Friday, July 18, 2025
"Much Ado About Nothing" by Gray Mallard Theater Company at Sociable Cider Werks
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
"Much Ado About Nothing" by Frosted Glass Creative at Rustic Roots Winery
Thursday, September 12, 2024
American Players Theatre 2024
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
2024 Great River Shakespeare Festival in Winona
Friday, June 23, 2023
"Much Ado About Nothing" by Classical Actors Ensemble at Tony Schmidt Regional Park
It's not summer in Minnesota without Classical Actors Ensemble (CAE) doing Shakespeare in a park near you! This year they're bringing us the rom-com Much Ado About Nothing, and as per usual they do it in a playful and accessible style. Performances are free and no reservations required (but recommended); you just show up with your picnic blanket, camp chair, and snacks to enjoy the show. And when you happen to get a lovely evening like I did, when the heat of the day has subsided and there's plenty of shade and even a gentle breeze, it truly is the most pleasant way to experience Shakespeare. Performances continue in Minneapolis, St. Paul, and the surrounding suburbs through July 16, so find one near you and go enjoy Shakespeare the way it was intended - fun, playful, outdoors, and with the whole community in attendance.
Saturday, April 30, 2022
"Much Ado About Nothing" by Fearless Comedy at the Historic Mounds Theatre
Wednesday, August 9, 2017
Fringe Festival 2017: "Much Ado About Nothing (as told by Dogberry and Verges)"
Read all of my Fringe mini-reviews here.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
"Much Ado About Nothing" at the Guthrie Theater
For those of you unfamiliar with the plot (I had seen it about ten years ago, so I was mostly unfamiliar), Much Ado is a typical Shakespearean romantic comedy, full of misunderstandings that eventually lead to a happy ending. The play contrasts the love stories of two couples: Hero and Claudio, simple young love, and Beatrice and Benedick, two smart and mature people who swear they'll never marry. Much like the soap character who wishes someone dead, only to be suspected in their eventual murder, this much protesting against love ensures that they'll fall prey to Cupid's spell by the end of the story. Beatrice and Benedick's friends conspire to get them together, telling one that the other is in love with them, causing each to see the other in a new light.
Highlights of the show include:
- Dearbhla Molloy and Daniel Gerroll (last seen at the Guthrie as Scrooge) have a wonderful chemistry as the clever, sparring lovers, like the Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy of Shakespeare.
- Beloved Guthrie veteran Peter Michael Goetz as the constable Dogberry is a total ham and steals every scene he's in. From the delivery of his witty lines, to the silly way he moves around the stage, to barking like a dog, everything he does is wacky and hilarious.
- The captain of the Pinafore Robert O. Berdahl makes a brief but memorable appearance singing and playing the guitar.
- Another one of my faves, Ron Menzel (I first saw him in a beautiful play about immigrants in the Lower East Side called Intimate Apparel, years ago at the old Guthrie), gives a serious, weighty performance in an otherwise light-hearted play. The depth of his performance made me want to know more about his character; I didn't quite understand why he wanted to sabotage the marriage of Hero and Claudio (it must be because he's the bastard brother, bastards always have a bad attitude in literature).
- The first act features a costume party, which gives the Guthrie costume shop, led by designer Fabio Toblini, an excuse to go gloriously over the top in the creation of delightful masks and costumes for the characters and extras.
- The set (designed by Riccardo Hernandez) is simple but beautiful. Green and red marble tiles adorn the empty stage, over which a moving neutral-colored tarp hangs.







