By Bill Croke on 8.5.09 @ 6:07AM
Montana Shakespeare in the Parks is the highlight of every Rocky
summer.
Montana Shakespeare in the Parks (MSIP) made its annual stop in
Salmon, Idaho, last week with an outdoor production of The
Tempest, complete with its small but ornate Elizabethan
stage set. The weather was fair: one of our golden summer
evenings with a whispering breeze through the cottonwoods and
views of distant snow-streaked granite peaks. Such a pleasant
contrast to the play's opening storminess. ("Down with the
topmast! Yare! lower, lower! Bring her to try with maincourse…A
plague upon this howling!") The Tempest was likely
Shakespeare's last play. It's a bizarre story of exile with
characters both human and fantastical interacting on an island,
and was based on a shipwreck in Bermuda that the playwright heard
about. Scholars also speculate that it's Shakespeare's great
retrospective play, in which he craftily leaves hints in the text
about his own life and work. And it contains such great lines as
"We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is
rounded with a sleep."
Now in its 37th summer touring season, MSIP continues to provide
the region with world class theater. Based in Bozeman, Montana,
it works out of Montana State University's (MSU) College of Arts
and Architecture, and may be America's most hardworking theater
troupe by virtue of the sheer geographical scope of its travels.
This year in 74 performances between June 17 and September 6, it
will log thousands of miles and play before 30,000 people in 59
different venues, mostly public parks in all the major cities and
small towns of Montana (average population, 7,000), and adjacent
corners of Wyoming and Idaho -- even one date in the tiny
farming-burg of Beach, North Dakota ("You sunburnt sicklemen, of
August weary; Come hither from the furrow and be merry"). On the
occasional rainy evening a performance might be held in a local
high school gym or other appropriate indoor venue.
Every summer tour features two plays, performed on alternate
nights with a few exceptions. This year they are the
aforementioned The Tempest and Two Gentlemen of
Verona. Last year it was Macbeth and All's Well
That Ends Well. I saw the lightly comic latter and was
disappointed to miss the majestically bloody former. Some year's
the Shakespeare play alternates with another from the classic
theater canon (Molière, Sheridan, Shaw, et al.). Over the last
few years I've seen performed in Salmon and Cody, Wyoming, A
Midsummer Night's Dream, Twelfth Night, Romeo
and Juliet, Love's Labour's Lost, The Winter's
Tale, George Bernard Shaw's Heartbreak House,
Molière's Tartuffe and last year's All's Well That
Ends Well. I don't consider myself a theater snob, but that
list is pretty good for a guy who lives 150 miles from the
nearest Interstate highway, and who hasn't walked down Broadway
in 20 years. All thanks to MSIP.
This year the MSIP troupe consists of ten young actors mostly in
their 20s (three are female), who during the rest of the year are
associated with big city repertory companies such as the Seattle
Shakespeare Company and Steppenwolf in Chicago. But for that
grueling touring schedule their summer spent on the road with
MSIP could be seen as a lark played in the spectacular milieu of
the Northern Rockies. ("With your sedged crowns and ever-harmless
looks, Leave your crisp channels and on this green land answer
your summons.") That backdrop does indeed make all the world a
stage.
As in Shakespeare's day, the actors play multiple roles with
frequent costume changes, and do the stage setup and breakdown
themselves. When the still-clapping crowd was dispersing after
The Tempest, some schmoozed with audience members while
others were already busy dismantling the stage and impromptu
dressing room partitions, and loading it into a nearby truck and
trailer.
Mark Kuntz, actor (he played Caliban) and Company Manager,
thanked the approximately 200 people who attended the play, and
then made what was obviously his nightly pitch for financial
support for MSIP. "Our revels now are ended!" he happily
exclaimed. And went on: "Damn the economy; full speed ahead!" and
"At least gas prices are lower than last summer!" He gave out
website information, and reminded us of the handy self-addressed
donation envelope found in our programs. There was also a wooden
donation box next to the stage and people sauntered by it on the
way to the parking lot. I dropped $5 into the slot.
Thank you, Montana Shakespeare in the Parks. Please come back
next summer, because when you do, "The air breathes upon us here
most sweetly."