Marston’s Jack Drum’s Entertainment

Jack Drum's Poster_v8A production of Marston’s Jack Drum’s Entertainment will be coming to the Cambridge Junction on Friday 26th and Saturday 27th February. The play is almost completely unknown but almost precisely contemporary with – and clearly not entirely unlike – Shakespeare’s later romantic comedies. There are eight new songs in the production, all original compositions using Marston’s lyrics. More information below:

In Renaissance London, the cynical Ned Planet observes the changing fortunes of two aristocratic heiresses and their social network: Katherine is courted by the impoverished but loyal Pasquil, the conniving usurer Master Mammon, and the ridiculous Master Puff, while her sister, Camelia, vacillates between an army of suitors according to the self-interested advice of her serving maid, Winifred. Meanwhile, Winifred conducts her own intrigues surrounding the extravagant Frenchman John fo’ de King, who will do anything to get a ‘vench’. 

John Marston’s acerbic city comedy was last performed by the Children of Paul’s in 1600. With its obsession with lust, money and double-dealing and its dense Shakespearean allusion, Jack Drum’s Entertainment is the best Elizabethan comedy you’ve never seen. Jack Drum’s Entertainment will be performed by a new group of 11 to 19 year-olds from The Young Actors Company, one of the most highly regarded theatre companies in Cambridgeshire, especially trained by leading academics and practitioners from King’s College London and University College London. It will brought back to life in a Georgian setting, with Marston’s original lyrics set to fresh compositions, performed live by the company.

More information here.

 

Brudermord: Puppet Hamlet

Three chances to see the 18th century style puppet show of Der Bestrafte Brudermord, with an academic talk by Professor Tiffany Stern.

In 1710, a mysterious slapstick German Hamlet was found in the archives of a German monastery. The Hidden Room Theatre has worked with Oxford University’s Tiffany Stern to re-create this historic eccentric event as it may have originally been performed: a puppet show. The marionette show, suitable for scholars and children alike, employs on-stage narrators who perform all the voices, the music and all sound effects for the show. The 18th century German version includes additional comic characters and scenes but the show will be performed in English. Acting as a laboratory for Professor Stern’s research, the Hidden Room uses a new English translation by Christine Schmidle with puppets created by Mystery Bird Puppet Show and styled and costumed by Jennifer Davis to imagine the staging conditions of an early 18th century puppet play.                                                                                                                                                                         31st May, Shakespeare’s Globe, 4pm and 7pm (7pm performance introduced by Tiffany Stern)

2nd June, Magdalen College, Oxford 2-6pm (one hour talk and puppet show by Stephen Mottram; one hour talk by Tiffany Stern; Brudermord by Hidden Room): contact Laurie Maguire (laurie.maguire@ell.ox.ac.uk) or Tiffany Stern (tiffany.stern@ell.ox.ac.uk) for a free ticket.

3rd June Shakespeare Institute, Stratford Upon Avon, 3pm (one hour talk by Tiffany Stern), 5.30pm Brudermord.