Shakespeare in the Park: To Be or Not To Be, That is the Question (For Next Year)
Hold Your Horses, Drama Queens and Kings!
If you're itching to quote some Shakespeare, don't break out your sonnets just yet. Drumroll please... Shakespeare in the Park is taking a breather in 2024. That’s right, no free outdoor drama under the twinkling lights of Central Park this year. The Delacorte Theater is undergoing a major makeover, and it's basically getting a full spa day. Think of it as a much-needed intermission before the next act.
Fear Not, Thou Shakespeare Enthusiast!
While the main stage is dark, the Public Theater is still bringing the Bard to the masses. There are free outdoor screenings of Much Ado About Nothing and a mobile unit production of The Comedy of Errors roaming the city. So, you can still get your Shakespeare fix without breaking a sweat (or your wallet).
But I hear you asking, “What about my picnic blanket and overpriced rosé?” Fear not, dear friend. There's always next year. The Delacorte is set to reopen in the summer of 2025, and we can only imagine the epic comeback they're planning. Until then, let's focus on perfecting our Elizabethan insults and practicing our balcony scenes.
How to Survive the Shakespeare Drought
Don't despair! Here are a few tips to tide you over until the Delacorte reopens:
- How to find alternative Shakespeare performances: Check out local theaters, community centers, or even online platforms for virtual productions.
- How to host your own Shakespearean picnic: Gather your friends, pack some finger sandwiches and a bottle of wine, and recite your favorite soliloquies.
- How to learn some Shakespearean insults: Impress your friends with witty and colorful insults straight from the Bard's plays.
- How to read Shakespeare: Don't be intimidated! There are many resources available to help you understand the language and plot.
- How to get excited for 2025: Start planning your Shakespeare in the Park outfit now!
So, while we patiently await the return of Shakespeare in the Park, let's keep the spirit of the Bard alive in our own unique ways. After all, as Hamlet famously said, "The play's the thing." And even though the main stage is dark, the show must go on!