Sleepless -a Midsummer Night-s Dream- Now

(the short, dark-haired victim) transitions from righteous anger to sleep-deprived psychosis. When Lysander rejects her (under the potion’s effect), she doesn’t just cry. She stops blinking. Her famous tirade— "And in the wood, where often you and I / Upon faint primrose-beds were wont to lie" —is delivered as a legal deposition, as if she is trying to prove that reality existed before this endless night.

There is a common misreading of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream that persists in popular culture: that it is a purely whimsical romp through a fairy kingdom, a sugar-spun fantasy of love potions, donkey heads, and wedding bells. It is often staged with pastel costumes and Tchaikovsky’s score, implying a gentle, narcotic slumber. SLEEPLESS -A Midsummer Night-s Dream-

To see is to confront your own relationship with exhaustion. When you leave the theater, you will not feel refreshed. You will feel seen. And you will want, more than anything, to turn off your phone, close your blinds, and finally—finally—sleep. Her famous tirade— "And in the wood, where

But as the play warns: Only if Titania wills it. SLEEPLESS -A Midsummer Night’s Dream- is not a comfortable evening of theater. It is an endurance test. It is a love letter to everyone who has ever lain awake until dawn, replaying conversations, watching shadows on the ceiling, wondering if the person next to them is real or a projection of their own tired mind. To see is to confront your own relationship with exhaustion

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