English & American Literatures ENAM

Actors From The London Stage: Much Ado About Nothing

One of the most historied Shakespeare theatre companies in the world takes on the Bard’s comedic masterpiece, exploring two wildly different romances, each wrapped in secrets and trickery. Co-founded by Sir Patrick Stewart in 1975, Actors From The London Stage embraces theatrical simplicity at its finest. Five actors take the stage, with minimal props and costumes, and direct themselves in a performance of a complete Shakespeare play, with each actor portraying multiple roles.

Wright Theatre

$25/$20/$10/$5
Open to the Public

Actors From The London Stage: Much Ado About Nothing

One of the most historied Shakespeare theatre companies in the world takes on the Bard’s comedic masterpiece, exploring two wildly different romances, each wrapped in secrets and trickery. Co-founded by Sir Patrick Stewart in 1975, Actors From The London Stage embraces theatrical simplicity at its finest. Five actors take the stage, with minimal props and costumes, and direct themselves in a performance of a complete Shakespeare play, with each actor portraying multiple roles.

Wright Theatre

$25/$20/$10/$5
Open to the Public

Represent This! Black Bodies, Green Space and Radical Self-Care

“Nothing is more intimate than your body in the world” – Alice Randall

NY Times bestselling author & activist Alice Randall joins artist & Middlebury scholar-in-residence Carolyn Finney for a conversation where they give up the “t” on the intimate experience of being a black body on a green and imperiled planet. 

Join them as they go off the beaten path to dig into self-care, allyship, Black possibility and the art of living. 

What would a Black Walden Pond look like? 

Virtual Middlebury

Open to the Public

Visiting Faculty Fiction Reading: Pamela Erens and Janice Obuchowski

Pamela Erens is the author of the novels Eleven Hours, The Virgins, and The Understory. She has been a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for First Fiction, the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing, and the John Gardner Fiction Book Award. Eleven Hours, Erens’s most recent novel, was named a best book of the year by Kirkus, NPR, The New Yorker, Literary Hub, and the Irish Independent. Erens’s essays and criticism have appeared in venues such as Vogue, Elle, The New York Times, Slate, Virg

Axinn Center Abernethy Room (221)

Can a Corrupt Company Be Green? The Volkswagen Scandal

Jack Ewing, Germany correspondent for The New York Times and author of “Faster, Higher, Farther: How One of the World’s Largest Automakers Committed a Massive and Stunning Fraud” (W.W. Norton 2017), explains how a win-at-all-costs company culture made a mockery of Volkswagen’s claims to be environmentally conscious—and why Volkswagen is a cautionary tale for any corporation striving to be socially responsible.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Open to the Public

Refugee Tales

Sponsored by:
History and Department of English
Inspired by the Canterbury Tales, representatives from the London-based group “Refugee Tales” walk in solidarity with Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Immigration Detainees, reclaiming the landscape of South East England for the language of welcome. Representatives from the group will present their project, discuss their call for the end of indefinite detention in the United Kingdom, and read the published tales of refugees with whom and for whom group walk.

Axinn Center Abernethy Room (221)

Open to the Public