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Shakespeare In The Park’s ‘Merry Wives’ Cancels Third Consecutive Performance After Positive Covid Test – Update

UPDATE, July 23 New York’s Public Theater has canceled tonight’s Free Shakespeare in the Park performance of Merry Wives, the third consecutive cancellation of the show after a member of the production tested positive for Covid-19 earlier this week.

In a series of Tweets today, the Public wrote, “On Wednesday, we learned that a member of the Merry Wives production tested positive for COVID, and in accordance with our existing protocols in the case of a positive result, we cancelled our July 21 and 22 performances.To support the artistic and logistical efforts required to restart performances, we are cancelling our performance on Friday, July 23.”

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Today’s announcement also noted that the theater company will “continue adhering to the rigorous testing and daily health and safety protocols needed to support a safe and joyful experience for all at Free Shakespeare in the Park.”

Information on future performances will be shared soon, the Tweets indicate.

PREVIOUS, July 22 New York’s Public Theater canceled last night’s and tonight’s Free Shakespeare in the Park performances of Merry Wives after a member of the production tested positive for Covid-19.

In a statement tweeted two hours before last night’s performance, the Public noted, “Earlier today, we learned that a member of the production has tested positive for COVID, and in accordance with our existing protocols in the case of a positive result, we are cancelling tonight’s performance, as well as the performance on Thursday, July 22.”

Subsequent tweets said that the “cast, crew, and staff of Merry Wives participate in rigorous testing and daily health and safety protocols to ensure everyone’s safety,” and that cast, crew and staff would “move forward with self-isolation and further testing that’s needed.”

Updates on future performances of the play at Central Park’s outdoor Delacorte Theater will be forthcoming, the theater company said.

The cancellations are a somber reminder that for New York City and its performing arts industries, Covid is neither a thing of the past nor an unchanging situation. The city has experienced an uptick in cases with the arrival of the Delta variant.

Just last month, the Public announced that it had significantly expanded the available seats at the Delacorte to about 80% of the outdoor venue’s full capacity. At the time, Artistic Director Oskar Eustis said, “We are thrilled with the news that we will be able to welcome far more New Yorkers into The Delacorte than was previously possible. What better sign that New York is returning than our theater in Central Park full of laughter, applause, and excitement.”

The cancellations arrive just days after a similar situation in London’s West End, where Andrew Lloyd Webber indefinitely canceled (or possibly postponed) the opening night of his new musical Cinderella after a cast member tested positive for Covid. Though Broadway’s financial structure differs significantly from the UK model – Broadway producers have repeatedly stated that the stop-and-start approach simply couldn’t work here (the non-profit Public Theater’s Free Shakespeare in the Park is not a commercial venture) – New York’s theater industry is no doubt watching and taking note of all Covid developments.

The Merry Wives cancellations are just the latest set-backs for the production: Earlier this week, the Public postponed the play’s opening night by nearly two weeks (to Aug. 9) after leading man Jacob Ming-Trent sustained an onstage injury. The nature of the injury was not disclosed, but the Public said the actor, who portrays Falstaff, is recuperating.

Adapted from Shakespeare’s Merry Wives of Windsor by playwright Jocelyn Bioh, the comedy Merry Wives features an all-Black cast and is set in a South Harlem community of West African immigrants. In addition to Ming-Trent, the cast includes Abena, Shola Adewusi, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Pascale Armand, Phillip James Brannon, Julian Rozzell Jr., Kyle Scatliffe, David Ryan Smith and Susan Kelechi Watson.

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