Blog Post No 51 Judith Shakespeare Goes to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2023

Blog Post No. 51: Judith Shakespeare Goes to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2023

June 13, 2023

After several years of well received staged readings at both The Players Club and The National Arts Club in New York City, Judith Shakespeare is making her first appearance in a full production. “Upstart! Shakespeare’s Rebel Daughter Judith,” as cast and directed by Alexandra Spencer-Jones, and produced by Maddy Mutch Productions, will appear from August 2 to Aug. 27, 2023, with the exception of August 15, at 12:10, at The Gilded Balloon Theatre, Edinburgh, Scotland. For an hour and twenty minutes the audience will see and hear a story about Shakespeare, his wife, his younger daughter Judith, with the Dark Lady thrown into the mix as well. The story is fictional but based upon research, as the playwright explores what Shakespeare and his family circle might have been like. Judith’s story is foremost, as her life illustrates how women of that time coped with the expectations of society—even the expectations of a father who was a man of the world.

Blog Post No. 50 The courtship scene from "Shakespeare Rising" on Youtube


The theater is beginning to revive after the long spell of darkness in the world in general, and the theatrical world in particular. Zoom has assumed some of the activities of live theater. And now some theaters are actually opening. I don’t know when the theaters in France will re-open and the translation of my third play, Shakespeare and the Heart’s Desire (Shakespeare et les raisons du coeur) will be promoted as live theater as well as published in a bi-lingual edition. In the meanwhile, here is a scene from the first play of my Shakespeare trilogy, Shakespeare Rising. This scene is an imagined version of how Will Shakespeare successfully courted Anne Hathaway. The cast: Matt Koenig and Jodi Dominick. Matt also directed and filmed this short video. It captures a bit of the flavor of the whole play, although this scene is only the beginning of the couple’s journey. Copyright 2013, Mary Jane Schaefer. All Rights Reserved. My email address is still: sarahredux@yahoo. com. And here is the scene: https://youtu.be/D2ZCJmkzABw

Post #49 The Review of the Presentation at The Players Club, Sept. 2018

Both John Mahon, Senior Editor of The Shakespeare Newsletter, and Charles F. Altieri, Professor of English at University of Southern California, Berkeley, distinguished critic, and lecturer on the plays of Shakespeare, were present at The Players to see and hear my trilogy performed as staged readings by actors of The Theatre Artists Workshop, directed by Mark S. Graham. The first play of THE LIVES OF SHAKESPEARE trilogy, “Shakespeare Rising,” was reviewed by Mahon, whlle Altieri reviewed the second play, “Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say,” and the third play, “Shakespeare and the Heart’s Desire.” The highly favorable review of the trilogy appears now in The Shakespeare Newsletter, fall/winter edition.

Following is the text of the review:

On three successive evenings in September, 2018 (September 25-27), John Andrews’ Shakespeare Guild and The Players Foundation sponsored staged readings of Mary Jane Schaefer’s trilogy of plays about Shakespeare. These readings took place at the Players Club on Gramercy Park in Manhattan. The Players, New York’s equivalent to the Garrick Club in London for members of the acting community, was the home of Edwin Booth in his later years, and his spirit still pervades the club. John Mahon attended the first play, Shakespeare Rising, and Charles F. Altieri, Professor of English at Cal Berkeley, saw the second and third plays, Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say and Shakespeare and the Heart’s Desire. These plays were work-shopped and developed by Mark S. Graham at The Theatre Artists Workshop. Further adjustments were made to the first play when it was work-shopped with notable success at the Utah Shakespeare Festival of 2014 under the direction of Henry Woronicz. The entire trilogy was performed together for the first time at the Players last September. The opening sentence of Professor Altieri’s review works perfectly to introduce both reviews below: “Here are three powerfully dramatic and extremely intelligent historical plays whose intense staging facilitates the plays' excellent acting—a reviewer’s job cannot get much better.”

 

SHAKESPEARE RISING 

According to the Playbill, Shakespeare Rising “presents a portrait of the artist as a young man.” In fact, we watch Shakespeare move through a series of scenes drawn from his entire life. From the start, Will himself serves as a commentator on his story, and we also see the same actor playing Will interacting with others and playing various roles. In Act I, we move from his sometimes-tense relationship with his father (who wants Will to become his partner in the business of glove making) and his wooing and wedding of Anne Hathaway (who urges Will to follow the players he's met at Houghton to London) to a scene in a London tavern where he presents his script for Richard III and performs the opening soliloquy for the Burbages and Will Kempe. Mary Jane Schaefer then takes us back to Stratford in 1596: Will’s father is trying to prepare Hamnet to apprentice in the glove-making business, but Anne wants Hamnet to go to university. Hamnet shares an ominous dream, and the final scene of Act I is set in a graveyard in Stratford, where Hamnet’s grandfather speaks Lear’s words over the dead Cordelia, including “Never, never, never, never, never.” The scene ends with Will’s arrival home after the burial of his son, to meet the greatest regret and harshest welcome of his life. 

 Eleven performers handle these scenes expertly—the acting is very good indeed, and the playwright’s “take” on Shakespeare’s life as he himself might have viewed it seems just right, demonstrating Mary Jane Schaefer’s complete understanding of Shakespeare, his work, and his times. Shakespeareans should find her work especially enjoyable because the characters frequently quote from him as part of their conversations with each other, making his words their own. Ms. Schaefer knows the canon very well indeed and works it in to her script, which already has an Elizabethan “feel.”

Act II is likewise filled with revealing incidents and creative treatment of the Shakespeare story. It opens in 1597 on a London stage, where Will Kempe, who has played Falstaff, is delivering the Epilogue to Henry IV, Part II, looking ahead to Falstaff in Henry V. As Kempe insists on adding his own words and gestures to what Shakespeare wrote, Will says he can’t abide Kempe’s antics any longer—it’s him or me! Kempe retorts that the company doesn’t need Shakespeare because the Earl of Oxford has offered his plays to the company.  

The scene that follows takes place in 1601 in Stratford, where John Shakespeare is dying and asks for the last rites from a priest. Because priests are no longer readily available in England, Will agrees to impersonate a friar, while his wife and his mother pray “Pater Noster” for his blind father. After the anointing, John Shakespeare indicates his recognition of Will's effort for his sake, and they reconcile before John dies.

