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Much Ado about Nothing
Teens in Jamaica
When Shakespeare wrote that "all the world's a stage,"
he was, of course, not referring to the Blackbird Theatre. Yet
it's an apt description of Ann Arbor's newest theater. At
the Blackbird the playhouse shares space with the playroom
of a preschool, that is. What serves by day as the gym of the
Children's Creative Center is by night the stage of the Blackbird.
The cheerful chaos and decor of the preschool, with its colorfully
painted walls and a Toys R Us inventory, is converted dramatically
with theater lighting, black curtains covering the walls and windows,
and chairs on risers for audiences.
CCC has long been staging an annual summer musical as part of
its youth drama program, but five years ago CCC owner Laurie Atwood
and Blackbird artistic director Barton Bund began offering adult
theater throughout the year. The current season includes Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof, Angels in America, Neil Simon's Lost in Yonkers,
and Wednesday through Sunday, March 26-30, an all-teen production
of Much Ado about Nothing.
Tailoring the classic to teens, Bund has reimagined the play as
a lighthearted spring-break beach comedy Messina is now
Jamaica complete with beach blankets, air mattresses, tanning
mirrors, shorts, and Hawaiian shirts. You can almost smell the
suntan lotion.
In the first scene, Don Pedro and his men "surf" ashore,
where Leonato greets them in a Jamaican accent: "Let me bid
you welcome, mon." Later scenes unfold at a tourist hotel.
When Hero and her handmaiden Ursula conspire to convince Beatrice
that Benedick loves her, the scene is staged in the "pool"
with the actresses "floating" on rafts made of wheeled
children's scooters.
And what's a beach comedy without surf music? Here a reggae
rhythm guitar riff backs "Sigh no more, ladies."
It all works, and on several levels. Shakespeare, endlessly
malleable, takes on unexpected dimensions when acted by
eleven-to-seventeen-year-olds. Watching the initial fight/flirt
between Beatrice and Benedick, you can easily picture the scene
happening in Huron or Pioneer High's cafeteria, the sparring
duo egged on by their friends. It works the other way too: you can
imagine the actors not only portraying their characters in the play
but also playacting the roles of the adults they soon will be.
And if one can desire too much, or at least more, of a good
thing, at the Blackbird the play's not the only thing. The
proceeds all go to benefit Kidz in Need, CCC's scholarship
program that helps needy children receive quality preschool and
after-school care. Now that's much ado about something.
Sandor Slomovits
Photo by J. Adrian Wylie
[Review published March 2008]
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