"ALL'S
WELL THAT ENDS WELL" JULY 6-22, 2017
It'll be the first production of this "problem play" in The
Drilling Company's Shakespeare in the Parking Lot--or in any other parking
lot for that matter.
 |
Anwen Darcy
as Helena. Photo by Jonathan Slaff. |
WHERE
AND WHEN:
July 6 to 22, 2017
La Plaza @ The Clemente Parking Lot, 114 Norfolk Street (E. side of
Norfolk St. between Delancey and Rivington)
Thursdays - Saturdays at 7:00 PM
FREE
Subways: F to Delancey Street, M to Essex Street.
Presented by The Drilling Company
More info: 212-877-0099 or visit www.drillingcompany.org
Running time: 2 hours (without intermission)
We open our 23rd season July 6 to
22 with "All's Well That Ends Well," directed by Karla Hendrick.
It's the first time this play has been presented in a parking lot, ever.
 |
(R) Elowyn Castle as Countess of
Rousillon, (L) Mary Linehan as Levatch, a clown in her household.
Photo by Jonathan Slaff. |
In the play, Helena is the only daughter
of a famous French physician. Although a gentlewoman, she is not nobility,
and for that the man she loves, a count named Bertram, her rank is not
enough. He rejects her but she follows him to the court of the King
of France, who is ailing. Bearing her father's potions, she offers to
cure the monarch on a gamble: if he dies, she will submit to execution,
but if he lives, she can choose a husband from anyone in his court.
She chooses Bertram, who is forced to marry her and does, but he flees
immediately after the ceremony to Italy to fight in the Tuscan Wars.
He issues an impossible challenge: he will only be Helena's husband
after she has borne his child and wears his family ring. In Italy he
distinguishes himself as both a warrior and a seducer of local girls.
Helena tails him to Italy, where she befriends Diana, a virgin he is
smitten with. Helena poses as Diana in his dark bedchamber and Diana
manages to obtain Bertram's ring in exchange for one of Helena's. So
the marriage is complete, whereupon Helena fakes her own death to lure
Bertram home. Back in France, Bertram tries to marry the daughter of
a Lord but Diana breaks up the engagement with her revelations. Bertram,
impressed by all Helena has done to win him, swears love to her. This
resolution fulfills the proverb: all's well that ends well. The play
offers side-splitting comedy in the self-serving machinations of Parolles,
a disloyal associate of Bertram, and by a clown of Bertram's household.
But its moments of levity are interlaced with gut-wrenching pathos,
causing it to be labeled one of Shakespeare's "problem plays."
 |
Anwen Darcy as Helena,
Michael William Bernstein as Parolles. Photo by Jonathan Slaff. |
In its previous 22 years, Shakespeare
in the Parking Lot has never before presented this tricky play and there
is no record of it being produced in any other parking lot. The Drilling
Company has been producer of Shakespeare in the Parking Lot since 2006
and is also the exclusive producer of Shakespeare plays in Bryant Park.
The troupe has been kicking around the idea of doing this challenging
play for about four years.
To director Karla Hendrick, the play's
quick shifts in tone are Checkhovian and that is the source of its strength
and beauty. She explains that the play might seem to depict a smart
woman who falls for the bad boy and makes dumb choices. But viewed through
the healing power of the feminine, it becomes a discovery of becoming
a woman and what it means to become a man. Helena, on her journey
of self-discovery, is driven by her heart and a positive life philosophy.
She makes bold choices and is emboldened with each success. Bertram
is on a journey too; becoming a war hero and learning what it means
to be a man. The play, then, is a Checkhovian coming of age story
of two young people united through diverse journeys through despair
and darkness.
 |
This truck will be moved before
the production. Photo by Wai Wing Lau. |
Ms. Hendrick has chosen to set the
piece in southeastern France just before the fascist invasion of World
War II. This is to illuminate themes of the muting of women's role and
voice, the breakdown of patriarchal systems, and the fight against fascism
(or lack of fight). The cloud of an uncertain future is always present;
in the end, we don't know what choices Helena and Bertram will make
but we are meant to wonder how the impending darkness will deepen their
journeys.
The actors are Anwen Darcy,
Una Clancy, Michael William Bernstein*, Michael Gnat*, Elaine Ivy Harris,
Elowyn Castle*, Adam Huff*, Mary Linehan*, Eric Paterniani, Jarrod Bates,
David Sitler* and Gabriela Montalvo. Costume design is by Sofia Piccolo
and Grace Whittemore. Sound design is by Andrew Keenan.
Assistant director is Andrew Gombas.
Stage Managers are Em Hornbeck and Joseph Treimanis. Assistant Stage
Manager is Rachel Jeffries.
 |
Karla Hendrick oversees a publicity
photo shoot. Photo by Maggie Rothberg. |
Karla Hendrick is one of The Drilling
Company's most accomplished actresses. Her performance as Betty in "The
Norwegians" by C. Denby Swanson, she was cited by The New York
Times as one of the Top 25 Quirky and Magical Moments in Theater of
2013. Her other significant roles in the company include the Woyzeck
character's psychiatrist in "Reservoir" by Eric Henry Sanders
and her performances in both the Parking Lot and Bryant Park in "Hamlet"
(Gertrude) and "The Merry Wives of Windsor" (Mistress Ford).
She earned a BA in Theater Arts from Mount Holyoke, attended the British
American Drama Academy, Oxford and earned an MFA from Brooklyn College.
She is a Master Teaching Artist at the Metropolitan Opera Guild. She
has been a guest artist-educator at the Pedagogy and Theater of the
Oppressed National Conference and a professional artist/panelist at
the New England Women's Global Leadership Conference. This is her
directorial debut.
The cast is filled with
standout actors of The Drilling Company. Anwen Darcy (Helena) stole
the show as Mercutio in "Romeo and Juliet" in Bryant Park
in 2015. Elowyn Castle (Bertram's mother) directed "The Norwegians"
and was commended by The New York Times for her performance in the Parking
Lot as Coriolanus' mother Volumnia, the pushy and hard-bitten "Momma
Rose of the Roman military." Adam Huff (Bertram) got the girl last
summer as Bassanio in "The Merchant of Venice" in the Parking
Lot. David Sitler (King of France) was critically praised as Claudius
in "Hamlet" and Dogberry in "Much Ado About Nothing."
Eric Paterniani and Jarrod Bates are The Drilling Company's leading
Shakespearean clowns. The part of The Fool, traditionally played by
a man, has been cast with Mary Linehan (Hero in "Much Ado About
Nothing" and Bianca in "The Taming of the Shrew"). Michael
Bernstein, who plays, was Lucio in "Measure for Measure."
Michael Gnat, playing Lafew, was the company's Polonius in "Hamlet"
in Bryant Park. Elaine Ivy Harris (Diana) played Celia in "As You
Like It."
IF YOU GO
"All's Well That Ends Well" will be performed July 6 to 22,
Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:00 PM and all admission is free. Seats
are available on a first come first served basis, with audience members
often arriving early to secure a place. Audience members are welcome
to bring their own chairs. Once seats are gone, blankets are spread
out. No one has ever been turned away and there's never a wait for tickets.
2016
| 2015 | 2014
| 2013
| 2012 | 2011
BRYANT PARK 2014
*= member, Actor's Equity Assn.