Image of IUB signature
Contact Us Site Map Search
 
You are here: home » Productions »


In Performance

Twelfth Night Page Header

Buy Tickets Ruth N. Halls Theatre
February 23, 24, 26-March 3, 2007 at 7:30 P.M.
About Ruth N. Halls

Henry Woronicz PhotoAn Interview with Henry Woronicz.

Bloomington, IN—On February 5, 2007, Ph.D. student Tom Robson sat down with Henry Woronicz to discuss the IU Department of Theatre and Drama's upcoming production of Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare. The production opens Friday, February 23, at 7:30 and continues February 24 and 26-March 3. Here is an excerpt of their discussion.

Tom Robson : First things first, how are rehearsals going so far?

Henry Woronicz: So far so good, can't complain, we are having a good time.

TR : With all of your professional experience, how is it different working with students in an academic setting like IU?

HW: Well the major difference, Tom, is that the students are a lot less experienced than professionals, I mean, that's the obvious thing. And dealing with a playwright like Shakespeare that has arguably written some of our greatest western dramatic literature, there are real challenges involved in terms of being able to act that material, and the more experience you have the better, but that's a given going into an academic situation. There's a certain element of directing in the academic area that has to do with teaching and giving young actors a chance to wrap themselves around such great material that has been around and out there for 400 years, thereabouts. So that is the major difference really.

TR : You have a very diverse cast. You have several graduate students who have a lot more experience, and you have some freshmen and sophomores in there.

HW: Yes, I think there are several freshmen, there are a couple sophomores and juniors, and seniors, and then some grad students; a first year, second year, and third year grad students are in there.

TR : So you really run the whole ranch.

HW: It is the whole ranch, and within that dynamic there is a range of experience, and levels of strength and weaknesses, so that's all part of putting the package together. But that is to be expected when you come and work in the academic theatre. That is one of the big joys, actually, for me. I like that process of working with young actors and opening up some doors in their artistic process, helping them understand this great material and the challenges that are involved in working on it.

TR: I think there were more names signed up on the audition sheet for Twelfth Night than any show we have done here in years. Any idea what might have attributed to that?

HW: I think probably that Twelfth Night is one of Shakespeare's great comedies, and it's his last true comedy in a way. I think it is perennially a favorite of audiences, and I think people like to be in it. There are some wonderful roles, some great comic roles, and a couple wonderful roles for women, particularly Viola and Olivia. Viola is one of the great Shakespearean roles for women. And Olivia is not too bad either. There is Toby, and Malvolio, and Andrew, there is quite a good range there. I think that had a big part to play in the number of actors at the audition. I think we saw 109 people, who came to audition.

TR : What is it about Twelfth Night that makes it such an enduring play that we are still doing it 400 years later?

HW: Well, Twelfth Night works on many different levels. It works on a purely ‘love story' level; people falling in love and trying to fall in love, and all the complications that result from falling in love. The whole story of Viola, for instance, who recently lost her brother and feels that she has to go in disguise so she can be protected in the world, dresses up as a boy. There's a very human story in that. And then this young woman, Olivia, falls in love with her… it's a very complicated plot on some level. And some of the elements in the play that are very accessable to people have to do with comedic farce and mistaken identities and things like that, although I wouldn't call Twelfth Night a farcical play at all, but there is some broad comedy in it.

At the same time, there is a thread of melancholy throughout the play. I think as Shakespeare's last comedy, he was ready to move on to other things, and you can sort of feel that in what I call its skeletal structure. The play is almost built around tragedy. As I said, Viola has been in a shipwreck and she thinks she has lost her only brother, her only family member. So the play starts for her in a very tragic vein. The young woman, Olivia, whom the Duke Orsino is in love with— though she is not in love with him—is in mourning for her brother and father who recently had died. So the play starts out with a air of tragedy about it. The wonderful character, the fool named Feste, goes through the play singing rather upbeat but melancholy songs, and a lot of his lyrics are double edged. At one point, he sings in the middle of one of his songs, “Youth's a stuff will not endure.” And perhaps that is where Shakespeare was at this point in his life. He was old enough and wise enough to understand that all things pass, the happy and the tragic, and our lives are composed of those two elements. So all in all Twelfth Night is, I think 1) a good story, and 2) it has great heart, great humor and some wonderful characters. There is a love story, there is a little adventure, there is a little swashbuckling, and things like that. So all of the elements come together in this big, wonderful mix. They have a complex flavor, I guess, if I can use the cooking metaphor a bit further.

And I think that it is a very appealing play, it is a very appealing story. It touches a lot of bases. I spoke to the cast very early on about the title “ Twelfth Night ”, Everyone is always debating, what does the title have to do with anything? The subtitle is, Or What You Will , which was more in keeping with the kind of comedy titles that they had in Elizabethan times, As You Like It , Much Ado About Nothing , things like that. But Twelfth Night , as I had said to the cast, was also the last day of the Christmas celebration. It was the last day of holiday merry making. And the thing about any last day of merry making is that the next day, you have to get up and go back to work, you have to go back to reality. And so the play is tinged with a level of reality with which the characters keep having to deal with; unrequited love, lost siblings, death, drunkenness, all kinds of things that can just inhibit our lives and keep us from finding our true path, find their own particular love, and find their way through the thorny forest of reality.

TR: Is [ Twelfth Night ] something that you have worked on before?

HW: I have. I played Malvolio, I played Orsino, and I have played Andrew, but I have not directed it before, which is always another completely different perspective on the play. But I knew the play very well, and I knew its structure very well, and I know the joy that is buried in the play. But as I said, it is buried in a certain melancholy and that affects design, casting, and all those things that go into making the play speak to an audience. At the heart of Twelfth Night is a knowing smile. Time to grow up.



Join our E-mail List

 


Productions

Ruth N. Halls Theatre
grey rectangle for decoration Seussical the Musical
grey rectangle for decoration Measure for Measure
grey rectangle for decoration The Seagull
grey rectangle for decoration A Funny Thing... Forum


Wells-Metz Theatre
grey rectangle for decoration The Real Thing
grey rectangle for decoration Jimmy Cory
grey rectangle for decoration Metamorphoses
grey rectangle for decoration An American Ma(u)l


Brown County Playhouse
grey rectangle for decoration Pump Boys and Dinettes
grey rectangle for decoration Lend Me A Tenor
grey rectangle for decoration The Glass Menagerie
grey rectangle for decoration Plaza Suite


Production History »

College of Arts and Sciences Department of Theatre & Drama, 275 North Jordan, Bloomington, IN 47405-1101. CONTACT INFO
Last updated: 19 February, 2007 |Comments: theatre@indiana.edu
Block IU Copyright © 2007 The Trustees of Indiana University | Copyright Complaints