Later in 1601, during performances of Hamlet, Will’s father appears to him one night. We watch Burbage as Hamlet, Will as Hamlet’s father, in scenes from the play that include Hamlet’s critique of players who improvise on a whim and ignore what the playwright has written.  The company recognizes the shot clearly directed at Kempe. 

In the final scene of Act II, more touching than all the earlier touching scenes, it is 1616 and Shakespeare has just died.  The ghosts of Hamnet and John Shakespeare meet him in eternity and Will says, after being assured by them both that he has been forgiven by them, "Then have I come home at last."  The three ghosts exit, but the play is not quite done. Shakespeare's old nemesis, Will Kempe, appears as the Devil, and attempts to take credit for inspiring Shakespeare's work:

 

O, the rest is silence, is it? La dee dah. You never thought

he coulda done what he did without me, now didja?

An angel whispered to him, did she? Huh! A bloody-minded

angel that would have to be. (a leering grin) Kinda like 

me. Well, never you mind. Would you like me to sing you a song? A love song,or 

a song of good life?

But John Shakespeare will have none of that, and, off-stage, he simply turns off the lights. Heaven has won the final round.  

What a wonderful play—its treatment of Shakespeare's biography is fresh and original, highlighting details that will be unfamiliar to many in the audience but that provide us with a most appealing and believable sketch of the life of the Bard. Surely it deserves a fully-staged production, as soon as possible!

 

 

JUDITH SHAKESPEARE HAS HER SAY and

SHAKESPEARE AND THE HEART’S DESIRE

 

The second play, Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say, begins and ends with Shakespeare’s younger daughter Judith alone at 77 years old, possessing little but a sharp wit and a lovely ironic sense of the useless but delightful freedom that wit provides her. The third play, Shakespeare and the Heart’s Desire, ends with Queen Elizabeth alone, terrified that all of her power has only left her the more abject before death and the despair of having put to death Lord Essex, the one man she loved deeply. 

 

These parallel endings tell a good deal about the scope and bite of the author’s intelligence.  Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say is fundamentally an engagement in the plight of women, then and now.  There is no preaching.  But there is a vivid awareness of the modes of suffering and paralysis caused by lack of education and confinement to the domestic domain, where dying children and intransigent husbands seem the norm.  Yet in Judith’s case there is something else that complicates the pain.  She is her father’s daughter, continually eager for experience, comprehending all the emotions involved in particular situations, and possessed of a sharp self-protective capacity for witty self-enjoyment that almost compensates for a minimal education—except that she cannot but envy her father’s freedom to live out what his imagination produces.  She chooses for her spouse a “mere” tapster because he has the roguish qualities she associates with her father, only to learn that he also shares Shakespeare’s discomfort with domesticity. The utter failure of all her dreams, however, cannot ultimately shake the capacious imagination she shares with her father.  So her presence on the stage is a constant source of delight, despite the pains beleaguering that imagination.

 

On the other hand, in the third playQueen Elizabeth has immense power, yet she too ends as effectively powerless—bereft of love and beleaguered by fear of death.  Schaefer is superb in capturing the vanity of human wishes as a dramatic condition.  There are three basic plots here, all mediated through Elizabeth. First there is Shakespeare’s unsatisfied love for Henry, Earl of Southampton. Shakespeare first encounters Henry in his mother's London townhouse, at Lady Southampton's invitation.

She is under the hopeful delusion that Shakespeare can write poems in honor of Henry that are so beautiful, they will dissuade him from going to war. That plan doesn't work, of course, but Shakespeare is electrified by his first sight of Henry.   Schaefer chooses not to let the audience see what Shakespeare sees. What they do witness is his visceral reaction to the sight, and his attempt to find words to describe the intensity of the moment.    Then Shakespeare has to take a back seat as Henry develops an intimate relationship with Lord Essex, late of Elizabeth’s bed.  The second plot turn develops as Henry and Essex put pressure on Shakespeare and his company to perform Richard II, whose deposition scene they think will martial support for their planned rebellion (That line from Henry IV, Part II,  “uneasy lies the head that wears the crown,” resonates through the ways that people seek power, then have to defend it from other seekers).  But the mutual support by the members of Shakespeare’s company, in the face of sudden and grave danger, provides a touching alternative to the quest for political power.  The third, both terrifying and amusing, strand of the plot occurs as both the rebels and Shakespeare with one other actor have to face charges with a well-informed and self-delighted Elizabeth.  Schaefer gets a marvelous variety of states of mind as both conspirators and players have to confront Elizabeth’s wrath.  Both Essex and Southampton confuse the power of their love with the possibility of power in the state—only to have to pay, the one with his life, the other with an extended stay in the Tower of London where Schaefer makes us care deeply that rats have devoured the cat that has become his only object of desire.  

 

I think Schaefer has two great gifts that make for utterly engaging theater.  First, she is a thoroughly adult dramatist, taking pains to sympathize with each of her characters while maintaining the reflective distance to judge for each how the vanity of human wishes ultimately reveals itself in delightfully varied modes. The other gift combines what seems an instinctive grasp of the tensions basic to human relationships with an amazing capacity to write lines making the conflicts not only completely alive but also profoundly appropriate to the character’s stakes in the conflicts.  In the Judith play, after an opening comic scene where Judith toys with a parson eager for information about her father, there is a marvelous situation where Shakespeare is castigated once again (and castigates himself) for coming too late to see his young son Hamnet before he died.  He wanted to see his son but rationalized that the situation was not so dire that he has to stop work:  the domestic order for him comes second, for someone with his imagination an easy act of rationalization.  But the women here refute every claim, even uttering suspicion about his protestations of love.  Yet they ultimately accept his return, now to confront new conflicts. Judith must deal with a marriage proposal from Tom, the man she has loved for years, only to hear in the next moment that he has made a serving woman pregnant who is soon to give birth; when Shakespeare and his family explode in anger at this situation, Shakespeare has a stroke but revives sufficiently to create a will that leaves nothing to his wife but their second-best bed and to Judith a small sum of money and a silver bowl she's always liked, as the only way he can see to both punish and protect his vulnerable daughter. After Shakespeare dies, the family must deal with the unexpected arrival in Stratford of Shakespeare's London mistress.  She has come to grieve over Will's grave, but the townspeople, realizing who she is, explode with anger at her daring to come to their town.  It is simply wonderful how Judith bonds with this free woman despite her grief and embarrassment at her presence.  The woman gives Judith her own book of poems inspired by Shakespeare, only to have the tapster husband burn in disgust what is to Judith perhaps the only thing she feels she could actually own and treasure.

