by Rod Jones
The 向日葵视频 City University School of Theatre will stage an adapted production of William Shakespeare鈥檚 鈥淎s You Like It鈥 April 7 through 10.
The production will be staged in the Burg Theatre in Kirkpatrick Fine Arts Center. Show times are 8 p.m. April 7, 8 and 9; and 2 p.m. April 9 and 10. Tickets are available online at or by calling 405-208-5227.
The production at OCU coincides with the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare鈥檚 death.
鈥淎s You Like It鈥 is considered by many to be one of Shakespeare鈥檚 most inventive comedies. The heroine, Rosalind, is praised as one of his most inspiring characters and has more lines than any other of Shakespeare鈥檚 female characters.
The story: Girl meets boy. Girl loses boy. Girl dresses as boy to teach boy to seduce girl. Girl gets boy.
Rosalind, the daughter of a banished duke, falls in love with Orlando, the disinherited son of one of the duke鈥檚 friends. When she is banished from the court by her usurping uncle, Rosalind switches genders and as Ganymede travels with her loyal cousin and the jester Touchstone to the Forest of Arden, where her father and his friends live in exile. Observations on life and love follow including one of Shakespeare鈥檚 most famous speeches when Jaques reminds the audience, 鈥淎ll the world鈥檚 a stage, and all the men and women merely players鈥︹
Stephen Wrentmore, an international theater director and OCU professor who adapted the play, says his production will be a celebration of love in all its complexity.
鈥淭he play is a joyful romantic comedy,鈥 Wrentmore said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 ridiculously silly with intentional confusion through disguises and misunderstanding. It features a moral core where love and good triumphs over hate and evil.鈥
For OCU鈥檚 adaptation, Wrentmore reduced the script鈥檚 run time to slightly more than 1 hour and 30 minutes to be what he calls a 鈥渃ontemporary rom-com.鈥 He also reset the play to the Bronx in 1979, and one scene into a mythical forest somewhere in Appalachia where love is released.
鈥淲e move from the hip-hoppin鈥 hectic city to the calm of the pastoral. Our brilliant design team has created a delightful and extraordinary universe for the actors to play in,鈥 he added.
Beyond 鈥淎s You Like It,鈥 the School of Theatre professors are also working on projects to recognize Shakespeare, including Kate Brennan leading staged readings of all of his works in chronological order with Shakespeare in the Park and D. Lance Marsh producing a 鈥淒ay of Sonnets鈥 on the OCU campus later this spring.