logo
Shakespeare is joining Waukegan Park District's Movies in the Park program

Shakespeare is joining Waukegan Park District's Movies in the Park program

Chicago Tribune13-06-2025

For more than 15 years, Waukegan residents flocked to free showings of movies in the city's parks and this year the Waukegan Park District is adding Shakespeare in the Park, offering live theater in an outdoor setting.
Angela Marcum, a cultural affairs specialist for the park district, said Movies in the Park draws hundreds of people to an evening of free movies and popcorn as well as other activities. She has seen outdoor performances of Shakespeare elsewhere and wants to introduce them to Waukegan.
'We celebrate the arts in Waukegan, and this brings a different experience to the community,' Marcum said. 'We've added another place people can see live theater for free. We're trying to make theater accessible and we're also trying to inject some joy into the community.'
Known for tragedies and comedies, Marcum selected an abridged one-hour version of William Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream.' It is one of the playwright's lighter works and suitable for family entertainment.
Movies in the Park opens with a showing of 'Moana 2' Saturday evening at Victory Park in Waukegan, with 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' premiering at 6 p.m. on July 21 at Bowen Park, giving people a variety of free entertainment.
With a cast of 16 actors, Marcum said there will be two performances of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream.' Along with the staging on June 21, there will be a 3 p.m. show on June 22 at the same location.
'It's in the formal gardens at Bowen Park,' Marcum said, 'People can bring their picnic and blankets. There are also benches in the area.
Deanna Dietz is directing 'A Midsummer Night's Dream. She has 30 years of experience acting and doing a variety of theater-related tasks. She directed Shakespeare's 'Much Ado About Nothing' at a theater in San Diego a few years ago. She believes people will relate to the show.
'People can see themselves in the characters,' Dietz said. 'People can relate to Shakespeare because his themes are timeless. This play is family-friendly. Children will enjoy it too.':
Family-friendly is also the byword for the five movies. Marcum said the pictures start at dusk at a different park throughout the summer. There are also activities for everyone there starting at 7 p.m. The Arts Park van arrives around then and people can do an art project before the show.
'We pick movies people want to see and are still popular,' Marcum said.
Each movie night has an attraction other than Arts Park. On opening night, Marcum said a dentist from Orthodontic Experts will be handing out free floss. The Waukegan Public Library's mobile van will come to some of the movie nights.
'If' is the movie on July 12 at Diversity Park. Marcum said Culver's will be offering free frozen custard as long as supplies last. 'Mufasa' is showing July 26 at Country Lane Park,
Movie night will be part of the city's annual Touch a Truck and Waukegan Night Out on Aug. 8 at the Waukegan Municipal Beach. 'The Garfield Movie' will be shown.
'Inside Out 2' will finish the season Aug. 16 at Bowen Park. The movie will be shown as part of the 25th annual Ray Bradbury's Dandelion Wine Arts & Music Festival.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Buy Disney as cruise and streaming businesses pick up steam, Jefferies says
Buy Disney as cruise and streaming businesses pick up steam, Jefferies says

CNBC

time3 hours ago

  • CNBC

Buy Disney as cruise and streaming businesses pick up steam, Jefferies says

Jefferies sees a rosy outlook ahead for Walt Disney . The bank upgraded shares of the entertainment giant to buy from hold. Analyst Ed Alter also lifted his price target to $144 per share from $100, implying nearly 18% upside from Friday's close. Alter pointed to the launch of two new cruise ships in the first quarter of next year as a catalyst. Together, these ships could drive incremental revenue up between $1 billion to $1.5 billion. The analyst also applauded Disney's direct-to-consumer business, especially the content and sports slate offered on its streaming platform, Disney+. Names such as "Moana 2" and "Lilo and Stitch" have been recent bright spots, while audiences can look forward to the upcoming releases of Avatar 3 and Zootopia 2 , alongside the launch of ESPN's new streaming service. DIS YTD mountain DIS YTD chart "DIS is leaning more and more into its key differentiations of bundling, studio releases, and sports, where our data suggests this strategy is working, with DIS+ web visits growing 40%+ y/y in each of last 3 months," he wrote. "Stronger user growth and content coupled with advertising (new AMZN partnership) should drive enhanced scale and margins." While a tough macroeconomic backdrop and competition from the opening of Universal's Epic Universe had previously been cause for concern, Alter said data on Disney's trends show that traffic remains strong. In fact, Orlando traffic may actually pick up from the launch of Epic Universe alongside Disney's two new cruise ships. "This creates a fundamentally stronger set-up for Exp; we est ~10% Op. Inc growth in FY26 and +8% in FY27 (vs. +3.6% in FY24)," he added. Shares rose more than 1% following the Jefferies upgrade. Year to date, the stock is up nearly 10%. Disney shares are well liked by analysts in general. LSEG data shows that 27 of 34 analysts covering the stock rate it a buy or strong buy.