 

What happens with focused intensity in the family drama of Judith gets gradually developed in the third play to accommodate a sympathetic vision of how men too are not free from loss and terror, despite their power.  Schaefer is up to the very difficult task of shifting dramatic intensity from the immediate conflict of interests to the general human experience of wanting more of life than one usually gets.   She has to create a drama that also frames the other plays and that contextualizes her fascination with the plights of women.  Richard II’s speech of forced abdication provides that frame, because the characters each have what they most want taken away, although in that loss they perhaps become more fully human.  Shakespeare has to see that for him Henry has to be an ideal that he can never join in fleshly relations without contaminating his wonder at his existence. And so this becomes Shakespeare's nod at his participation in the vanity of human wishes.  Both Essex and Henry do achieve romance and loyalty but they overreach politically and are effectively ruined yet achieve nobility in facing that loss with dignity.  And Elizabeth in this play has to realize that her brilliance is not sufficient to ward off agony.  She sees through all the plots against her, including the use of Shakespeare's theater in those plots. So she can toy with the male perpetrators' versions of self-justification. But, in the end, she is left empty and in darkness.

 

These plays offer rich characters, tremendous dialogue from characters at cross purposes, and a comprehensive sense of sympathy with these characters that is vital testimony to how much Schaefer has gathered from her devotion to Shakespeare.  It is the miracle of theater that we can get so much satisfaction from the author's pains-taking depiction of so many unfulfilled desires. 

 

 

[To date, none of these plays has received a full production.

Mary Jane Schaefer may be reached at sarahredux@yahoo.com.

Her plays are also available on The New Play Exchange. –Eds.]

 

BLOG POST NO. 48

I am in the process of reading an amazing book by a prize-winning American author named Paul Collins. This book, published in 2009, is called THE BOOK OF WILLIAM. It is one of the best books I have ever read, and I would call it to the attention of anyone with intellectual passions, because this book is not merely about Shakespeare’s First Folio. It is a masterful exemplar of intellectual dedication, told through unpretentious anecdotes which are fascinating in themselves, but point to more, if you wish to follow up and look for more. I am having a great time reading it.

The main thrust of this book is that there were three “rescues” of Shakespeare’s works, one performed by the two remaining members of his theater company, The Kings Men; one by a dedicated scholar, though unsuccessful writer, Lewis Theobald; and two money-hungry printers, Jacob Tonson and Robert Walker. Without them, Shakespeare might have been lost forever, or neglected and forgotten.

Here is the post I wrote for my husband’s blog, Pater Familias, but I am also posting it here in full on mine.

         A SURPRISING ACCOUNT OF THE SUCCESS OF A VERY FAMOUS BOOK

The book in question is the First Folio of 1623 of the plays of William Shakespeare.Now very valuable, very much sought after. . . to say the very least!

But, wait, in his book The Book of William, Paul Collins gives a brief history of the assemblageand publication of this book of plays by the two remaining members of the core of Shakespeare's theater troupe, the men who had acted with him and for him for twenty years.  Collins doesn't spend too much time on this event, as he is more interested in what happened next: to the First Folio, to other Folios, and to the reputation of Will Shakespeare.  Several  events followed which turned out to have greater consequence than anyone could have expected.

The First Folio was followed by a second, and a third, etc., each one newly edited as the years went by in order for the publisher to maintain his publishing rights to the works. (Such a thing as a copyright law did not exist until early in the 18th Century.) Each editor of a Folio left his own personal imprint on the book. By the 18th Century, if not earlier, Shakespeare's plays were going out of style, and considered a relic of a previous era.  However, three things occurred to bring Shakespeare's work back into the sun.

Many people are aware that the famous actor David Garrick idolized Shakespeare and, by his emotional and impassioned performances, helped to renew the public's interest in his plays. What is less well known is that Samuel Johnson, a friend of Garrick's, had been his school master.  Johnson's view of Shakespeare was later set out in the Preface to Johnson's edition of Shakespeare's plays, and what he said was revolutionary. Johnson claimed that Shakespeare had changed the world of the theater forever by refusing to write simple love stories that featured untarnished heroes.  Instead, he wrote of complex characters living in situationsfar from simple, and in a world in which love was merely one feature. 

One further event or, rather, series of events, is credited by Collins as placing Shakespeare's works in the company of the classic authors of antiquity. Simply put, the great poet Alexander Pope was given HIS chance to edit Shakespeare's works, and he did it carelessly, basing his choices upon his own personal taste, with little to no care for establishing and preserving the actual texts. Lewis Theobald was a less gifted writer than Pope, but a much better and more dedicated scholar. And he became wildly indignant when he perceived the desecration, as he saw it, that Pope had inflicted upon Shakespeare's plays. And so he, in turn, wrote an entire book, pointing out, over and over Pope's errors, but of omission and commission. This bookwas called Shakespeare Restored.  As Collins points out, this book not only ruined the sale value of all the unsold copies of Pope's edition, but also pointed out to scholars and to the wealthy collectors of books that these were important works of literature, these plays, deserving of study and the kind of fidelity to the author that could be found only in the First Folio.

Finally, Shakespeare's works were also put forward to the class of reader who could not afford to buy a full collection of plays.  This was not a deliberate attempt to educate the masses.  This was brought about by a price war! The book seller and printer Jacob Tonson considered Shakespeare his private property until another printer, Robert Walker by name, decided to challenge him on that score, and began printing each play separately, with no frills, and charging only fourpence a play. Tonson was livid and tried threats of legal action (empty), bribery (not enough), and sabotage of the presses (abortive).  Tonson, though he lost money with each play he sold, countered by selling his individual plays for thruppence a play. Indeed, Tonson put out 10,000 copies of each play. Together these two men flooded London with Shakespeare's works, making Shakespeare available to everyone who could read.  Shakespeare awareness was renewed in London and it is hoped will never be endangered again. But that remains to be seen, I’m afraid.

