones provided there. So what is it that

delivers the taut bills of many a wallet into the coffers of the

Shakespearean institution?

Nearly every media encounter of the Idaho Shakespeare Festival

describes, or at least touches upon the setting. As well it should.

The Boise River seems to be a main attraction as it softly pulses

on the outskirts of the complex, which is not simply a theatre.

There is a café that serves appetizers, soups, salads,

entrees, dessert and drinks. Most of which is moderately priced,

and the frugal consumer can spend under $10 for a decent meal. The

premier beer is Table Rock Draft and costs only as much as it would

in any bar. The wine selection should obviously be passed over by

any cost-effective college student, but overall the cafe affords a

fine outdoor eating experience.

The outbuildings themselves are beautifully crafted of soft

sandstone or river-rock and the vegetation—lustful green,

blue, yellow, and even some red, all promoted by the

river—accents the structures wonderfully. Some may worry

insects could pose a problem, but in fact they do not. Bats dart

overhead feasting, performing their own hunting dance, above the

audience attempting, but ultimately failing, to steal the spotlight

from the thespians.

The stage props are changed between the ‘green show’

(an introductory performance) and the main attraction. They alter

slightly between acts, so the background is never dull. If the eye

wanders directly behind the complex a wonderful view of the

mountains are proffered. The lighting is superb and no matter where

one sits, the stadium seating assures that the stage is always in

view. Tables are also available, but for a price. Another option is

a grassy hill, but the performances are typically very long, so a

seat may be a better bet for someone with a bad back, ankles, or

knees.

The sound quality of the event is really not bad. Surely voice

projection is a practiced form of the thespian, but there were

moments when a rude patrons guffaw outweighed the play. Certain

steps have been taken to curb audible distractions, especially

high-pitched, teeth–grinding squeals of children. There are

family nights for those with children under six, but on every other

occasion they are not permitted. Now, if they could only discover a

way to silence the annoying adults…

The previously mentioned wonders of the complex only serve to

strengthen the performers, who are obviously professionals. Even

those who hate, or feel indifferent towards famous literary

playwrights such as Shakespeare or Oscar Wilde, must acknowledge

that each writer did something very right. But without an

incredibly picturesque imagination, ink-marred pages can only do so

much for a reader in search of entertainment. One can break down

the tragic character development of King Lear and his

daughters’ dissent, or ponder over the choices that Jack

Worthing makes regarding his friend Algernon Moncrieff in The

Importance of Being Earnest, but ask any one member of the audience

after a performance what their favorite part was, and it probably

will not be intellectual stimuli. Chances are, they will comment on

a certain actor or actresses role, how the woman who played Lady

Bracknell was so composed in posture that she intimidated even the

patrons. How the simple statement, “Good heavens,

Gwendolen,” was enough to send them home with a side-ache

from laughter. Without a performer’s voice or choreographed

food exchange, sword fight, or dance, the humor would be a bit less

engaging, not as thick.

Though the works in written form are definitely worth their

weight in gold and cannot be undermined, at least so far as what

they have represented in the critical literary world, live

performance takes different things into account. Months of

preparation are only a part of the process; over 100 different

types of specialists are summoned into the theatre for things such

as lighting, audio, costume design and production management, not

to mention volunteers who escort patrons to their seats (and act as

walking trash receptacles during intermission). Furthermore,

theatrical presentation is someone’s interpretation of a

familiar work, so each play will vary depending upon the director,

but each time a hardback copy of the play is opened, the same words

exist unchanging.

Or the theatre could simply be a great way to escape daily

toils. For the student, it could be a break from a cluttered

apartment, summer school and studies, or other typical forms of

entertainment that have become exhausted, such as Edwards. At least

the Idaho Shakespeare Festival has ample parking, and basic human

odor is not trapped indoors to manifest within your nostrils.

The Shakespearean event, though beautiful and well suited to its

purpose, does have its errs. The thespians make slight mistakes,

most are not distracting, and some even add to the flavor of the

experience. This of course is to be expected during any live

performance and the thespians typically roll with the impromptu

problems. This was only one of many more minor problems though.

Take 700 people, add alcohol that only seems to get cheaper with

each passing act, a five-minute intermission, and only four

bathrooms. The answer to our equation? An insurmountable line of

people all holding their crotches and nearing point break by the

second.

Furthermore, take a friend, as the audience is not terribly

warm, and do not show up at the event underdressed unless you do

not mind being openly glared at (the author would recommend

neckerchiefs and sweaters, pink or cream, to be tied about the

throat and tucked like a tie into the front of a suit-coat).

The Idaho Shakespeare Festival is currently putting on A

Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Comedy of Errors, Henry V, all

by William Shakespeare, as well as The Fantasticks by Tom Jones and

Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. Ticket prices

and schedules can be viewed online at www.idahoshakespeare.org

Jason Bright

Related Posts:

  1. Everybody loves Shakespeare
  2. Shakespeare Festival offers unique entertainment
  3. Little Shop of Horrors hits Shakespeare Festival with a laugh
  4. Pacino aids latest Shakespeare rehash, but rest of film falls flat
  5. Theatre Department produces Moliere masterpiece
Filed under: Culture — Archive @ 12:00 am July 11th, 2003

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