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Chicago Shakespeare Theater (CST) is a non-profit, professional theater company located at Navy Pier in Chicago, Illinois. Its more than six hundred annual performances performed 48 weeks of the year include its critically acclaimed Shakespeare series, its World's Stage touring productions, and youth education and family oriented programming.
English Heritage, which controlled the site, refused to give Wanamaker the precise dimensions of the original Globe. [12] [13] According to Karl Meyer of The New York Times: The Shakespeare project helped Mr. Wanamaker keep his sanity and dignity intact.
The Shakespeare Project was the first major New York residency of actors from the Royal Shakespeare Company - with Edwin Richfield, Heather Canning, Christopher Ravenscroft, Jennie Stoller and John Kane (the later two from Peter Brook's A Midsummer Night's Dream) - for a week of public workshops, panel discussions, seminars and performances at ...
She directed the Lyric Opera of Chicago's 2010 production of Giuseppe Verdi's Macbeth. [3] In 2016, Gaines adapted and directed Tug of War, a 2-part series based on Shakespeare's history plays. [4] Outside of her work with the Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Gaines is currently a member of the Shakespearean Council for the Globe Theatre in London
Theater in Chicago describes not only theater performed in Chicago, Illinois, but also to the movement in Chicago that saw a number of small, meagerly funded companies grow to institutions of national and international significance.
1812 Productions, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The 52nd Street Project, New York; 7 Stages, Atlanta, Georgia About Face Theatre, Chicago, Illinois; Academy Theatre ...
Alabama Shakespeare Project — Tuscaloosa, Alabama Appalachian Shakespeare Project — Athens, West Virginia Back Room Shakespeare Project — Chicago, Illinois
A statue of William Shakespeare, sometimes called the William Shakespeare Monument, is installed in Chicago's Lincoln Park, in the U.S. state of Illinois. The work by William Ordway Partridge was created in 1893 and installed in 1894.