Please go to The New Play Exhange for copies of my trilogy, The Lives of Shakespeare.


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BLOG POST NO. 47

A YEAR HAS PAST, AND SO MUCH HAS HAPPENED.

Last year in October, the third play of my trilogy, “Shakespeare and the Heart’s Desire” No. 3 of The Lives of Shakespeare, was performed as a staged reading at The National Arts Club in New York City. The day before, it had been performed in Norwalk, Ct., at The Theatre Artists Workshop, the theater “gym” where actors try out their audition pieces, where directors direct plays that appeal to them as a challenge to stage, and where new plays are being written, rewritten, and tested on audiences for comments and reactions. This play, originally called “Bloody Treason” and focused on the attempted rebellion of the Earl of Essex against the Queen, had been revised by me to center more upon Shakespeare’s role in these events, and also upon Shakespeare’s rueful acceptance of his unrequited love for the beautiful young man of the Sonnets, the Earl of Southampton.

Someone attended this performance in Norwalk and said, “This play should be done at The Players Club in New York.” Founded by Edwin Booth in the 19th century, the Players Club has as its mission to celebrate the works of Shakespeare and to educate each new theater audience to the importance of experiencing his work. The Lives of Shakespeare attempts to explore three possible Shakespeares, what he might have been like in various circumstances of his life. And each play has at its core true historical events, fleshed out by the literary imagination. Each play is also imbued by Shakespearean themes and motifs, and is written in an accessible form of Elizabethan English.

Sponsored by The Players Foundation, at the urging of Raymond Wemmlinger, and The Shakespeare Guild, the President of the latter, John Andrews, the three plays were given three staged readings, with a Q and A after each one. Sept. 25, 26, and 27, 2018. Three plays in three days—how Elizabethan. And how the audience listened and responded. Now the hope is that word of mouth will create a demand for these plays to be done again, as full productions. There is an audience waiting. All three plays are available from The New Play Exchange.

BLOG POST # 46: Mark S. Graham and My Shakespeare Trilogy

I began my day by posting on Facebook about my mentor, Mark S. Graham. This is a timely post because the third play of the trilogy we have worked on so long together is about to be given two significant staged readings.   So, this is a public notice, but also an acknowledgement of how instrumental Mark has been in the creation of three plays I am proud to call mine.

What follows is what has just appeared on Facebook:

MARK GRAHAM, the director of "Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire," has beena theater person for most of his life, progressing from ardent young theater-goer to trainedprofessional, director and actor, as well asteacher, producer, and promoter par excellence.As a board member and director at The Theatre Artists Workshop, he has helped to develop, shape, and promote many of the works of playwrights, both within and outside the workshop, to bring them to final form, ready for the professional stage.

Mark has been the creative partner on this trilogy, written by Mary Jane Schaefer, since 2010, when she first approached him with a very long play she'd written, covering most of Shakespeare's life. He was able to see the work's potential, with this caveat: would the playwright be willing to rewrite substantially, to learn how to focus the material, to shape three dramatically effective plays, each one with its own arc, out of this one interesting but overly ambitious first draft. The result of this artistic collaboration has been the three plays that make up the trilogy.  

Both the first and second plays have already been presented at The National Arts Club ("Shakespeare Rising," 2013; "Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say," 2014).  And, now, "Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire."

The first play was also selected for the 2014 Utah Shakespeare Festival, in its program of staged readings of plays by new, emerging playwrights.  It is also under consideration for production by several Shakespeare festivals in the U.S., as well as the U.K. and Australia.

Thank you, Mark.

The two staged readings appearing shortly are as follows:

Oct. 29 at 3 p.m.  at The Theatre Artists Workshop, 5 Gregory Blvd. (red brick bldg.), Norwalk, CT. Suggested donation $15, no reservations.  Adult Content.

Oct. 30 at 7:30, p.m. at The National Arts Club, 15 Gramercy Park South, New York City.No reservations. Adult Content.

 

 

 

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BLOG POST # 45

A lot has happened since I last wrote.  All three plays of the trilogy are now in their final form.

"Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire"  is scheduled to be given a staged reading at The National

Arts Club in New York City on October 30th, 2017.  My mentor, Mark Graham, has moved to

Florida but is hardly what you would call retired. He is involved in theater in Florida, and also

comes north to keep his hand in with projects that interest him.   I'll write again soon with new

ideas, updates, and, I hope, news of further prospects for a full production.

BLOG POST # 44 Sherry Cohen and Broadway World Ct.

In a recent article for BWW, Sherry Shameer Cohen wrote:

"Coming up at the Darien Arts Center is a staged reading of actress and playwright Mary Jane Schaefer's play, Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire. This is the third of Schaefer's trilogy about Shakespeare's life and it explores a part few people know about. Each play can be a stand-alone. (The earlier ones are Shakespeare Rising and Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say.) "All three plays try to show him as human, although the first play also celebrates his emergence as a great artist," says Schaefer. She is being modest. The plays have angles most people don't expect and illuminate his interests and his emotions. This is not heavy Shakespeare, the type of play you feel obligated to see in order to fill your quota of serious theater and fit in with the theater snobs. This is accessible Shakespeare and it's thrilling. Directed by Mark Graham, the cast of Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire includes Larry Reina, John O'Hern, Damian Langan, Tom Zingarelli, Allan Zeller, Joe Maker, Miles Everett, Scott Bruno, Betty Jinnette, Emilie Roberts, and Marca Leigh. The play includes live Elizabethan-style music, composed on short notice by Stephanie Wong, who teaches violin, viola, piano and flute at the Darien Arts Center."

 

MJS:  As I have noted in the Trilogy section of this site, the play was very well received by a gracious, focused audience. 

