| For
information on the Cyrano 'We're Talkin' Classics' Symposium
Series, click here.
Court
Theatre U of C Student Night
On Wednesday,
June 2 at 7:30 PM come see a performance of Cyrano for
just $8 (with your U of C Student ID). Afterward, join David Bevington,
Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service Professor in the Humanities,
University of Chicago, and your fellow classmates for an informal
discussion about the play! Taking place at the Museum of Contemporary
Art Theatre, 220 E. Chicago Ave.
Regular
Run Post-Play Discussions
David Bevington
and Danielle Allen return to Court with their popular post-play
discussion series.
June 2, 2004:
David Bevington Cyrano Discussion (at the MCA)
June 9, 2004: Danielle Allen Cyrano Discussion (at the
MCA)
Danielle
Allen is a scholar whose intellectual scope spans the
fields of the classics, philosophy, political theory and the arts.
A published poet, Allen is the director of the Poem Present Series,
which brings prominent contemporary poets to the University of
Chicago for readings and informal discussions. Allen received
a B.A. (1993) from Princeton University, an M.A. (1998) and Ph.D.
(2001) from Harvard University, and a M.Phil. (1994) and Ph.D.
(1996) from the University of Cambridge. She has been affiliated
with the University of Chicago since 1997. She is the author of
The World of Prometheus: The Politics of Punishing in Democratic
Athens (2000) and the forthcoming Talking to Strangers: on rhetoric,
distrust, and other democratic difficulties. She is also working
on manuscripts on Aristotle’s Rhetoric and Ralph Ellison.
Allen is a 2001 recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship.
David
Bevington is the Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service
Professor in the Humanities at the University of Chicago, where
he has taught since 1967. A Court Theatre Trustee, his studies
include From “Mankind” to Marlowe, 1962, Tudor Drama
and Politics, 1968, and Action Is Eloquence: Shakespeare’s
Language of Gesture, 1985. He is also the editor of Medieval Drama,
Houghton Mifflin, 1975; The Bantam Shakespeare, in 29 paperback
volumes, 1988; and The Complete Works of Shakespeare, 5th edition,
Longman, 2003, the Oxford 1 Henry IV (1987) and the Arden 3 Troilus
and Cressida (1998). He is the senior editor of the Revels Student
Editions, the Revels Plays, the forthcoming Cambridge edition
of the works of Ben Jonson, and the recently published Norton
Anthology of Renaissance Drama (2002). His latest book, intended
for general readers, is called simply Shakespeare (2002).
Preview
Post-Play Discussions
All of Court
Theatre’s preview performances include a post-play discussion
with the audience. A member of the Court Theatre Artistic Staff
leads a dialogue where audience members can ask questions and
share responses to the production.
|