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Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Punk Rock Shakespeare

Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Folger Shakespeare Library

Arts

4.8 • 879 Ratings

🗓️ 20 March 2015

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"Here will we sit and let the sounds of music / Creep in our ears" (The Merchant of Venice, 5.1.63-64) How can young people connect with Shakespeare? It's a question that confronts each generation. Members of Taffety Punk, a Washington, DC, theater company, have taken to heart the mission of bringing Shakespeare into the 21st century. Rebecca Sheir, host of our Shakespeare Unlimited series, talks with Taffety Punk founding member and Artistic Director Marcus Kyd about how he and a group of classically trained actors—who are also ex-punk rockers—are giving new meaning to the term "band of players." From Bootleg performances of Shakespeare's plays—rehearsed and staged in a day—to Riot Grrrls all-female Shakespeare, recordings of punk versions of Shakespeare's Sonnet 71 and Mercutio's "Queen Mab" speech from ROMEO AND JULIET, and the Generator series of experimental works, Taffety Punk is defining Shakespeare for a new generation of theatergoers and theater makers. Marcus Kyd is a founding member and artistic director of Taffety Punk Theatre Company. Taffety Punk Theatre Company's mission is to establish a dynamic ensemble of actors, dancers, and musicians who ignite a public passion for theater by making the classical and the contemporary exciting, meaningful, and affordable. Taffety Punk received the John Aniello Award for Outstanding Emerging Theatre Company at the 2008 Helen Hayes Awards. ---------------- From the Shakespeare Unlimited podcast series. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. Produced for the Folger Shakespeare Library by Richard Paul; Garland Scott, associate producer.

Transcript

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0:00.0

From the Folger Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited.

0:07.5

I'm Michael Whitmore, the Folgers director.

0:10.6

How can young people connect with Shakespeare?

0:13.0

It's a question that seems to confront each generation.

0:16.5

Here's one idea.

0:19.6

You're on the ground for me. Here's one idea.

0:33.3

Under the distortion, that's Shakespeare's Sonnet 72.

0:41.6

It's performed by members of a Washington, D.C. performance troop that has taken to heart the mission of bringing Shakespeare into the 21st century.

0:43.8

The troop is called Taffity Punk.

0:46.8

And it's their story we're going to hear in this podcast.

0:50.9

We'll call it, let the sounds of music creep in our ears.

0:56.2

Marcus Kidd is one of Taffity Punk's founders, and he's the troupe's artistic director.

0:58.5

He's interviewed by Rebecca Shear.

1:08.2

So, Marcus, when we think of a band of players, there's kind of this old-time traveling theater troupe, but you've kind of taken that term, you know, band of players

1:11.5

quite literally. Can you talk about how taffety punk started because the word band is clearly

1:17.7

quite important to the story. Well, some of us when we started had been in bands. Some of us

1:23.4

actually when we started were still in bands. And we all realized that we shared that.

1:29.5

Like we were classically trained actors who had befriended each other,

1:32.9

and then we realized that we shared this punk rock thing.

1:35.6

And we always look at both of those worlds almost as equals.

1:39.9

We know that Shakespeare's company had a regular company of players,

1:43.0

and that's gone in America.

...

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