 

BLOG POST #43 THE NIGHT BEFORE THE READING

"Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire" has gone through five versions now, and even the fifth version has been tweaked., tweaked even in ink on the pages of the actors who will be reading my play tomorrow night in the staged reading at the Darien Arts Center. They've been great about the last-minute changes.   They have been great about everything else too.  We have not had many rehearsals, but each one has counted enormously. The characters are growing with each reading, the relationships between and among the actors are becoming richer and fuller.  It's a pleasure to watch.

It's also a pleasure to anticipate the actual performance. No matter how wonderful the actors are in rehearsal, they often seem to rise to new levels of understanding and vocal commitment when there is an audience there, counting on them to bring the story to full life.

Mark Graham and I have gotten so used to working together over the past six years, our disagreements, and there always are some, get resolved to good purpose, with good humor intact.  As a playwright, I do from time to time over-commit to a phrase or an approach which is not in the best interest of the play as a whole.  While I may (and do) protest, I often find that what Mark is suggesting is better than what I thought "perfect."  Not always, though. Not always.  Sometimes I can figure out a way to make my way be the chosen way, and the play is all the better for my clarification and amplification to get his stamp of approval.

Telling the story has been our focus.  We have an exciting story. But, as with the other two plays, at the core is the heart of Shakespeare, as he grapples with the challenges all mortals face, even the greatest of writers.  It is easy to slip into the myth of Shakespeare as an almostgodlike fellow, all seeing, all understanding.   But the three plays of my trilogy try to show him as a man, and no less a man for being a great one.

 

BLOG POST 42 Program Note for "Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire"

Here is an advance look at the program note I wrote for the Feb. 27th reading of
"Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire."  I don't know if the whole thing will be accepted for the program, but I wanted to make it as accurate and complete as I could. 

 

ABOUT THE PLAY: Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire

               by Mary Jane Schaefer

                

Tonight's play tells the story of an amazing and true event in Shakespeare's life, his dangerous involvement in a plot to pull Queen Elizabeth the First off the throne of England. How can this be our gentle Shakespeare?  Was he not content to enjoy his success at the Globe Theatre, and to present his plays at Court for the Queen?  Why in the world would a man who had won such great success risk everything: his life and fortune, along with those of his Company and his family? Many of the play's events are based on historical records; the rest provide an answer to that basic question: why did Shakespeare do it, and the question that immediately follows: how did he escape unscathed after abetting High Treason? This play follows the thread through a web of love and intrigue to answer these questions.

 

ABOUT THE TRILOGY: The Lives of Shakespeare

                   by Mary Jane Schaefer

 

Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire is the third play of the trilogy. Each play stands on its own, but together they present Shakespeare's life from very different perspectives. The first play of the trilogy, Shakespeare Rising, tells the story of Will's development as a successful playwright and how his life and work almost came to a crashing end when his only son, Hamnet, died at the age of eleven.  PRODUCTION HISTORY : This play was presented in 2013 at The National Arts Club, NYC, under the title Shakespeare in the DarkIn 2014 it won a spot and was performed at The Utah Shakespeare Festival under the title Hamlet's Shakespeare.  The second play of the trilogy, Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say, was given a staged reading at The National Arts Club, NYC late 2014.  This is the story of Judith Shakespeare, Will's younger daughter, whom he disinherited on his deathbed.  Seeing Will from his disgruntled daughter's point of view provides a very different perspective indeed.

 

All three plays have been developed under the guidance of Mark S. Graham, director and creative partner on the project, and through the generous assistance of the gifted actors of The Theatre Artists Workshop of Westport. For more information, see: schaeferonshakespeare.squarespace.com

 

BLOG POST 41

"Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire" will be coming up soon, in a February 27 presentation at the Darien Arts Center, featuring the great actors of the Theatre Artists Workshop, directed by my mentor and artistic partner, Mark Graham. This is the third play of the Shakespeare trilogy we've been working on for several years now. The first one was featured at the Utah Shakespeare Festival in 2014. Both the first and second ones were also done at The National Arts Club in NYC, 2013 and 2014. The three plays bring to life Shakespeare the man, the creative artist, the flawed father (through the eyes of the daughter he disinherited), and the writer caught in a political web he dreaded but barely believed possible, as well as a lover in thrall to an emotion he could not have anticipated. The plays have been called "magic" and "nothing like what anyone else has been doing."

BLOG POST #40 SHAKESPEARE AND THE HEART'S DESIRE

On Feb. 27, 2016, The Darien Arts Center: STAGE will present a staged reading of "Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire,"  by Mary Jane Schaefer.  It will be directed and staged by Mark
 Graham, her creative partner, and feature the tremendously talented actors of The Theatre
 Artists Workshop.  I am very excited about this new forum for my work, and the new audience who will come to see this, the third play of my Shakespeare trilogy.  Right now, the play is in very good shape.  I need one more pass to erase the mistakes, as well as develop and augment a few characters and story lines that need a bit of work.  But the hard slogging, I believe, is mostly done, at least for the playwright.  Although it is the third play of the trilogy, it can stand fully on its own, as can the other two. 

The Darien Arts Center has created this notice:

Shakespeare and the Heart’s Desire, a drama, is third in the DAC Stage lineup and is written by accomplished local playwright Mary Jane Schaefer. This one-night staged reading will be directed by Mark Graham on February 27 at 8:00 p.m. Shakespeare's fascination with the beautiful youth of his sonnets is at the heart of this play that involves an historical incident and its aftermath. Shakespeare's Company is entangled in a treasonous act committed by the Earls of Southampton and Essex. At the play's center is Shakespeare himself, explaining to himself, and to us, this crucial event in his life.

 

BLOG POST #39: "Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire": Aftermath

The reading on Aug. 26th went very well.  The audience stayed late to comment, critique, and listen to the other comments on offer.  There was a general feeling of having been entertained, but I'm still being urged to clarify characters and relationships earlier than I apparently have been doing.  Some of the audience members were indignant on behalf of the play: "Wait just a little
 while, listen patiently for a little while, and all the characters reveal who they are and what they want.  What do you want? A score card?" 

