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O Romeo, Romeo, What The Heck Are You Saying?

The Oregon Shakespeare Festival's Allen Elizabethan Theatre, featuring a production of <em>A Midsummer Night's Dream.</em>
T. Charles Erickson
/
Courtesy of Oregon Shakespeare Festival
The Oregon Shakespeare Festival's Allen Elizabethan Theatre, featuring a production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.

By now, it's pretty much settled: No one debates that Shakespeare was one of the greatest writers in the English language. What is debatable, however, is just how much today's audiences actually understand what he was saying.

That's why the Oregon Shakespeare Festival has launched an unprecedented project to translate the Bard's entire canon from his original style into contemporary English. The ambitious and controversial experiment, called Play On, will commission 36 dramatists toward that end over three years — beginning with playwright Kenneth Cavander, who has drawn up a pilot version of Timon of Athens.

(Below, you can read and listen to both the original of Timon and Cavander's translation.)

The goal is to leave the settings and the structures the same, and not to touch any language that's understandable to modern ears.

"I'll just be really honest to say I can't understand all of it all the time," says Lue Douthit, Oregon Shakespeare Festival's director of literary development and dramaturgy. That's saying a lot; after all, it's Douthit's job to understand these plays.

She's working with such renowned playwrights as Luis Alfaro, Amy Freed and Jeff Whitty — and their dramaturgs — to help them unpack the meaning behind Shakespeare's word choice.

"So I don't want everything closed up nice and neat, and I don't want everything to be sort of literal or paraphrased," Douthit says. "I want a certain kind of rigor and a certain sense of language. But language has changed from 400 years ago."

Douthit is quick to point out that all Shakespeare productions are adaptations of some sort. Most cut difficult passages and scenes for length, to say nothing of changing the settings to every time period imaginable. Nonetheless, she jokes that messing with Shakespeare's language could be a career-ender.

And the project has been met with cries of blasphemy.

"Shakespeare is about the intoxicating richness of the language," says James Shapiro, a Shakespeare scholar and English professor at Columbia University. "It's like the beer I drink; I drink 8.2 percent IPA. And by changing the language in this modernizing way, it's basically shifting to Bud Light."

The festival's artistic director, Bill Rauch, agrees there's no match for the Bard's language.

"When you've got the power of a great actor and a great director the original language can burst into life with great clarity," he says. "But with that said, there are still going to be passages, images, that you need a footnote to begin to unpack."

Rauch remains committed to Shakespeare's original scripts, but he hopes this project will provide companion works that audiences can dig into. And other companies have already signed on to stage the new translations, including Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Orlando Shakespeare Theater and the University of Utah.


Compare the versions

Original passage from Timon of Athens

Slaves and fools,

Pluck the grave wrinkled senate from the bench

And minister in their steads. To general filths
Convert o'th' instant, green virginity,

Do't in your parents' eyes. Bankrupts, hold fast;
Rather than render back, out with your knives

And cut your trusters' throats! Bound servants, steal:
Large-handed robbers your grave masters are

And pill by law.

Playwright Kenneth Cavander's translation

Servants

And clowns, kick the grizzled old senators
Out of their offices and legislate in their place ...
Innocent virgins, turn sluttish now — why wait? —
And do it while your parents watch ... Bankrupt?
Keep your money, and if your creditors demand
Payment, pick up a knife and cut their throats.
Workers, steal — your bosses are crooks

In fine suits, bandits raking in their loot,
Legalized pirates.

Copyright 2015 Oregon Public Broadcasting

Aaron Scott
Aaron Scott (he/him) is co-host of NPR's daily science podcast, Short Wave. The show is a curiosity-fueled voyage through new discoveries, everyday mysteries and the personal stories behind the science.