Handcart Ensemble

Pulitzer Prize-Winning Poet Paul Muldoon on Handcart’s The Burial at Thebes

“I simply can’t imagine a better production of The Burial at Thebes. Handcart Ensemble is a spectacularly gifted group, absolutely equal to the subtleties of Heaney’s text. I’ll go anywhere to see anything they do.” —Paul Muldoon

The Third Wheel

Handcart Ensemble’s Theater Blog

March 2006

Monday, March 27, 2006

Note from the AD

So why is Handcart doing Yeats? It’s because his work recognizes and calls upon the full resources of the theater. Unlike most great playwrights, he constructed his plays not as watertight masterpieces that could be boarded by company after company while retaining their essential appearance, but as loose-fitting apparel needing to be filled by music, dance, and imaginative staging equal to the power of his words. Among twentieth century dramatists, Bertolt Brecht perhaps most fully realized that aspect of Yeats’s vision in Mother Courage, Galileo, and other plays whose bold scenic demands required inventive solutions from their performers. As a Marxist, however, Brecht saw theater as relevant only insofar as it addressed those matters of politics and power that he believed governed the human condition. (He began to modify this view late in his career.)

Yeats had faith in enduring myths as a source of wisdom and narrative power. Like Brecht, Yeats had an agenda, which was in his case the cultural and political renewal of Ireland. The bulk of his plays draw specifically from Irish myth and legend, and it’s perhaps because of this exclusivity that they haven’t yet commanded a vast audience outside their native country. In his finest plays—and I believe Cat & the Moon and Only Jealousy of Emer are among them—the Irish cultural specificity both richly informs them and recedes before their universality in treating matters like childlike faith and noble self-sacrifice.

Yeats’s material is very demanding of its interpreters, and to see a group of committed artists join their talents to make these performances possible has been immensely satisfying. I hope you’ll not only come and enjoy, but share your thoughts with us as well.

Posted by Scott Reynolds at 03:03 PM | Comments (0)
Friday, March 17, 2006

Two Yeats Plays in two weeks!

Plans are coming along nicely for our next production. It opens in less than two weeks!

As far as publicity goes, we got an email off this morning, have sent off advertisements to the Irish Echo, mailed off postcards, putting up posters, partnering with Irish and poetical organizations, etc. But the real story is in rehearsals. We’re getting back to our roots. This one’s going to be good, folks. Of course, there’s Yeats himself. But the great actors, our wonderful director, the good music Nathan’s providing, and much more. Too much to mention in a quick message. It’s all looking great — including a very, very large ball.

Sign up to our mailing list if you haven’t already, and we hope to see you at the Independent Theater!

Posted by Kevin Ashworth at 10:28 AM | Comments (0)

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March 2006 Entries

Note from the AD
Two Yeats Plays in two weeks!

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