| SPECIAL
EVENTS
FRAULEIN
ELSE 'We're Talkin' Classics' Symposium
Saturday,
May 15: Fräulein Else Symposium
On Saturday, May 15 at 5 PM please join us for a lively panel
discussion of Fräulein Else and the 'Theatre of
Hysteria,' moderated by David J. Levin, Associate Professor of
Germanic Studies, Cinema & Media Studies, Theater & Performance
Studies, University of Chicago.
This conversation
will feature Charles Newell, Artistic Director at Court Theatre,
as well as other distinguished guest panelists from the University
of Chicago. If you plan on attending, please RSVP to 773-753-4472.
Date: Saturday,
May 15, 2004
Time: 5 PM, in between performances of Fräulein Else.
Location: Court Theatre's intimate Abelson Auditorium, 5535 S.
Ellis Ave. in Chicago.
The lecture
is free and open to the public, however tickets for either the
matinee or evening performance of Fräulein Else must be purchased
at the regular price through the Court Theatre Box Office at 773-753-4472.
Please join
us for what is sure to be an engaging and insightful look into
the world of Fräulein Else!
Court
Theatre U of C Student Night
On Friday,
May 7th at 8 PM come see a performance of Fräulein Else
for just $8 (with your U of C Student ID) and
then afterward, join your classmates for an informal discussion
about the play. Food and drink will be served.
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.
Regular
Run Post-Play Discussions
David Bevington
and Danielle Allen return to Court with their popular post-play
discussion series.
May 5, 2004:
David Bevington FRAULEIN ELSE Discussion
May 6, 2004: Danielle Allen FRAULEIN ELSE Discussion
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). |

Set
model for FRAULEIN ELSE by Mike Brown. |