Hello, Guest! [Login] [Register]
Rural Intelligence: The Online Magazine for Eastern New York, Western Connecticut and the Southern Berkshires
Search Archives:

RI Archives: Arts

View past Theatre articles.

View all past Arts articles.



Theatre Intelligence

[See more Theatre articles]

The True Meaning of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol”

Rural Intelligence Arts
In Charles Dickens’s day, his novel A Christmas Carol was credited with reviving enthusiasm for a holiday, that, incredibly, had fallen out of favor with the public and appeared to be on the wane.  Needless to say, modern marketing will never permit such heresy again.  Nonetheless, Dickens’ ghost story, which was published just six days before Christmas, 1843, remains an important part of the Christmas package.  For many secularists, it conveys the “true meaning” of Christmas more effectively than anything else.
 
Besides, children love it, at least in its abridged, theatrical form, which explains why no fewer than two theatre companies in our region are doing adaptations of it now.  Tonight, December 11, The Berkshire Theatre Festival presents the opening of it’s third-annual holiday production of Charles’ Dickens A Christmas Carol, adapted and directed by Eric Hill.  In Hudson, Walking the Dog Theater Company is doing it as a one-man show with music.  Their A Christmas Carol, performed by David Anderson with music by Jonathan Talbott and directed by Ted Pugh, recreates the experience American audiences had when Dickens performed it himself in packed lecture halls during his 1865 New England tour.
 
Anyone who loves Dickens and has tried reading his work aloud to young children knows what a dicey proposition that can be.  (I happen to be acquainted with two otherwise notably literate young women who still shriek at the memory of sitting through a few pages of David Copperfield.)  So if you are among those who believe that the message of Marley’s ghost captures the true meaning of Christmas, here’s a perfect opportunity to pass that rather important notion along to your kids.
 
Walking the Dog Theater

Space 360
360 Warren Street, Hudson; 800.838.3006
Through December 21; at 2 p.m. (check website for matinee days) & 8 p.m.
Tickets: $15, $12/students and seniors, $10/WTD members
Thursday, December 11 is 2-for-1 night
 
Berkshire Theatre Festival

Unicorn Theater, Stockbridge; 413.298.5536, ext. 33
December 11 - 30; dark December 16, 23, 24, & 25; 2 p.m. (check website for matinee days) & 7 p.m.
Tickets, $35 - $45/adults; $20 - $25/children and students.

(0) Comments

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

Tell-a-Friend TwitThis    Facebook    del.icio.us    Diigo    Digg    Reddit    StumbleUpon   

Posted by Marilyn Bethany on 12/11/08 at 03:36 PM • Permalink