September 18 – November 28, 2014

Buffeted from shore to shore by the winds of destiny, Pericles must navigate the whole of the Mediterranean on his search for peace, love, and family. His journey becomes an astonishing adventure filled with assassins, shipwrecks, pirates, brothels, goddesses, and magicians. He must weather loss and heartbreak before the storm calms with miraculous reunion and wondrous rebirth.

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Stuff that Happens
Stuff that happens during the play
  • John Gower, an English poet from the time of Chaucer, introduces the play in the role of a Chorus.
  • Pericles, Prince of Tyre, arrives in Antioch to pursue the princess in marriage. He solves the riddle that King Antiochus has set for the suitors; but, the King, wanting to keep the princess, lies and says Pericles did not solve it correctly.
  • Fearing for his life, and in disgust at discovering the incest between Antiochus and his daughter, Pericles flees. Antiochus orders Thaliard to chase Pericles and kill him.
  • Back home in Tyre, Pericles laments to his friend Helicanus that Antiochus will go to any length to kill him, even war.
  • Helicanus suggests that Pericles travel for a while, to let Antiochus’s anger cool. Pericles agrees and heads to Tarsus, leaving Helicanus to rule in his absence.
  • In Tarsus, the governor, Cleon, laments to his wife Dionyza how their city is in ruin due to famine, but Pericles arrives, bringing food to help the town, in return for letting him stay there.
  • Pericles receives a letter from Helicanus telling him that Thaliard is searching him out to kill him. Pericles flees by the sea and gets caught up in a storm, which wrecks the ships and kills all but Pericles.
  • Pericles washes up on the shore of Pentapolis in Greece and is found by three fishermen, whom he convinces to help him.
  • They tell him that their king, Simonides, will hold a jousting tournament the next day and that the winner will marry the princess Thaisa; they also find Pericles’s armor in their nets; he plans to use it to enter the contest.
  • At the joust, some ridicule his rusty armor, but Pericles wins; at the celebration dinner, Thaisa and Pericles fall in love.
  • Back in Tyre, Helicanus agrees to be King only if Pericles cannot be found in twelve months.
  • Pericles and Thaisa wed, and Thaisa soon becomes pregnant. They set sail to return to Tyre.
  • During a storm at sea, the nurse Lychordia reports that Thaisa has died giving birth to a daughter. She is buried at sea in a chest, and Pericles includes a note with her body asking that she be properly buried if found.
  • Pericles stops in Tarsus for nearly a year with his daughter, Marina, then voyages back to Tyre, leaving her in the care of Cleon and Dionyza.
  • In Ephesus, the chest holding the apparently dead Thaisa washes ashore. The physician Cerimon uses an Egyptian ritual to revive her.
  • Convents, growing up, murderous plots, pirates, brothels, supposed death, and happy reunions ensue.
Notes from the Director
Go big, or go home

Pericles, Prince of Tyre is unlike any other Shakespeare play. It was not included in the First Folio – the first collection of Shakespeare’s plays printed in 1623. Some scholars speculate that it was left out because it may have been co-written with George Wilkins. But this theory is problematic because Shakespeare’s fellow actors who assembled the First Folio (John Heminges and Henry Condell) chose to include: Macbeth, Measure for Measure, and Timon of Athens – all with contributions by Thomas Middleton; Henry VIII – well-known to be a collaboration with John Fletcher; plus the possibly collaborative Titus Andronicus – George Peele; Henry VI, Part 1 – a team of co-writers. Pericles was, however, included in the Third Folio printed in 1633. The Two Noble Kinsmen – co-written with John Fletcher – is the only other surviving play that most scholars think Shakespeare had a strong hand in writing that was not included in the First Folio.

Written in 1607-8, Pericles was printed in quarto form (the Elizabethan and Jacobean paperback) six times in the first half of the seventeenth century, proving it was a popular play from its first performance up until the theatres were closed by the Puritans in 1642. Pericles is also Shakespeare’s first foray into the genre we now label “romance,” plays that meld the magical and fantastical with comedy, tragedy, fairy tales, and long-lost families being redeemed and reunited. Because the action of Pericles takes place in seven different locations over the course of many years (including two ships; in two different storms; plus pirates), modern theatre companies that want to build a different set for each location have been reluctant to stage this epic adventure. Shakespeare was writing, however, for staging conditions that did not include big sets on rotating revolves. The Globe and Blackfriars themselves were the “sets” and Shakespeare was able to take us to multiple locations by using language to ask the audience to imagine the setting. Because the ASC employs Shakespeare’s staging conditions on the road and in the Blackfriars Playhouse, traversing the Mediterranean Sea with the help of Gower (the chorus) and the rest of Shakespeare’s Theatre of the Imagination is part of the fun for ASC audiences. Not only did you help create the play with your imagination, you are on the journey yourself because the lights stay on you, the actors talk to you and include you in the world of the play, and you surround the stage so that you can see other audience members making the trip with you. This play is ideally suited for the ASC and the Blackfriars Playhouse.

Some notes I sent to the actors before rehearsals:

  • Our production will be the first time many of our audience have seen this play. So we have to make sure that clarity (of words, thoughts, sentences, and story) is at the pinnacle of our priority list.
  • In an attempt to differentiate the many locations in the play, some productions turn the characters in the various locations into cartoons. We’re not going to do that. We can use costumes, voice, posture, etc. to provide enough differences between the characters and locations without going into Toontown.
  • (This note might seem at odds with what I just said above, but it’s not.) This play is colossal. It’s epic. As trite as it sounds, we have to “go big or go home.” And/But/However, like the best big tales, it somehow manages to be simultaneously larger than life AND real. Star Wars, Moby Dick, The Lord of the Rings, Gladiator, Peter Pan, Antony and Cleopatra, Citizen Kane, Avatar, Spartacus, Game of Thrones – they all radiate with this duality. Our production of Pericles needs to do that too.
  • I can’t wait to create an unforgettable odyssey with you that will thrill and inspire our audiences.
  • We are delighted you have joined us for today’s ride that we hope will bring you joy.

Thanks for coming.

Jim Warren

Co-founder and Artistic Director