Last Chance to see Shore Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice

Queen Anne's Theatre

Photo: Shore Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice
Your last chance to see this critically-acclaimed production of Shakespeare’s most modern play is September 13th & 14th 2019 at 6:00pm at The Centreville Wharf

Performances are FREE and open to the public. Bring a picnic and a lawnchair or blanket. Enjoy a riveting performance alongside the sparkling headwaters of the Corsica River! More information may be found at the Company’s website, www.shoreshakespeare.com

We invite you to experience William Shakespeare’s most controversial, most problematic and, perhaps, most modern and relevant play: The Merchant of Venice.

What should contemporary audiences make of a work whose characters and issues have been debated by audiences, scholars, critics, directors, and actors for over four hundred years? Considered both a romantic comedy and a “problem play,” The Merchant of Venice is one of Shakespeare’s most controversial works. Set in 16th Century Venice, it is on the surface a romantic comedy featuring a love tested by obstacles placed in the path of the lovers. The play also examines the darker themes of intolerance, tribalism, betrayal and revenge – personified in the characters Antonio, a Christian merchant, and Shylock, a Jewish moneylender. As the two plotlines weave together, nothing in The Merchant of Venice is quite what it seems to be.

Shore Shakespeare’s production showcases a strong and talented cast including company co-founders Avra Sullivan as Portia and Christian Rogers as Antonio, Brian McGunigle as Shylock, Max Hagan as Bassiano, Howard Mesick as Gratiano, and featuring Jackie Royer, Li Wojehowski, Troy Strootman, Paul Briggs, Samantha Davis, Josh Hansen, John Feldman, Deanna van Skiver, and Jane and John Tereby. The production is co-directed by Christian Rogers and Juanita Wieczoreck, with costume design by Barbi Bedell and tech support by Hope Dorman.

Whatever you think you already know about the play, this production will challenge your assumptions and defy your expectations. The Merchant of Venice, in the words of Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro, “scrapes against a bedrock of beliefs about the racial, national, sexual and religious difference of others. I can think of no other literary work that does so as unrelentingly and honestly.” So honestly that it should be noted that the text contains language that some may find offensive.

We invite you make plans now to see this thoughtful and honest production.

More information is available at www.shoreshakespeare.com.

September 13th & 14th at 6:00pm
The Centreville Wharf
212 Watson Road
Centreville, Maryland

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~ Shore Shakespeare