Ah, yes. I did love the part where the eyeballs hit the floor.
Richard
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bruce Meyer" <Bruce.Meyer(a)UTSouthwestern.edu>
To: "Jerald Head" <jlhead1952(a)gmail.com>om>; "Clay Stromberger"
<cstromberger(a)mail.utexas.edu>
Cc: "Eric Thomas" <Eric.Thomas(a)uth.tmc.edu>du>;
<winedale-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Sent: Friday, June 11, 2010 10:21 PM
Subject: Re: [Winedale-l] Fwd: CampShakespeare '10
Oh no you did not - OK, it is ON
Summer 1980: the Lear that left the audience and the players so stunned
that they sat in the barn for 10 minutes in the dark afterward... Larsen
howling, Galloway with her achingly poignant fool, Godwin plucking out
the eyes, Faires at his evil best, me throwing mud specks into the
audience..... awesome.
Having said that, I agree with Clayton - the first folio Hamlet two
years ago at camp Shakespeare just blew me away... maybe it is that
EVERY year creates its own unique magic and only Doc really knows the
formula to produce that magic.....
>> Clay Stromberger
<cstromberger(a)mail.utexas.edu> 6/11/2010 9:12 PM
>>
Thank you Eric for luring the reclusive Dr. Head out in the open! He
took the bait.
Fear not, Jerald, anyone who set foot in the barn after the summer of
'75 has wished for a time machine so they could somehow turn back the
cruel clock and sneak into that parade.... I was only 82 miles away that
summer, a goofy teenager messing around with a Super 8 movie camera, and
I still am ticked off (unfairly of course) at my parents for not taking
me out there to see it. Your wonderful little description only makes me
wish to go back in time even more.
But let me add that if you were not in attendance for the summer of
'86, you missed some really amazing, amazing moments, earned through, as
I recall, intense hard work and genuine suffering and
crawling-up-from-the-depths effort. Even the unflappable Zig looked
stunned and drained after those performances. We told him the group was
terrific. "Really?" he asked, dazed.
And I have to say that being a part of the first Winedale "Hamlet" in
'83 with Rando, Larsen, Mize & Co. wasn't too darn bad.
I even remember that the summer of 2000, Doc's last, so far from the
days of the Polka Dots, had many moments of aching beauty and riveting
ensemble electricity. Still the best "Pericles" I've ever seen. And
the Camp Shakespeare Bad Quarto "Hamlet" a few years ago may have been,
as Doc put it himself, the best complete performance I've ever witnessed
in the Barn. Kids ages 10 to 14 or so who weren't even alive when Don
Pedro and that parade marched into the Barn.
Doc always has had, and shared, that rare gift for looking backwards
(to the glories of '71, '75, other breakthroughs) and forward (what THIS
group can do with its potential) at the same time. There was always
something great to be done, with the lesson being, there still is today.
That's one of the experiences we all share, no matter what summer we
were lucky enough to alight in that old barn.
Come out to Camp Shakespeare performances next weekend and you'll see
it's still going on, this very moment.
cheers,
clayton s.
On Jun 11, 2010, at 8:47 PM, Jerald Head wrote:
Heat indeed. And now we start. The best class of
Shakespeare at
Winedale? Such competition, how tiresome and unnecessary. Really
there
is only one best class, and we all know it was the legendary Class of
'75. The "Much Ado" will forever be remembered as a turning point in the
history of Winedale. Not only for the fact that it was the first year a
complete play was performed, but also for the use of the entire
community and surroundings for the beginning, including the parade with
soldiers on horseback and the amazing Polka Dots marching ensemble. I
really did not want to participate in such a discussion of "The Best..."
but for sake of historical accuracy, I felt compelled to respond. I feel
this should be the end of this discussion. Besides who the hell is
Autolycus? Some ancestor of Odysseus? Oh now I remember. Wasn't he a
character, a peddler or something, in one of those "problem" plays, "The
Winters Tale." I recall seeing it in the barn perhaps in the 80's but
the Reagan years all seem to blur together for some reason. I vaguely
recall a frozen statue and some pastoral nonsense involving sheep. I
recall that the statue did a fine job of
being a statue, outstanding in
fact. So lets put an end to this petty "best of" nonsense. We are all
proud Winedaleans. It is just that some of us have much more to be proud
of as we approach this historic reunion than others.
Sincerely,
Jerald, proudly a member of the historic class of '75.
On Jun 11, 2010, at 6:00 PM, James Ayres wrote:
> Good for you, Eric. All we need is a bit more heat!
>
> Doc
>
>
> On Jun 11, 2010, at 8:07 AM, Thomas, Eric wrote:
>
>> Doc,
>>
>> David has thousands of fans so be prepared. Start cooking, pull
out the
extra chairs, and just go ahead and expand the barn. Has there
ever been a better Autolycus at Winedale? And now that I think about
it, was there ever a better class (Summer ’86)?
>>
>> Just thought I’d try to heat up this list-serv a bit.
>>
>> Eric
>>
>> From: winedale-l-bounces(a)lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:winedale-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of James
Ayres
>> Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2010 7:43 PM
>> To: David Ziegler
>> Cc: winedale-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
>> Subject: Re: [Winedale-l] Fwd: CampShakespeare '10
>>
>> While we have not made final arrangements for everything I can
report this
with some degree of confidence:
>>
>>
>>
>> 1) Performance is at 2:00, n'est-ce pas?
>>
>> Yes.
>>
>>
>> 2) Is there a banquet or bbq or meal and further celebrations
afterwards?
>>
>> Yes.
>>
>>
>> 3) Until what time is above event to unfold?
>>
>> Probably about 7.
>>
>>
>> 4) Are we out of Winedale that evening, out of our accomodations?
(Sp)
>>
>> No. You have reservations for the evening of the 14.
>>
>>
>> 5) Or are we staying through the evening and vacating on August
15?
>>
>> Yes. After breakfast.
>>
>>
>> Sorry to have to ask someone to repeat him or herself, but fans are
lining
up and would like me to clarify these details.
>>
>> Just how many "fans" are you talking about?
>>
>>
>> Looking forward (you can't IMAGINE how much) to being with you
all!
>>
>> David
>>
>>
>>
>> > From: jayres(a)cvctx.com
>> > To: winedale-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
>> > Date: Thu, 10 Jun 2010 16:39:58 -0700
>> > Subject: [Winedale-l] Fwd: CampShakespeare '10
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > >
>>
>> The New Busy think 9 to 5 is a cute idea. Combine multiple
calendars with
Hotmail. Get busy.
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Clayton Stromberger
Outreach Coordinator
UT Shakespeare at Winedale
College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin
www.shakespeare-winedale.org
cell: 512-228-1055/ office: 512-471-4726
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