
What we’re about
All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players
--As You Like It, Act II
We are Shakespeare lovers of varied backgrounds: actors and non-actors; teachers and baristas, retirees and programmers; people who read Shakespeare all the time and people who haven’t read him in many years. Some of us can do spot-on accents, some can sing, and some are very gifted performers; many of us just gamely read our lines as best we can, and with the best will in the world.
No acting experience is required; just a willingness to read aloud and appreciate Shakespeare’s language. Try it out—we're a friendly group! The beauty of the language, the insights into our human nature, the humor, compassion, anguish and scope of Shakespeare's work make it a treasure that we return to again and again, finding something new each time.
How to Get Started: RSVP to a particular meetup (and please keep your RSVP up to date; let us know if you can’t attend). Bring a copy of the play, if at all possible. To prepare, reading the play or watching a performance are ideal. Or you can read an introduction or a synopsis. Some of our readers practice at home, to get a feel for the language. Regardless of preparation, there will be some confusing lines, and we often have different editions; in that case, just wing it.
What to Expect from a Readthrough: We read the entire play; it takes most of the afternoon. We start by allocating roles. You can volunteer for a particular role that you want. There are usually twelve to twenty or more readers. The roles with the most lines are usually shared. We usually don't follow gender in determining who reads which role. However, at an event host’s discretion, there may be some occasions when gender is matched for a character. Weather permitting during July and August, we meet outside in Volunteer Park.
How This Meetup Group Is Run: The Seattle Shakespeare (Etc!) Readthrough meetup group has several organizers (Aidan, Scott, Harry, Mitch, Randi) plus individual event hosts. They take turns as “Event Hosts” for the read-throughs. The organizers select plays and library locations, and they update the website information.
How to Use This Web Site: Each meetup date has a place for posting comments about that meetup; these are usually appreciations, greetings, and tips on parking.
If you want to discuss a play or a performance in more depth, or if you want to discuss the group itself, click the “Discussions” menu near the top of the page, and then click “Message Board.”
If you want to find out more about a play (such as lists of characters and how many lines each has), click “More” near the top of the page and then click “Files.”
Upcoming events
16
•OnlineRead Coriolanus - Online
OnlineIn Coriolanus, William Shakespeare conjures up an ancient Rome that, in many ways, feels disconcertingly familiar. This Rome is a fragile republic, mired in decades-long border wars and fractured by competing visions of how the state ought to be governed, and by whom. The commoners of Rome, weary of wartime austerity and wary of the patrician elites who hold the balance of power in the Roman Senate, are on the verge of riot. The patricians, meanwhile, are scrambling to find a Consul able to counter the popularity of the Tribunes, who have been whipping up the plebeians’ discontent. And for a moment, they’re sure they’ve found one: Caius Martius, a battle-scarred war hero whose fervent devotion to the state is matched only by his reverence for his mother. Who better to install as an elected figurehead, they think, than a man who can dazzle the masses with his heroism while quietly protecting the interests of his own aristocratic class?
There’s only one problem with this plan. Caius Martius—surnamed Coriolanus, after the city he almost single-handedly sacks in Act I—is no man of the people. He can’t play populist demagogue to save his life. And his election will have catastrophic consequences for Rome, his family, and himself.
Written early in the reign of James VI and I, when Shakespeare’s reputation and career were well established, Coriolanus pushes at the generic boundaries of history play and tragedy. It isn’t always a tidy narrative, and the rigid, sharp-tongued “lonely dragon” at its heart isn’t the most emotionally accessible of tragic “heroes.” But its portrait of an embattled republic is compelling, and the questions it asks about family, duty, and personal and political loyalty are (at least) as pertinent now as they were when Coriolanus first crossed the stage.
Join us in Rome (on Zoom) on November 15th! New readers are always welcome!
Logistics:
Roles sheets will be posted shortly. Please look them over, and send me (Adrian) a note via Meetup Messaging listing your top three role preferences – or, if you have no preference, let me know that as well.
Because there’s often variation between different playtexts, we prefer to use the online Folger's version, available here: https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/coriolanus/read/
The Zoom link is visible for attendees on Meetup, under the event details.
On the day, we will read through the first half of the play, take a break, read the second half of the play, short break, then have a short discussion.
Thanks to Gloria for facilitating and Teresa for tech hosting!
12 attendees
Read Taming of the Shrew - In Person
Green Lake Public Library, 7364 E Green Lake Dr N, Seattle, WA, USRead Taming of the Shrew with us!
Logistics
Recommended text is Folger's, but we make it work no matter which version you have!
https://shakespeare.folger.edu/shakespeares-works/This is an in-person reading.
On the day, we will read through the first half of the play, take a break, read the second half of the play, short break, then have a short discussion.
We look forward to reading with you!
1 attendee
•OnlineRead Julius Caesar - Online
OnlineRead Julius Caesar with us on Zoom!
Logistics
Recommended text is Folger's, but we make it work no matter which version you have!
https://shakespeare.folger.edu/shakespeares-works/This is an online reading.
Host: Kat; Zoom Host: Kat; Facilitator: HEWOn the day, we will read through the first half of the play, take a break, read the second half of the play, short break, then have a short discussion.
We look forward to reading with you!
2 attendees
Read Pericles - In Person
Location not specified yetRead Pericles with us!
Logistics
Recommended text is Folger's, but we make it work no matter which version you have!
https://shakespeare.folger.edu/shakespeares-works/This is an in-person reading.
On the day, we will read through the first half of the play, take a break, read the second half of the play, short break, then have a short discussion.
We look forward to reading with you!
1 attendee
Past events
504