I've got some notes to review, to amplify and clarify the play; to delete a bit that doesn't do the play as a whole any good, though it's great fun in itself.  Mark Graham was right about that after all, although I fought like crazy to hear the scene one more time.  Oh, my darling scene, farewell.  Perhaps we shall meet again in another play that I will build around that scene.  I promised Allan Zeller, who was so good as the Knight, that I would do that for him.  He was sensational in this role which is now on the cutting-room floor.

The play is well on its way to being finished, and all the better for the reading and the ensuing reactions.  I am so fortunate to have this Workshop, this director, these friends.

BLOG POST 38 WHAT IS AN ALTERNATE NIGHT?

The theater group where I workshop my plays all year long is called The Theatre Artists
 Workshop of Westport. We're no longer located in Westport, but that's our official title. We meet every Monday night, except for holidays, summer hiatus, etc., to present material for critique. The actors often bring in audition pieces for work they plan to then bring into New York.

We playwrights bring in our scripts in various stages of development, to hear them read by our accomplished actors and to get audience reaction, advice, critique.  We also have a pool of gifted directors who can guide us through the process.  Hearing the plays is often the best way to spot what is working and what isn't!

One of the opportunities we playwrights have is called an Alternate Night.  We can secure dates in our scheduling book for when the theater will not be in regular use, and that's when we can rehearse and present versions of our new plays and invite an audience.  This audience is privately invited.  They are guests of the playwright, the director, and the actors. They are the people who would normally go to the theater to see plays; so their reactions are very valuable.

I'm having an alternate night in a few days.  And I plan to record here what I learned from it.

BLOG POST 37 SHAKESPEARE AND THE HEART'S DESIRE

The second draft of "Bloody Treason" has a new title, because it has a new focus. Shakespeare is back in the center of his play, where he belongs.  The draft has been cut and rebuilt, perhaps 50% of it all new dialogue. One character is gone, just gone.  This has been an intense month!

I'll get a chance to hear "Shakespeare and the Heart's Desire" very soon. Mark Graham and I will be having a reading of it next week.  I'll post again on how the reading goes and what I've learned from it.  Katie Sparer is a towering Queen Elizabeth, and almost took over the play in Draft I!  I haven't cut a thing of hers; in fact, I've added a long speech at the end of one scene. But the placement of what she says has solved the problem of over-featuring what is a major but not THE major character of the play.

My actors are wonderful.  And Mark Graham has a miraculous eye for placement. If only we had a light grid/and light board.  I keep writing my plays as if they are full productions, in a theater with a lots of lighting options.  That's how I see the play.  Mark can make it work, though, even without the complex lighting I keep on writing into the stage directions.

When it's in full production, though, this play will explode!

 

BLOG POST 36: REVELATIONS

        Draft II is now under way, after the reading on July 20th and all the reactions it triggered.
The heartening thing is that the audience loved the play and seemed surprised by their delight. I have asked myself, and others, why the raw, first draft of this play, "Bloody Treason" (note the quotation from one of Marc Antony's speeches--"and bloody treason flourished over us") got such a favorable reaction.
       The audience was the membership of The Theatre Artists Workshop, whoever came to the meeting that Monday night, which was the third Monday of the month and, so, playwright's night.  I've been told that this play has a great dramatic thrust and lots of suspense. Also, there is humor and wit (more than my other plays?).  One playwright said that its unfocused focus was a crowd-pleaser for modern audiences; that a play without a clear arc created suspense, surprises-- where will this go next. And that I should just trim it a bit and say to myself, "There. That's the play." Someone else suggested that the group has been familiarized with the world of my plays by the first two; so they were better able to assimilate all the history that is built into the plot.

       Some people who gave the play a lot of thought think the play should be centered around Queen Elizabeth and that Shakespeare could go whistle, that Shakespeare can have another play to himself, but not this one.

         I am processing all this advice, and the advice of Mark Graham to stay calm and consider the play's focus and how to make this play the third (and effective third) play of the trilogy.  He suggested that Shakespeare become the narrator, which makes a lot of sense as Shakespeare was also the narrator of the first play, "Shakespeare Rising." I think I can make this work.

 

 

 

BLOG POST 35: EATING MY HAT

Well, I had thought that my third play of the trilogy, "Bloody Treason," was going to need a major refocusing.  But I spent several weeks in May and early June doing more research and working on a outline for the play.  And I came to realize that I did have a focus, or, two foci, but that both of them centered on the themes of love and betrayal, and everywhere in between.

Unless I make a major overhaul of Draft I, which is now written, Shakespeare will be a main character of the play but not the central focus.  The play is held together like a woven net. The plot lines intersect; the themes support the whole.  And, beyond it all, is the vision of the complexity of Elizabethan life, combined with the basic human needs and instincts that live forever.

So, we will have the first reading on July 20 at The Theatre Artists Workshop. I'll get feedback, and then we shall reassess the needs of the piece.   In the immortal words of Nisma Baig, "It's all good."

BLOG POST 34 "WOLF HALL" as done by the Royal Shakespeare Company in New York, The Shakespeare Society, and "All Is True"

Phil and I went into New York City recently, to attend an event at the world-famous Players' Club on Gramercy Park.  The Shakespeare Society, which we have joined recently, hosted an attractive and unusual program.  Actors who were currently appearing in "Wolf Hall" at the Winter Garden Theater in New York used their night off from performing to participate in this program.  Selected actors from that show performed as readings several scenes from "The History of King Henry VIII," also known as "All Is True."  There was a subsequent discussion, moderated by Michaelf Sexton, President of the Shakespeare Society, of how the two plays overlap, comparing Shakespeare's treatment with the fall of Cardinal Wolsey to that of Hilary Mantel, etc. 

I say "Shakespeare" a little inaccurately.  Scholars are pretty sure that Shakespeare contributed heavily to this play, perhaps as a "guest artist" or script doctor. In fact, whenever something is really good in this play, it's attributed to him.  When it is heavy-going and inferior, everyone says, "Oh, this must be the part Fletcher wrote."  Now, this is a little hard on poor Fletcher.  On the other hand, it's probably as accurate as any other way to sort out the collaboration.

