CMU School of Drama


Friday, November 04, 2016

Stage preview: James FitzGerald, PICT bring modern edge to 'Merchant of Venice'

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Idiomatic phrases (“demand a pound of flesh”) and famous monologues (“the quality of mercy”) aside, “The Merchant of Venice” has given the language one of its more sinister nouns: Shylock. The name has become eponymous with “ruthless moneylender or loan shark.”

That the character is Jewish is central to the plot and an insight to anti-Semitism in Shakespeare’s England. PICT Classic Theatre has taken the script intact and moved it ahead to post-World War II, a time when it took the bombing of Pearl Harbor to get America involved in the battle and genocide being waged overseas.

1 comment:

Rebecca Meckler said...

I love how the PICT is trying to make the Merchant of Venice applicable to a variety of time periods by setting it in the 1930’s. I hope that the message is clear that this play is not only applicable to 1930s but to modern times as well. Also, I would like to see how they attempt to manage the line of comedy vs drama. I feel that the message that all people feel like outsider at some point in time can get lost if their isn’t the right balance between the two. I think it’s interesting that they feel that the basis for the actors interpretation of Shylock’s based on a small interaction with his daughter. Family connections are the basis for how we interact with other in the world. Often times, a person’s reaction to something makes more sense once you know something about their family. I hope that the PICT’s production of the Merchant of Venice is a success and that they get the drama to comedy balance correct.