Twelfth Night

Chicago Shakespeare Theater will conclude its 2008/09 subscription season with Twelfth Night, William Shakespeare's rollicking comedy of disorder and revelry staged by London's Bush Theatre Artistic Director Josie Rourke. CST's Courtyard Theater stage will be flooded with water to create the coast of the imaginary world in which the play is set.

Josie Rourke, a celebrated director of both classical and contemporary theater, makes her Chicago debut directing Twelfth Night. Ms. Rourke was recently appointed Artistic Director of London's Bush Theatre, a 36-year-old company that focuses on the development and presentation of new plays. The theatre has supported a number of successful new playwrights including David Eldridge, Neil LaBute, Conor McPherson and Stephen Poliakoff and, under Rourke's leadership, was able to reverse major funding cuts threatened by Arts Council England last year, making her one of England's foremost voices for not-for-profit theaters. Rourke has held positions at the Donmar Warehouse, Sheffield Theatres and the Royal Court and has directed a number of critically acclaimed productions, including David Mamet's The Cryptogram starring Kim Cattrall and Douglas Henshall at the Donmar Warehouse and Believe What You Will and King John for the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Collaborating with Rourke, and in the European tradition of designing both the Elizabethan costumes and scenic design for the production, is renowned designer Lucy Osborne who will fill CST's thrust stage with nearly 7,000 gallons of water to create the coast of the dreamlike land of Illyria. "We wanted to set the play on a pier-on this pier here in Chicago," says Osborne. "There's something about a pier that suggests a voyage into the unknown. People like venturing out, we like to go out into open spaces, and pleasure piers are just fundamentally playful and sort of decadent." Ms. Osborne's extensive theater credits include designs for the Bush Theatre, Nottingham Playhouse, Northampton Theatre Royal, Edinburgh Festival and Cambridge Arts Theatre.

Often regarded as Shakespeare's "most perfect comedy," Twelfth Night is set in the make-believe country of Illyria where "nothing that is so, is so." Sebastian and Viola-twins separated in a shipwreck-wash ashore on the strange land, each thinking the other dead. The tale of mistaken identities and mismatched loves is set into motion when Viola disguises herself as a man to serve as a page in the court of the love-sick Duke Orsino. She becomes enamored with the Duke who pines for the Countess Olivia, who in turn wants nothing to do with him and instead falls in love with the Duke's new page. As the confusion persists, the surly Sir Toby Belch and his fellow pranksters humiliate the brooding steward, Malvolio, for trying to curb their merriment. Throughout all the chaos, Sebastian and Viola find each other and all, with the exception of an irate Malvolio, are reconciled.

Twelfth Night runs March 29 through June 7, 2009 in the Courtyard Theater. Tickets are $44–$70 and may be purchased by calling Chicago Shakespeare Theater's Box Office at 312-595-5600 or by visiting the Theater's website at www.chicagoshakes.com.