Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' is his most magical and most perfect comedy. It is colourful, spontaneous, poetic, hilariously funny, teasingly sinister and satisfyingly cyclic. Its appeal is universal, and it encourages both cast and audience to indulge their imaginations. It has been lighting up theatres all over the world for generations. It appeals to the human love of mischief, and exists in the illusive sphere of dreams. Most of all it is wonderfully entertaining and wholeheartedly theatrical.

'A Midsummer Night's Dream' is set in two words. There is Athens - a pallid, boring place where order, hierarchy and decorum form the rigid parameters of a constrained style of living. Then there is the Wood - a magical place without boundaries, where fairies are in control, and life is turned on its head. Our production is designed to hinge on the connection between the two words. The wood is Athens turned inside out. It is the topsy-turvy, irrational side to human consciousness, the unconscious brought to life. It is a dream itself.

Our production is set in Victorian Britain. This is based on two modern-day preconceptions of what this famous age was like, which correspond neatly to Shakespeare's Grecian settings. Athens is upper-class nineteenth-century London. It is grey, angular, sensible, mannered, adult. Theseus's court is a like a Victorian drawing room, with piles of neatly arranged books, where 'children should be seen and not heard' and the judgement of the father is final. The Athenian Wood is the rest of London - the Victorian Labyrinth in Technicolor. The darker, more subversive, more alive, more dangerously spontaneous atmosphere of a Dickensian metropolis meets an exotic jungle, an endless wood full of surprises.

With a cast of eleven, and minimalist design, coupled with music and dance, Pembroke Players's production promises to be a dynamic and exiting revival of Shakespeare's classic.

Tour Dates

June
20thWorkshop at Falkner House School, London
September
4thPublic performance at Pembroke House Charity, London.
6thPerformance for the Regent Language School, Cambridge
18thWorkshop at Seikei University.
19th 
20thPerformance at Seikei University.
21st 
22ndPerformance at Himeji University.
23rdWorkshop at Himeji University.
24th 
25th 
26th 
27thPerformance and Workshop at Sendai University.
28th 
29th 
30thPerformance at Kyoritsu University Hall.
October
1stPerformance at Daito-Bunka University
2ndPerformance at Daito-Bunka University
3rdPerformance at Meiji University
4th 
10thPost-tour performance in the Pembroke New Cellars
11thPost-tour performance in the Pembroke New Cellars
12thPost-tour performance in the Pembroke New Cellars
13thPost-tour performance in the Pembroke New Cellars