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Twelfth Night

By William Shakespeare
Directed by Dawn Monique Williams
June 1 – October 13, 2023 Allen Elizabethan Theatre

Twelfth Night

By William Shakespeare
Directed by Dawn Monique Williams
June 1 - October 13, 2023
Allen Elizabethan Theatre

Shakespeare’s hilarious yet heartbreaking tale of unrequited love takes over the Allen Elizabethan stage! A ship is wrecked on the rocks: Viola is washed ashore but her twin brother Sebastian is lost. Determined to survive on her own, she steps out to explore a new land. In a production by Dawn Monique Williams (The Merry Wives of Windsor) inspired by early Blues and Jazz greats like Bessie Smith, music is the food of love and nobody is quite what they seem.

 

(Approximate running time: 3 hours, including one intermission.)


Go Deeper and Read the House Program

Tickets!
Tickets are $35 – $75.

 
Suitability Suggestions
The play contains some bawdy humor that may be physicalized. Twelfth Night, written at the peak of Shakespeare’s comedic brilliance, seamlessly balances bright and dark elements. Therefore, the poetry and themes of the play may be best enjoyed by well-prepared middle and high school students.

For additional content warnings regarding violence or graphic depictions that may be upsetting to some audience members, please see our Content Warnings page (may contain spoilers).
Accessibility

The Allen Elizabethan Theatre is outfitted with an elevator for balcony seating.

The Oregon Shakespeare Festival is committed to accessibility. We recognize the needs of persons with disabilities and strive to make our facilities and productions accessible to all. Please visit our Accessibility page for details about 2023 programs and services as they develop.

Immerse

Dawn Monique Williams
Director’s Notes

If music be the food of love, play on”—and so begins Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, a romantic comedy, darkened by the melancholy of grief, separation, longing, loss, and unrequited love. Twelfth Night sings the blues. Blues music was my true point of entry into this world of overindulgence and make-believe. It was the voices of Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughn, and Nina Simone that permeated the choices I made with Twelfth Night. Feste the Fool became the embodiment of this idea. Feste’s songs are filled with the forlorn as she questions “what is love,” reminds us that “youth’s a stuff will not endure,” and sings of being “slain by a fair cruel maid.” And yet the blues release us, too; we can give in to the ecstasy of exorcism and be made whole. It is how Viola-Cesario cracks open this world of self-deceivers; before order is restored, we must follow these characters on their journeys of misdirected yearning and be reminded that “nothing that is so, is so.”

Gender and identity are grossly malleable; I am intrigued by how the play raises these questions. With a gender-fluid protagonist whose self-effacement disrupts the status quo, how do we understand romantic love? Twelfth Night reveals how in serving our imperfect humors—“what I want” (liver), “what I need” (brain), or “what I feel” (heart)—we make the choice to mask our loneliness, or give ourselves over to it, or try like mad to strike a balance between the two. In this season of love, I hope Twelfth Night can teach us all something about reunification, expelling grief, and how the choice to love, in a world of so many misguided other choices, can shape, change, and bring a community together.

—Dawn Monique Williams

Creative Team

Cast

* Member of Actors' Equity Association (AEA)
** AEA Professional Theatre Intern

Understudies

* Member of Actors' Equity Association (AEA)
** AEA Professional Theatre Intern

Our 2023 Season