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Edited and Published by Robert W. McDowell
August 7, 2025 Issue |
A FREE Weekly E-mail Newsletter Covering Theater, Dance, Music, and Film in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill/Carrboro Area of North Carolina Since April 2001. |
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PART 3A: TRIANGLE THEATER REVIEW BY MELISSA ROONEY |
Scrap Paper Shakespeare's Love's Labor's
Lost Is a Highly Entertaining Night OutThere is much to say about Scrap Paper Shakespeare's production of Love's Labor's Lost at Durham's Shadowbox Studio. First is that Scrap Paper Shakespeare, a nonprofit (501c3) local theater, founded less than three years ago, is moving right along.
Established in 2022, their seasons include the works of William Shakespeare', lesser-performed classical plays, and original works inspired by classic stories, in the belief that classical theater can and should be accessible "whether you're a Shakespeare pro or you slept through high school English class." Their productions are often staged in small venues, where audiences sit just a few feet from the action, making them uniquely suited to introducing teenagers and newcomers to the real mechanics of live theater.
Love's Labor's Lost is one of Shakespeare's earliest comedies, written in the mid-1590s. The plot follows King Ferdinand of Navarre (Collins Wilson) and his three lords -- Dumaine (Caleb van Doornewaard), Longaville (Cole Goodnight), and Berowne (Ben Apple) -- who take an oath to avoid women and devote themselves to study and fasting for three years. Their vows are immediately tested by the arrival of the Princess of France (Maya Noor) and her attendants -- Rosaline (Jacqueline Nunweiler), Katherine (Zoe Matley), and Maria (Cassidy Petrykowski). The men, undone by desire, quickly find themselves rationalizing their way out of their oath. The ending is untraditional for a comedy and seems to lay the road for a sequel. Interestingly, there is evidence that a lost play, entitled Love's Labour's Won, may have existed with this in mind.
Scrap Paper Shakespeare artistic director Emma Szuba reimagines Navarre's court as a modern-day college campus. The setting is simple -- just a couch, a chair, and a whiteboard, scribbled with equations and notes related to the men's oath. By stripping down the set, Szuba lets Shakespeare's language do the heavy lifting, while contemporary details infuse the production with immediacy and humor, seamlessly merging Elizabethan wit with 21st-century cyberculture.
The cast's work is uneven, but often delightful. The standout is Ben Apple as Berowne, who delivers Shakespeare's dense verse with the clarity, rhythm, and naturalism of a seasoned professional. Rather than coming off as recitations, his speeches sound like thoughts forming in real time, a rare and impressive feat in Shakespeare performance. Similarly, Maya Noor's Princess and Jacqueline Nunweiler's Rosaline bring poise and precision to their roles, handling the language with confidence and intelligence.
Caleb van Doornewaard is adorable as Dumaine. His boyish energy and timing evoke Gaten Matarazzo's lovable "Dustin" from Stranger Things. Van Doornewaard also doubles as Nathaniel, where his quirky earnestness adds comic flair. In one of the evening's highlights, he strums a guitar and sings his Shakespearean lines to the tune of Oasis' 1995 hit "Wonderwall" -- a cheeky touch that captures the production's balance of reverence and playfulness.
Another memorable turn comes from Mason Cordell, who doubles as Boyet and Costard. As Boyet, the Princess' flamboyant courtier, Cordell channels the energy of a high-profile PR manager, attending to the ladies like a social-media handler for Internet influencers.
Not all the casting choices work as smoothly. Liz Howard as Don Adriano de Armado and Zoe Wright as Moth make for an odd pairing. Shakespeare's Armado is a pompous, self-styled, alpha-male wannabe; yet Howard's casting muddles that dynamic in this staging, leaving the characterization somewhat confusing. Zoe Matley, in dual roles as Dull and Katherine, leans heavily into exaggerated physical comedy -- sometimes to good effect, though occasionally overwhelming for the Shadowbox Studio's intimate space.
Despite these inconsistencies, the production succeeds in marrying 17th-century language with a contemporary sensibility. Dumaine's T-shirt emblazoned with "I Got That Dog in Me," Armado's "Education before Fornication" shirt, the podcast hosted by Holofernes (Cole Goodnight) and Nathaniel (van Doornewaard), the Princess reading a copy of Hamlet's Blackberry, playing "Everybody Talks" by the Neon Trees during intermission -- the audience chuckled knowingly at all the Easter eggs woven throughout.