Phil has several interesting ideas about the different ways the major characters were represented. He also has insights as to the kind of risks Shakespeare liked to take with historical subjects. For a change, I'm not going to steal Phil's insights, but, instead, refer to his blog, philipschaefer.com, also known as Pater Familias.  He may not have written up this post yet, but I know he's planning to. 

After the program, we went to the bar of the Players' Club, where the actors were congregating, and got to  talk to some of the performers.  I'm afraid I talked far too long with Nicholas Boulton who was sitting with his lovely fiancée and trying to enjoy his evening.  He was very interested to hear about the effect of the PBS "Wolf Hall" on an American audience. (We had already heard that the Winter Garden was probably too big a hall to try to fill, and that's even before the PBS version of "Wolf Hall" aired.) I had to admit that I would have definitely come in to see both parts, "Wolf Hall" and "Bring Up the Bodies" if I had not seen the brilliant television version. The novels had been so internal, the inner monologue of Thomas Cromwell so essential to the books,  I had been skeptical about any kind of dramatization of the novels. But television allows for a kind of internality that the stage, perhaps, doesn't. Mark Rylance's face, close-up on the tv screen, conveyed subtle feelings, complex ideas, without much language at all. 

Meanwhile, Nicholas Boulton, with his incredible, thrilling voice, his 6'3" presence, was a powerful presence on the stage. You may have seen him.  If you saw the film "Shakespeare in Love," he was Henry Condell, one of Shakespeare's actors.  If you've been watching this season's "Game of Thrones," he played the Master of Ceremonies at the fighting pits!  He deserved, of course, a much bigger role.  Perhaps they'll have him back to do something more substantial.  As it was, he was very patient and gracious to me, as I soaked up a good bit of time he could have enjoyed with his lovely companion. 

 

 

BLOG POST # 33 INTERVIEW FROM BROADWAY WORLD, CT.

 

 

 

 

 

BWW Interviews: MARY JANE SCHAEFER

June 11, 2015

 

👤by Sherry Shameer Cohen

 

 

Actress and playwright Mary Jane Schaefer explores the relationship between Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald in her play, Scott and Zelda: Happy Forever, which was performed at the Theatre Artists Workshop in Norwalk in June. Schaefer is best known for her work in Shakespeare. She performed with Shakespeare On The Sound and has written two parts of a trilogy on the Bard -- Shakespeare Rising and Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say.

BWW: Tell us first about Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald. Why did you choose them? Why do you think they still resonate so much among audiences?

MJS: I originally wrote this piece on spec for a show called Forbidden Westport. I hadn't realized that broad comedy was what they were looking for, so it didn't really fit into their show. But I knew I had stumbled onto something special [because] the tone, the mood seemed so right. When Theatre Artists Workshop announced it was doing a show themed Love and Marriage: And Everything in Between, I realized I was sitting on something really good that had never done before. I went back to it and changed the ending, having seen, to my amazement, that I had been working towards the different ending all along. That happens sometimes. You write something and then you realize what you were really getting at.

I have always loved The Great Gatsby, and found it amazing that someone so self-destructive as F. Scott Fitzgerald could write with such a clear eye about a romantic figure with an imagination that led to his destruction. I think the current Hollywood scene is filled with stories of celebrities who think they have found Great Romance, only to end up with disaster, scandal and betrayal, and the need to re-invent the rest of their lives. (Robert Pattinson anyone?)

Mark Graham directed the piece, and it was performed with great sensitivity by Miles Everett and Emilie Roberts. The weekend run was sold out.

BWW: What makes your play about them different?

MJS: Any works that I know of about Scott and Zelda seem to focus on their mutual and self-destruction. Even Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris shows Scott trying to deal with Zelda's moods, her jealousy, with Zelda teetering on the edge of the Seine, tempted to drown herself. I didn't want to go there.

I wanted to show them early in their marriage, their Eden of a honeymoon, when the entire world seemed to be stretched out before them as their own little Paradise. The play is ironic, of course, because the audience knows they're heading for a monumental disaster. And yet, as my husband

remarked, it's nice to have this reminder of how happy they were once, and how much they fulfilled each other's longings.

This play, Scott and Zelda: Happy Forever is short and a two-person play, but there is definitely room for expansion. Several people have approached me and urged me to develop it into a full-length play. I've put it down on my list of projects, along with the third play of my Shakespeare trilogy, and a piece I've been working on that is about Byron and Keats. I like literary projects. A certain amount of research--and then my imagination takes over, wherever I see a chance to interpret and bring to life previously ignored aspects of very interesting subjects.

BWW: How do you come up with your inspirations?

MJS: There are certain authors that resonate with me, both emotionally and intellectually. Shakespeare, especially. And when I read their works and read about them, my imagination starts going full blast. I spend a long time reading up on the figures I have in mind, and then the first draft of each play comes pouring out. Of course, the first draft is only the starting point, if you want to have a focused and powerful play. Shakespeare Rising, the first play of the trilogy, has gone through fourteen drafts.

BWW: What is like working with Theatre Artists Workshop? Is it very competitive to get a show produced there?

MJS: Theatre Artists Workshop is an amazing group of gifted people -- professional actors, playwrights, directors. The whole point of TAW is to have a place to hone one's work and then take it out into the world. The two plays about Shakespeare that are already completed have been presented at The National Arts Club in New York, and the first one was also part of The New American Playwrights Project of The Utah Shakespeare Festival in August of 2014. My director at the Utah Shakespeare Festival was the renowned Henry Woronicz. The distinguished theater figure Mark Graham has been my creative partner on these plays and instrumental in their development. (Graham is working with Schaefer on her third play in her Shakespeare trilogy.) The actors of the Workshop have given me two gifts: their performances, which let me see and hear what needs to be rewritten, and their insights into the characters themselves or what rings false to them in a scene. I give some examples of this in my blog on my website, www.schaeferonshakespeare.squarespace.com, in which I write about Mia Dillon and her influence on Judith Shakespeare Has Her Say and on the characterization of Anne Hathaway as influenced by Katie Sparer and Nadine Willig.

TAW is not a production company, although the group invites audiences in from time to time to see what's cooking! We're non-profit, so those shows also help us to make our rent! My play Scott and Zelda: Happy Forever is the first of my short pieces to be presented as part of a TAW production. The competition for those spots is pretty fierce, yes.

