Showing posts with label Round Top. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Round Top. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Upcoming: Conference on Scandinavian Drama: 'In the Land of the Midnight Sun,' Round Top Festival Institute, November 2 - 4



Round Top Festival Institute
presentsLand of the Midnight Sun Round Top Festival Institute TX

In The Land of the Midnight Sun
a conference on Scandinavian Drama

Center for Performance and Learning, 248 Jaster Road, Round Top, TX 78954, (979) 249-3129

Theatre Forum – Schedule



Friday November 2, 2012
4:00 pm Registration Service Building
6:00 pm Dinner Menke House
7:30 pm Lecture, Felicia Londré
Northern Lights: Henrik Ibsen and
August Strindberg.
The Origins of the Modern Theatre
Edythe Bates Old chapel
9:00 pm Film: "Immortal Ibsen" Edythe Bates Old chapel
Saturday November 3, 2012
8:00 am Breakfast for overnight guests Menke House
8:30 am Morning Walk, Ann Thompson Menke House Porch
9:00 am Late Registration Service Building
9:30 am Lecture, Anne-Charlotte Harvey
The Mystery of Equivalency:
Translation and Adaptation in the
Theatre.
Edythe Bates Old chapel
10:45 am Performance:
Scenes from Strindberg
Edythe Bates Old chapel
Noon Carl Larsen Picnic Lunch Menke House Garden
1:30 pm Film: "Immortal Ibsen" Concert Hall Stage
2:30 pm Performance and Discussion
"Ibsen's Women: Nora, Helene and
Hedda"
Concert Hall Stage
3:30 pm Talk, Ann Thompson
"East of the Sun and West of the
Moon: Norse Folklore and Fantasy"
Concert Hall Stage
6:30 pm Reception and Dinner Menke House
8:30 pm Performance: Helluvaguy!!! Concert Hall Stage
9:30 pm Informal Get-together Kafe Kaffeine
Sunday November 4, 2012
8:00 am Breakfast for Overnight Guests Menke House
8:30 am Walk with Ann Thompson Menke House Porch
10:00 am Talk, Jack Elvig
"The Oxehufwud Collection at
Festival Hill"
Concert Hall
11:00 am Performance: Young Peer Gynt
A Musical Adaptation of Ibsen's
Peer Gynt.







































Click to view full text at AustinLiveTheatre.com

Monday, July 18, 2011

Arts Reporting: The Bard of Winedale by Kurt Wilson, Roundtop Register


Background on Shakespeare in Winedale with an interview of program director Dr. James Loehlin and program coordinator Liz Fisher, republished by permission from

Round Top Register logo




As You Like It at Winedale: Kelsi Tyler as Rosalind, Susan Bennett as Celia

The Bard of Winedale

by Kurt Wilson

Four decades ago, two events added immeasurably to the cultural riches of Fayette County. James Dick held a classical music concert in Round Top (please see our previous issue) that was the genesis of Festival Hill, and Dr. James Ayres founded Shakespeare at Winedale. Both of these projects were encouraged and supported by Miss Ima Hogg. The similarity does not end there. Like Festival Hill, Shakespeare at Winedale has flourished and expanded its mission well beyond its beginnings. In addition to furnishing University of Texas students a chance to learn about Shakespeare through performing some of his plays before an audience, the program now runs Camp Shakespeare, a two week program wherein ten to sixteen year olds get to perform scenes from the plays for their fellows and, finally, for an audience. The emphasis for the children, as with the college-aged students, is on the learning process, not the polishing of a performance. The program, which is part of the College of Liberal Arts, also provides classroom visits and workshops for schoolchildren from kindergarten through twelfth grade. Under the direction of its founder, Shakespeare at Winedale also provides classroom teachers with professional development to enhance their language arts instruction. There is an emphasis on reaching students from lower-income communities.

Recently the Round Top Register met with Dr. James Loehlin, Director, and Liz Fisher, Program Coordinator, for Shakespeare at Winedale to ask them some of the questions that might occur to readers of this magazine.

RTR: Dr. Loehlin, when did you take over from Dr. Ayres as the director of the summer program at Winedale?

JL: My first summer was 2001, so this past summer was my tenth anniversary. Dr. Ayres ran it for the first thirty years, and I have run it for the last ten, but he is still very involved in Camp Shakespeare. He is teaching at UT this semester. Even though he is retired from UT, he comes back from time to time to teach a course.

RTR: Liz, did you start as a student in the program?

LF: I was a student in Dr. Loehlin’s first class in 2001and then came back to do another summer in 2003. I worked with our outreach program for a bit after I graduated and then became the program’s coordinator in the fall of 2008.

RTR: You perform in a barn. Was the barn already on site when you began?

JL: The barn was already there. It was part of the original property purchased by Miss Ima Hogg, renovated, and donated to the university in the 1960s. I believe the original interior structure of the barn goes back to the late Nineteenth Century. It has had significant additions and renovations since then, including many things that happened since Shakespeare at Winedale started forty years ago when Professor James Ayres began taking his students out there to perform. When he started, it was certainly a spare structure with just the hayloft, a dirt floor, and no stage. He made a number of changes to the barn over the years to make it somewhat more of a theatrical space and more along the lines of an Elizabethan theatre, but I think the original structure of the barn gives the suggestion of an Elizabethan playhouse. That was one of the reasons Doc and Miss Ima had the idea of doing Shakespeare in that space.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .