It might be best to see this Herberger Institute play on an empty stomach.
Shakespeare’s “Titus Andronicus” features a pair of severed heads, three chopped-off hands, a sliced tongue, multiple murders and a human meat pie offered up as a dish best served cold — also, there’s candy.
Throughout the play, actors will break the fourth wall by serving small portions of food and drink to audience members to correspond with what’s happening on stage.
“For instance, when the actors are celebrating with wine, the audience will have a sparkling grape beverage,” said Kristin Hunt, the show’s director. “And the box of candy is attuned to Roman classic flavors to give the audience a taste of their world.”
Hunt, bringing Shakespeare to the ASU stage for the first time in a decade, believes the timing is right to give "Titus" new consideration.
“It’s relevant to today’s politically charged climate,” said the assistant professor in ASU's School of Film, Dance and TheatreA school within the Herberger Institute of Design and the Arts.. “Some of the characters in the play are dealing with trying to define their nation through establishing who’s a patriot, who’s a real citizen, who’s an outsider and who’s a threat. It’s very complicated.”
The food and drink are being incorporated as a design element to further engage the audience, Hunt said.
Written in the late 1500s, “Titus” is set in the latter days of the Roman Empire and is known as Shakespeare’s first tragedy. Over the centuries, it fell out of favor and was considered distasteful for its graphic violence, which includes rape.
“Titus” found a new audience in the 1960s as the nation experienced political upheaval and social unrest, but it has yet to find a revival in the following decades.
The play tells the story of a Titus, a Roman general whose unyielding patriotism draws him into a bloody cycle of revenge that is simultaneously graphic, poetic, comic and bizarre.
The 80-minute, multi-sensory production starts Friday at Tempe’s Lyceum Theatre and runs through Feb. 26. For more event information, including a link to buy tickets, click here for the ASU Events listing.
Top photo: Director Kristin Hunt gives direction to Lavinia onstage as students rehearse the play "Titus Andronicus" at the Lyceum Theatre on ASU's Tempe campus on Feb. 14. Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now
More Arts, humanities and education
AI literacy course prepares ASU students to set cultural norms for new technology
As the use of artificial intelligence spreads rapidly to every discipline at Arizona State University, it’s essential for students to understand how to ethically wield this powerful technology.Lance…
Grand Canyon National Park superintendent visits ASU, shares about efforts to welcome Indigenous voices back into the park
There are 11 tribes who have historic connections to the land and resources in the Grand Canyon National Park. Sadly, when the park was created, many were forced from those lands, sometimes at…
ASU film professor part of 'Cyberpunk' exhibit at Academy Museum in LA
Arizona State University filmmaker Alex Rivera sees cyberpunk as a perfect vehicle to represent the Latino experience.Cyberpunk is a subgenre of science fiction that explores the intersection of…