The
Taming of the Shrew

From the Playbill – Director’s Notes:
I have chosen to emphasize that Shakespeare’s story
is a play within a play to give even clearer perspective
on the subtlety the bard brings to the folk-motif
image of a man who tames a wife. The story is set
in a modern era to make the characters more familiar
– real people with real feelings and complex motivations
– and the play more fun. So return now to the early
days of rock-and-roll and ‘them’ restaurants. The
setting is Ye Olde Castle Bowl in Bakesfield, California
some 40 years ago, an era, according to James Brown,
when it was ‘a man’s world’ for the last time. Be
bop a lula!”
What the Critics Said:
“Marin
Shakespeare Company has mounted a boldly clever production
of The Taming of the Shrew that accomplishes
the difficult task of preserving the play’s basic
integrity without endorsing misogynistic brutality.
Along the way, the audience is even treated to a fair
amount of fun. Set in the 1950’s era of bowling alleys,
jukeboxes and motorcycle-riding tough guys, this seems
like a Shrew of a different species. But, the plot
and dialogue remain largely untouched, albeit accented
quite nicely with bits of rock music.” Patrick Sullivan, Pacific Sun
“You just have to give in to it.
Marin Shakespeare’s production of The Taming of
the Shrew is loyal to the play’s theme of total
obedience, full of gimmicks, and merciless in converting
Shakespeare’s language into 1950’s musical numbers.
It’s also one of the most successful modern adaptations
of Shakespeare that I have ever seen….This Taming
of the Shrew is a bold unapologetic suitor, and
we would be foolish not to submit. Chrisanne Beckner, Commuter Times
“Marin Shakespeare Company’s rock-‘n’-roll
version of The Taming of the Shrew is more
akin to 20th century Elvis than the 16th bard. These
two celebrities have little in common, but the mixture
of Shakespeare’s plot ideas with the music of Elvis
at Forest Meadows Amphitheatre is very funny. The
action takes place in Bakersfield, California. Lodi,
Frisco and the names of other towns continue to draw
laughs in this production, no matter how many times
they are mentioned. Familiarity breeds joy....Although
I missed the language of Shakespeare and am no fan
of rock-‘n’-roll, I enjoyed the play and the music.
Young music enthusiasts should adore this production.”
Bess Davoren, Tiburon Ark
“Set in Bakersfield in the
1950s, the shrew in question is a tantrum-happy
vixen, a sex-kittenish bad girl clad in tight leopard-skin
slacks and with tall, tall hair played with oodles
of cheek by Mary Knoll. She is startlingly similar
to Pinky Tuscadero – the only irregularly recurring
character on ‘Happy Days’ spunky enough for Fonzie
to take seriously as mate material….Throughout the
play, the actors break into lip-synched performances
to recorded rock ‘n’ roll
numbers that are lyrically relevant to the action….The
highlight of the night is when Mary Knoll as Katherine,
the shrew, interrupts the taming process for one final
show of resistance. She breaks into a campy rendition
of Dusty Springfield’s whiny anthem ‘You Don’t Own
Me’….This rockin’ protest that ‘You Don’t Own Me’
is the perfect retort to Petruchio’s avowal that he
does. He states: ‘I will be master of what is mine
own: She is my goods, my chattels; she is my house,
my household stuff, my field, my barn, my horse, my
ox, my ass, my anything..’ Who wouldn’t break into
Dusty Springfield’s song after listening to that?”
Erika Milvy, Santa Rosa Press Democrat

“It may be because it’s a Marin
Shakespeare Company production and that it has the
title of one of Shakespeare’s most enjoyable comedies,The
Taming of the Shrew, but, it is barely Shakespeare….only
a thin veneer is recognizable as the work of The Bard….Currier
retained nothing more of the play than the surface
situation. He then proceeded to wreck havoc with what
little he kept….At the slightest provocation, some
early ‘50’s rock ‘n’ roll record intercedes, and the
caricatures on stage start moving their hips, playing
air guitars, and mouthing the words of the songs….Predictably,
many in the audience opening night couldn’t get enough
of it. Except, I suspect, for those like myself, who
came to see The Taming of the Shrew and not Taming of the Shrew: The Musical. What’s
going on at the Marin Shakespeare Company?” Roberta
Floden, Marin Independent Journal
“Talk about a Tempest. First there
was the August 21 Roberta Floden review of the Marin
Shakespeare Company’s production of The Taming
of the Shrew. Next came a flood of letters chastising
and challenging Floden’s review. On Aug. 31 the Independent
Journal’s Lifestyles section featured some of
the readers’ letters and a response from
Floden. That give-and-take ignited a second round
of letters….”Marin Independent Journal
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