{"id":4896,"date":"2019-05-08T09:47:22","date_gmt":"2019-05-08T13:47:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ramapo.edu\/sshgs\/?page_id=4896"},"modified":"2019-09-17T16:00:03","modified_gmt":"2019-09-17T20:00:03","slug":"shakespeare-at-ramapo","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.ramapo.edu\/hgs\/shakespeare-at-ramapo\/","title":{"rendered":"Shakespeare At Ramapo"},"content":{"rendered":"
William Shakespeare was an English playwright, poet and actor who was born in Stratford-on-Avon on April 23, 1564; he died on his birthdate in 1616. Between those years he wrote the most astounding plays and sonnets of the English language. His plays, continually produced all over the world for over 400 years, include comedies, tragedies and histories. Some of his most famous tragedies are Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth<\/i>, while his better known comedies are A Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream, Love\u2019s Labour\u2019s Lost, and As You Like It<\/i>. Shakespeare lived in London for periods of his life, and was partners in both The King\u2019s Men, an acting company, and the Globe Theater, built on the south banks of the Thames. While the original Globe burned down, a recreation of it was completed in 1997 and regularly presents his works today.<\/p>\n The 2019 Shakespeare at Ramapo was held on April 25. Students had two events to choose from; both involved Professor Terra Vandergaw\u2019s Acting students. First, her \u00a0\u201cVoice and Movement\u201d class was opened up to all. After many warming up exercises, Shakespeare sonnets were performed in front of an encouraging audience.<\/p>\n Following up the open classroom, about 40 students joined Professor Vandergaw\u2019s \u201cIntroductory Acting\u201d students in the York Room to perform any Shakespearean soliloquies, scenes or sonnets that they wished. First, the Acting students performed the Prologue from Henry V. Then a few scenes from A Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream were performed by students who had recently had roles in the college production of same.Soon student spectators turned into actors, as they read from their phone Shakespearean scenes that were particularly meaningful to them. Pizza and chocolate contributed to a relaxed, celebratory Shakespeare at Ramapo for 2019.<\/p>\n <\/span> The 2018 Shakespeare at Ramapo events were held on April 23, the author\u2019s birth and death date. The day\u2019s festivities began with a \u201cPerforming Shakespeare\u201d workshop led by Professor Terra Vandergaw. The workshop was followed by an open \u201cVoices and Movement\u201d class where Professor Vandergaw\u2019s students shared their Shakespearean performance projects with the audience.<\/p>\n The subject switched to Shakespearean gardens when English professor Todd Barnes gave a lecture titled \u201cCultivating Shakespeare\u2019s Gardens.\u201d Barnes principally focused on how in the late nineteenth-century a craze arose for books with illustrations of the flowers referenced in Shakespeare\u2019s plays. Those paper gardens became actual gardens in the early twentieth century, particularly in America.<\/p>\n At night, students joined with the Rockland Shakespeare Company to read or perform various texts of Shakespeare, again under Professor Vandergaw\u2019s direction.<\/p>\n Visual and performing artist Melissa Bartley Chernowetz, Ramapo Alumna ’02, gave an artist’s talk on Friday, April 21st. This talk was followed by three, free puppetry workshops, which were offered twice per day on the 22nd and 23rd. Then, on Tuesday, April 25th, from 7-7:30pm in the Grove, students presented their puppets in a pageant. The pageant was followed by “Shakespeare Live,” from 7:30-10:30, an open mic\/performance party in BC 216. Students presented scenes, sonnets, soliloquies, music, and dancing. On Thursday, April 27th, Professor Todd Barnes opened up his “Shakespeare’s Plays” course to the public. Held in the Laurel Hall Screening Room, his lecture, “Richard II: Staging History, Staging Power,” focused on the controversial turning point in that play, Act 4, Scene 1, wherein Richard abdicates his throne to Henry Bolingbroke, who then becomes Henry IV. Throughout the lecture, Prof. Barnes also shared clips from the BBC’s recent series, The Hollow Crown.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n 2016 was the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. Thus, the British Studies Center sponsored numerous events relating to this important anniversary.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Shakespeare at Ramapo was begun in 2013 to celebrate the work of William Shakespeare and enrich the intellectual life of students and the college community. Various events are held on a date close to his April 23 birth\/death date. Shakespeare Day is a collaboration between faculty from the School of Humanities and Global Studies (Patricia Ard, Todd Barnes, Yvette Kisor) and the School of Contemporary Arts (Terra Vandergaw). Please contact any of these faculty with questions or ideas concerning this day of celebration of Shakespeare and his many works.<\/p>\nArchived Events<\/h3>\n
<\/a>Shakespeare At Ramapo 2019<\/h3>\n
\n<\/div><\/div><\/p>\n
<\/a>Shakespeare At Ramapo 2018<\/h3>\n
<\/div>\n<\/div><\/div>\n
<\/a>Shakespeare\u00a0At Ramapo 2017<\/h3>\n
<\/a><\/h3>\nShakespeare At Ramapo 2016 –\u00a0400th Anniversary<\/h3>\n
\n