Today in History: June 29, Apple releases the first iPhone to consumers
Today in History: June 29, Apple releases the first iPhone to consumers

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Today in History: June 29, Apple releases the first iPhone to consumers

In 1520, Montezuma II, the ninth and last emperor of the Aztecs, died in Tenochtitlan under unclear circumstances (some say he was killed by his own subjects; others, by the Spanish). In 1613, London's original Globe Theatre, where many of Shakespeare's plays were performed, was destroyed by a fire sparked by a cannon shot during a performance of 'Henry VIII.' In 1767, Britain approved the Townshend Revenue Act, which imposed import duties on glass, paint, oil, lead, paper, and tea shipped to the American colonies. (Colonists bitterly protested, prompting Parliament to repeal the duties on each of the products — except for tea.) Advertisement In 1776, the Virginia state constitution was adopted, and Patrick Henry was made the state's governor. In 1967, Jerusalem was reunified as Israel removed barricades separating the Old City from the Israeli sector. In 1970, the United States ended a two-month military offensive into Cambodia. In 1995, the US space shuttle Atlantis docked with Russia's Mir space station as they orbited the earth. In 2006, the Supreme Court ruled, 5-3, that President George W. Bush's plan to try Guantanamo Bay detainees in military tribunals violated US and international law. In 2007, the first version of the iPhone went on sale to the public; over 2.3 billion iPhones have been sold to date. In 2009, disgraced financier Bernard Madoff received a 150-year sentence for his multibillion-dollar fraud. (Madoff died in prison in April 2021.) In 2022, R. Kelly was sentenced to 30 years in prison for using his R&B superstardom to subject young fans to sexual abuse. The singer and songwriter was convicted of racketeering and sex trafficking the previous year.

Your dose of summer rejuvenation? Fairies, love juice and Shakespeare
Your dose of summer rejuvenation? Fairies, love juice and Shakespeare

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 days ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Your dose of summer rejuvenation? Fairies, love juice and Shakespeare

In Shakespeare, sleep is dangerous. Close your eyes, and you might wake up a different person. Or species. An ass might morph into an actual ass — as in a donkey. Even worse, a fairy queen might fall in hee-hawing, prancing lust for that animal thanks to a heaping dose of magic love juice. More prosaically, that tunnel vision a young person has for the object of their desire? In 'A Midsummer Night's Dream,' love's sightlines have blind turns. Marin Shakespeare Company's take on the hormone-drenched comedy, which I saw Friday, June 27, at the Forest Meadows Amphitheatre, is a pratfall feast. In Bridgette Loriaux's direction, four young Athenian lovers, the fairies that get up in their business and a troupe of rank amateur thespians preparing a skit for a wedding are always crawling through each other's legs, dragging each other around on the stage floor and munching on their own garments in attempt to rein themselves in. Demetrius, played by Ixtlan, makes a squirmy-wormy face as if they could escape the amorous clutches of Elena Wright's Helena via grimace alone. Here, lust is ugly. Spurned over and over, Helena rises like a zombie coming back to life, pledging, 'I'll follow thee,' with vocal cords scraping the bowels of the earth. When Adrian Deane's Lysandra turns overnight on Hermia (Storm White), her sometime lover, insulting her as 'You bead, you acorn,' Deane ekes out the words the way a boiling tea kettle starts to whistle. If Ray Archie's sound design lingers too long, like the looping soundtrack of a video game level you can't beat, you can seek visual respite in Bethany Deal Flores' costumes. The script says that Athenians are recognizable by their mode of dress, and she shows why: Clad all in white, with chunky heels, futuristic cuts, jaunty angles and the occasional feather, they look as if 'Star Trek' characters had been crossed with elves. The underclass acting troupe crosses 'Alice in Wonderland' with steampunk. Think goggles, aviator caps and coveralls, but with a top hat that's actually a spool of thread, a bandolier studded with more spools and an all-white bicycle decorated with lights. But in this 'Midsummer,' under every surface frolic lies a pool of sadness. You see it in the way Charisse Loriaux (sister to the director) as Athenian queen Hippolyta observes lovers denied the fulfillment she enjoys; in the way the foolish Nick Bottom (Steve Price) awakens from his time as a donkey and wonders at the fairy queen's love he enjoyed; in the way the show acknowledges — with a wordless scene of packed suitcases and a huffy exit — that not everyone gets a happy ending. The thing is, that character never awakens the way the others do, preferring to stay in his comforting darkness of hate and rage. When the four lovers finally rouse themselves from their turbulence, lighting designer Jon Tracy makes it look like dawn is peeking through a leafy canopy, enchanting the emerald forest floor of Nina Ball's set design. There's a 'fairy time' of night, in Shakespeare's world and ours. If it's when someone might rub a potion on your eyes, it's also a nightly chance for rejuvenation and renewal. 'Lord, what fools these mortals be!' Puck (Rob Seitelman) complains of the Athenians' thundercloud of passions. But the play's true fool, the one we pity the most, is the one who seals off his heart.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store