A series of lively and informative panel conversations
In the Spring of 2024, SF Shakes Artistic Director Carla Pantoja and Board Member Dan Rabinowitz began hosting an online series of panel discussions with Shakespeare scholars, directors, performers, and designers..
Check out each of these fascinating discussions.
Join us on December 16, 2024 for this informative and and insightful discussion featuring 2025 Directors Ely Sonny Orquiza and Katja Rivera in conversation with Artistic Director Carla Pantoja and SF Shakes Board member Dan Rabinowitz. They’ll offer a first glimpse of what they’re looking forward to for Festival programs in 2025!
Sign up and pose any topics you’d like to see covered or questions that you may have about the coming season!.
The September 9, 2024 panel conversation featured Stanford’s Dr. Roland Greene in conversation about The Tempest with SF Shakes Board Member Dan Rabinowitz and Artistic Director Carla Pantoja.
Dr. Greene’s research and teaching are concerned with the early modern literatures of England, Latin Europe, and the transatlantic world, and with poetry and poetics from the Renaissance to the present.
See this informative conversation about the rich themes and motifs found in The Tempest.
The August 19, 2024 panel conversation featured cast and company members from this summer’s Free Shakespeare in the Park production of The Tempest in conversation with SF Shakes Board Member Dan Rabinowitz and Artistic Director Carla Pantoja.
Behind-the-scenes perspectives were presented by actors David Everett Moore and Nic Moore and Music Director/Composer Jen Coogan and Costume Designer Bethany Deal.
The July 8, 2024 conversation featured Dr. Farah Karim-Cooper, the incoming Director of The Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington DC.
Board Member Dan Rabinowitz hosted this third discussion, in which he and SF Shakes Artistic Director Carla Pantoja engaged in conversation about The Tempest with Dr. Farah Karim-Cooper. The discussion explored and examined her deeply thoughtful analysis of race, gender and otherness in The Tempest, along with a radical reappraisal of society in Elizabethan London, the backdrop from which Shakespeare’s plays emerged and against which they were presented.
The June 17, 2024 conversation featured 2024 Free Shakes in the Park Director Rotimi Agbabiaka in conversation with SF Shakes Artistic Director Carla Pantoja and was hosted by SF Shakes Board Member Dan Rabinowitz.
Dan and Carla engaged in lively and insightful discussion with Rotimi, who shared his directorial perspectives on this summer’s Free Shakespeare in the Park production of The Tempest and his intent to highlight the themes of forgiveness and recovering from loss.
We’re delighted to share a recording of this fascinating panel conversation (that took place on March 25, 2024), featuring Dr. Will Tosh, Head of Research at Shakespeare’s Globe, London in conversation with SF Shakes Artistic Director Carla Pantoja and hosted by SF Shakes Board Member Dan Rabinowitz.
Dan, Carla, and Will touched on a wide variety of the remarkable features and the artistic and historical context of this wonderful comedy. They see it as a remarkable social commentary that is just as relevant today as it was in 1599, as Shakespeare’s great implicit feminist statement, and as a play that touches on and implicates gender issues more broadly in ways that resonate with our audiences.
Catered to enhance your curriculum and aligned with the Common Core in subjects such as English, History and Theater Arts, an interactive course that bring Shakespeare to life for students of all backgrounds and levels of interest. This in-depth residency helps students gain skill and enthusiasm, and can be carefully crafted to the needs of your classroom.
These on-demand, performance-based video lessons illuminate Shakespeare’s work in exciting ways that encourage students to think critically and come to their own conclusions. Each episode offers fresh, often unexpected ‘takes’ on famous scenes that interrogate complex, and sometimes controversial topics in Shakespeare’s canon.
Amador Valley High School, Pleasanton
Aptos Middle School, San Francisco
College of Adaptive Arts, Saratoga
Everett Middle School, San Francisco
Francisco Middle School, San Francisco
Lick-Wilmerding High School,
San Francisco
Lynbrook High School, San Jose
Marina Middle School, San Francisco
Odyssey School, San Mateo
Star Academy, San Rafael
Westmoor High School, Daly City
Bay School, San Francisco
Cadwallader Elementary School, San Jose
Civicorps School, Oakland
Creative Arts Charter School, San Francisco
Father Sauer Academy at St. Ignatius Prep, San Francisco
Jane Lathrop Stanford Middle School, Palo Alto
Paul Revere Elementary School, San Francisco
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