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Agassiz Theatre. April 6-8, 13-15 at 8 p.m; April 8, 9, and 15 at 2 p.m.
Evenings: $12/10 regular; $9/7 students. Matinees: $7/5
Students; $10/8 regular. Thursday night shows $5 with student ID. April
8th: Milk and Cookies Matinee; April 15th: Hack Night. Tickets
available at the Harvard Box Office.
So spring break might be over, but fear not: on April 6, the revered
Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert and Sullivan Players (HRG&SP) will open
their annual spring production, a show that consistently has one of the
largest budgets in the campus theatrical world. This year’s feature is
a farcical operetta entitled “The Yeomen of the Guard,” which will run
at the Agassiz Theatre. HRG&SP produce one of Gilbert and
Sullivan’s 14 operettas per semester, replaying shows every four years.
While this production promises to deliver the characteristic
Gilbert and Sullivan humor style that the composers’ fans know and
love, “Yeomen” is noteworthy for its new delivery of a Victorian-era
story.
Last performed by HRG&SP in the fall of 2001, “Yeomen”
tells the story of Colonel Fairfax (Noah Van Niel ’08), prisoner and
falsely accused sorcerer who finds himself incarcerated in the Tower of
London. While imprisoned, Fairfax manages to marry Elsie Maynard (Celia
R. Maccoby ’07), a singer whose commitment is questionable: she is
already engaged to a jester named Jack Point (Samuel Gale Rosen ’06).
Fairfax’s rather blatant admirer, Phoebe Meryll (Jessica G. Peritz ’06)
helps him to escape and hijinks ensue in typical Gilbert and Sullivan
style with some surprising twists at the finale.
But what is not so typical about this rendition is the
directing. Though some consider and portray theatrical farce quaint and
Victorian, director Roxanna K. Myhrum ’05 advocates that this is “not
[her] style” and that she sought to “take the story that’s offered… on
its own terms.” Myhrum suggests that this approach both exposes the
ever-appreciated comic chaos of Gilbert and Sullivan’s work and the
beauty of a script that “does something to get in touch with human
emotion,” she says.
HRG&SP’s interpretation promises to be an exciting
reinvention of an old favorite. What’s more, the show casts the Tower
of London as a puppet, lending a slightly off-beat vibe to the show. As
HRG&SP President Casey M. Lurtz ’07 notes, ““Yeomen of the Guard”
is the closest Gilbert & Sullivan [came] to a serious dramatic
work.” The variety and hilarity in “Yeomen” promise to make it an
exciting production.
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