Technically, the production is modest but effective. Lighting and sound were straightforward, never distracting. The minimalism, rather than feeling underdeveloped, reinforced the company's scrappy ethos: that Shakespeare's plays don't need elaborate sets or budgets to come alive.
By rooting Shakespeare's comedy in a modern collegiate environment, Scrap Paper Shakespeare highlights the universality of themes, such as ambition, love, deception, and adherence to the notion that "society is the happiness of life." For high school students, aspiring actors, or anyone looking for an engaging entry point into classical theater, this company offers an ideal introduction -- not to mention a highly entertaining night out.
William Shakespeare's LOVE'S LABOR'S LOST (In Person at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16 and 17), directed by Emma Szuba and starring Maya Noor as Princess of France, Jacqueline Nunweiler as Rosaline, Zoe Matley as Katherine/Dull, Cassidy Petrykowski as Maria/Jaquenetta, Collins Wilson as King Ferdinand of Navarre, Ben Apple as Berowne, Caleb van Doornewaard as Dumaine/Nathaniel, Cole Goodnight as Longaville/Holofernes, Liz Howard as Don Adriano de Armado, Zoe Wright as Moth, and Mason Cordell as Boyet/Costard (Scrap Paper Shakespeare at the Shadowbox Studio in Durham.) PRESENTER: https://scrappapershakespeare.org/, https://linktr.ee/scrappapershakespeare https://www.facebook.com/ScrapPaperShakespeare, and https://www.instagram.com/scrappapershakespeare. 2025 SEASON: https://scrappapershakespeare.org/shows. VENUE: https://shadowboxstudio.org/, https://www.facebook.com/shadowboxdurham/, https://instagram.com/Shadowbox_Studio, https://x.com/ShadowboxDurham, and https://www.youtube.com/@shadowboxstudio1190. DIRECTIONS/MAP: https://www.google.com/maps/. LOVE'S LABOR'S LOST (Five-Act Comedy, written in the mid-1590s): https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/loves-labors-lost/, https://www.britannica.com/topic/Loves-Labours-Lost-by-Shakespeare, and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love%27s_Labour%27s_Lost. THE SCRIPT: https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/loves-labors-lost/read/. STUDY GUIDE (Utah Shakespeare Festival): https://www.bard.org/study-guides/loves-labours-lost-study-guide/. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (Elizabethan and Jacobean English playwright and poet, 1564-1616): https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/25200, https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-life/, https://www.shakespeare.org.uk/explore-shakespeare/shakespedia/william-shakespeare/william-shakespeare-biography/, https://www.biography.com/authors-writers/william-shakespeare, https://www.britannica.com/biography/William-Shakespeare, and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare. RUNNING TIME: This show will run two hours, including intermission. WARNING: SPS cautions, "This show is recommended for ages 11+ due to some suggestive humor." TICKETS: $25 ($20 students, seniors, and artists), plus taxes and fees. Click here to buy tickets. INFORMATION: 919-213-0269 or contact@scrappapershakespeare.org. PLEASE DONATE TO: Scrap Paper Shakespeare. Kurt Benrud's Triangle Review Review Permalink.
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EDITOR'S NOTE: A Durham, NC resident for 20 years, Melissa Rooney is a scientific editor, freelance writer, and author of several science-based children's picture books. She has published children's stories and verse in Highlights Children's Magazine and Bay Leaves. Rooney earned undergraduate degrees in English and Chemistry from the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, VA; and she earned a Ph.D. in Chemistry in 1998 from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Her stories Eddie the Electron and The Fate of the Frog form the basis of two workshops offered through the Durham Arts Council's Culture and Arts in the Public Schools (CAPS) program, through which Rooney teaches elementary- and middle-school students about electrons and atoms or sustainability and rhyme, respectively. When she isn't writing, editing, reading, teaching, or experiencing theater, Rooney volunteers as a Soil and Water Conservationist for the nonprofit Urban Sustainability Solutions. Click here to read Melissa Rooney's reviews for Triangle Review. |
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