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PMA presents work at National Shakespeare Conference

Members of Cornell's Department of Performing and Media Arts are participating in the Shakespeare Association of America conference in Boston March 19-22. 

PMA Senior Lecturer  is leading a workshop entitled "Suiting Action to Word: Laban Technique and Shakespeare," co-facilitated with eCornell instructor Alex Manuel Teicheira. 

During the conference's first-ever undergraduate seminar, PMA major Tess Lovell 鈥25 is presenting her paper, 鈥淲ho is Ophelia, Really?: Plants, Embodiment, and Making it Up to Hamlet鈥檚 Tragic Heroine.鈥 The paper discusses , a multi-disciplinary event held at the Schwartz Center in Fall 2024. Lovell and two PMA alumni 鈥 Amanda Vialva 鈥23 and Rohan Misra 鈥23 鈥 will also participate in Black's workshop. 

Black鈥檚 workshop will allow scholars to engage with the Laban practice. 鈥淲ithin Laban are immediately accessible ways for actors to get Shakespeare鈥檚 characters into our bodies and share indelible stories with our audiences,鈥 Black said.

Misra will be working with the opening soliloquy of 鈥淩ichard III鈥 during the workshop. 鈥淭he plan is to use myself and my former company-mates to illustrate the viability of Laban movement analysis (categorizing movement along three axes: strength, flexibility and duration) in Shakespearean monologue,鈥 he said.

Vialva is adapting Countess Olivia from 鈥淭welfth Night鈥 in American Sign Language, a project generated during Black鈥檚 advanced directing course. 鈥淚 am thrilled to revisit Olivia once again, conveying her words in both American Sign Language and English. Incorporating the Laban technique into Olivia's modes of speech and movement can enlighten new character dynamics and heighten the stake of the scene.鈥

Tess Lovell will partner with professional actor Teicheira to illuminate scene-work鈥檚 dynamic potential via Laban, engaging Lady Macbeth and her husband in an intensely dramatized exchange. 

鈥淎ll three of these students/alums have engaged not only this technique with me in-depth, but also brilliantly adapted Shakespeare to make it resonant in salient ways now,鈥 Black said. When asked what he hopes attendees take away from this workshop, he said 鈥淔earless, empowered, and excited engagement with Shakespeare, poetry, drama and relation to their own expressive capabilities.鈥

Lovell reflected on her seminar ahead of the event: 鈥淭wo years ago, Theo introduced me to the wild world of eco-Shakespeare, and the concept of [鈥渢heater for social change鈥漖 started to become clearer,鈥 she said. 鈥淧lants and nature are marginalized groups in today鈥檚 world, and when we foreground them, or allow them to act as co-stars to their human counterparts, we take a small step towards a less anthropocentric lifestyle. That is no small feat in our increasingly technology-driven, consumption-crazed lives.鈥 

 

鈥淭here is a lot of existing scholarship on the role of plants in Hamlet, especially in relation to the character of Ophelia,鈥 Lovell continued. 鈥淭hroughout the BIOphelia symposium, we strove to bridge some of that theory with embodied performance in order to make it resonate with an audience鈥 I hope that I can offer up a new lens through which to consider Ophelia鈥檚 character beyond her innocence, helplessness, and tragic end.鈥 

 

Co-facilitated by Cornell Associate Professor  in the Literatures in English department, BIOphelia is also poised to be re-staged under at The New Swan Shakespeare Center in 2026.

about the Shakespeare conference.

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