BWW: Tell us more about your Shakespeare trilogy. How did that develop?

MJS: Shakespeare has been a part of my life for a long time. I've performed in many of his plays, from college productions to Shakespeare on the Sound. But how I began writing about Shakespeare began with the SquareWrights of Stratford, Ct. Vanessa David had urged me and my husband to join as playwrights, and this proved to be an invaluable experience. In the spring of 2007, the prompt for all of the playwrights for the April show was Shakespeare. Phil wrote a very funny comedy called Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth, but I wrote a monologue, "The Great Will Shakespeare Speaks." Will Rogers performed the monologue beautifully at the Stratford Library, and then it was picked up for the Outdoor Shakespeare Festival in Stratford and performed by another experienced Shakespearean, Mark Frattaroli. It was also done successfully at St. Andrew's College in Canada. A long story there. J. Sibley Law, one of the founders of SquareWrights, had not been able to come to the show at the library. The other performance took place the following year. But he kept hearing about how the monologue really brought Shakespeare to life. So, when I took part in the 24-hour play-writing festival months later, Sib, as the producer of this festival, gave me as my topic "Shakespeare in the Dark."

He also gave me two wonderful Shakespearean actors, Mark Frattaroli (who later did the monologue for me) and Lucy Babbitt. There was also a young man from New York named Jason Basso who had never done Shakespeare but was eager to learn. The director was a very gifted and dedicated man named Christopher Caltigirone. I wrote the play overnight, emailed the script to the actors and director at 4 a.m., tried to get a little sleep, and the following night I saw a FULL production of the play at the SquareOne Theater in Stratford. That was a jolt, let me tell you, a wonderful one. It was costumed, staged, memorized, even had intro music. They had lavished a tremendous amount of attention on it. And, to me, it felt as if I had had a dream the night before, and now I was watching it on the stage! An amazing sensation.

I decided to write a full-length version of it. My friend, Jo Anne Parady, is a member of The Theatre Artists Workshop, and I had come to see her in several productions at TAW. I thought, how wonderful if they would do a reading of this play for me. I approached her, and she said, "You would need to apply for membership first." So, I did, and joined in 2009. The following year, I asked Mark Graham if he would work with me on developing it. He read the first draft, in all its excess, and said if I would be willing to listen to him, to cut and focus, we might make something really good out of it. All the rest that followed has been the result of his vision, the workshop process, and a lot of hard work. I love the whole process. Now, to get the plays professionally produced, is the final goal.

Learn more about Mary Jane Schaefer at http://www.schaeferonshakespeare.com and about the Theatre Artists Workshop at http://www.taworkshop.org.

Photo credit: Annalise F. Schaefer

About Author

Sherry Shameer Cohen is an award winning parachute journalist and blogger who is always looking for more challenging work. Her articles and photos have appeared in Connecticut Magazine, Greenwich Magazine, Stamford Plus, The Advocate, Greenwich Time, The Minuteman, Connecticut Jewish Ledger, The Jewish Chronicle, The Jewish Press, The New Jewish Voice, and various daytime magazines. She has stage managed, designed flyers, programs and props for community theatre and reviewed theatre for the Connecticut Jewish Ledger, Theater Inform and New England Entertainment Digest. She lives in Connecticut with her husband, Ken, and her two little drama kings, Alexander Seth Cohen and Jonathan Ross Cohen.

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BLOG POST #33: WAS SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE WITH A MAN?

A lot of ink and emotion have gone into this topic.  Argue away about the sonnets, everyone. Or the role of Antonio in "Twelfth Night,"  also Antonio in "The Merchant of Venice." 

During the English Renaissance men were, in general, more cultivated and educated than women.  Men went to University, for example, though Shakespeare did not. Nor did he need to, having gotten a great preparatory education in his grammar school.  Any education women got, however, had to be private.   This weighting of education in favor of men created an audience for brilliance that was comprised primarily of men. Men writing for men.

Queen Elizabeth I, of course, had gotten a stunning education. She amazed continental ambassadors with her capacity to discuss politics with them in Latin. But, ah, how many women had the Queen's advantages?  In my plays, I show Emilia Lanyer, the putative Dark Lady of the Sonnets, as a well-educated woman, having been trained by an extraordinary father to be an ornament to the Royal Court. 

But men were the wits, the poets, the playwrights.  When Shakespeare wrote his sonnets to the beautiful young man, he was writing, I believe, for money. And prestige. And reputation. Perhaps he was trawling for additional patrons. For years before their publication, manuscript copies of the sonnets were being passed around within the circles of young aristocrats. But perhaps Shakespeare was also writing with his heart.  I believe he had a crush.  And why not?  The Earl of Southampton was beautiful and aristocratic, with a great taste in literature.  He appreciated Shakespeare's work and was a willing and generous patron.  It is thought that "Venus and Adonis," dedicated to Southampton, was written at the Earl's estate, where Shakespeare was given  refuge from the plague sweeping through London, which it did with alarming persistence, repeatedly.  The playhouses were shut down, and a writer would be very grateful to find a bolt hole where he was fed and housed while he generated  income with a long erotic poem.  The erotic poem is heterosexual. Why not? On the other hand, it does focus on the dazzling loveliness of the young Adonis which has driven Venus mad with desire.

There is evidence that Christopher Marlowe was homosexual.  But Shakespeare?  I think the argument there is thin.  One is required to extrapolate so much from the writing, when Shakespeare is famous for trying out viewpoints and being impossible to pin down as to his "own" viewpoint.  He savors all of humanity.  What does he endorse, apart from basic decency?

In the third play of my trilogy, "'Twas Ever Thus: Betrayal,"  I intend to portray men fascinated by other men.  I have been cautioned, "Now don't make this your gay play!"  Why not? I wonder.  Well, first of all, I never want a play of mine to be simplistically defined in any way.  Secondly, I don't want to show something that may not have been true at all. And, thirdly, I find a sweetness and wistfulness in the concept of a crush.  Is it possible that a crush can be more powerful and more deadly than True Love?