Sunday, July 17, 2011

Our 2011 Spoleto jaunt

Since our son started working as a crew member at the Charleston SC Spoleto Festival while attending UNCSA, we have been heading to Charleston each late May or early June to take in some of the wonderful range of offerings at this event. We usually try to cram in as much as possible, which with Spoleto and the parallel Piccolo Spoleto schedules usually can mean A LOT. This year, I think, we set a new record with nine events in four days.

The first year we went, Andy was on a mobile crew of troubleshooters and we never saw him at all. This year, he was overseeing the lighting requirements of all Spoleto venues, and we were able to see him three times. Nice!

As for our shows, in addition to a jazz concert done outdoors at College of Charleston's Cistern and a dance concert done to the music of Duke Ellington, we saw a wide range of plays that were at a high level of enjoyment and quality (some past years, to be fair, there has been some variation in quality. Not so in 2011!)

First and among the foremost was the Druid Theatre Company (Ireland)'s production of "The Cripple of Inishmaan," presented in the historic Dock Street Theater. A strong, touching, flawless production, with nary a faulty performance from the cast.

We then saw a variety of shows from the very touching "The Guys" in a tiny but effective space used by Threshold Repertory Theatre; the amusing and well-acted "The Understudy" and Sartre's "No Exit" by groups grown out of or directly affiliated with College of Charleston's theater program; the one-man show "The Banana Monologues"; and a well-done production of Tracy Letts' most recent play, "Superior Donuts," by PURE Theatre.

Finally and fittingly, we saw the awe-inspiring "The Red Shoes," the third production we've caught at Spoleto by the rule-bending Kneehigh Theatre company from Cornwall, England. Their main focus is interpreting classic folk tales such as the first one we saw, "Tristan and Iseult," perhaps still my favorite, though this entry was strong competition. We also liked "Don John," two years ago, but not quite as much. But still, in nearly all moments, sit-on-the-edge-of-your-seat and wait-to-see-what-they'll-do-next theater. Awesome.

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