arts & life theater Alan Ball (below, left) as Alfred Doolittle in Pygmalion (with Joseph Wycoff) and (above, center) as the Duke of Clarence in Richard Ill (with Rick Eva and Jared Cole) The Michigan Shakespeare Festival brings its repertoire closer to Metro Detroiters. The Michigan Shakespeare Festival performs July 29-Aug. 16 at the Village Theater at Cherry Hill in Canton. $16- $40. (734) 394-5300; michiganshakespeare festival.com . Shakespeare Steps Out I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer I is the 21st anniversary of the Michigan Shakespeare Festival, and the company is celebrating by stepping out. With a performance history in Jackson, the troupe is moving to Canton for the end of the season and asking Metro Detroiters to join them. The Canton presentations, July 29-Aug. 16, are planned to accommodate the growth in audi- ences from the Metro Detroit area, who will have a shorter drive to see Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and Henry IV (two parts combined) as well as Richard Brinsley Sheridan's The Rivals. Alan Ball, appearing in all three plays, looks forward to the addi- tional venue, the Village Theater at Cherry Hill. Although based in Chicago, he will be recognized by local theatergoers because of his many roles for the Jewish Ensemble Theatre (JET) in West Bloomfield. "I'm excited because we're the Michigan Shakespeare Festival and able to expand into more of Michigan:' Ball says. "The deci- sion to go into Canton had to do with a study of our audiences. "They expanded by 70 percent in the last five or six years. While we have people coming from all directions, a lot come from southeast Michigan so we're going closer to them. "Also, the theater in Canton was designed by the same person who designed the Baughman Theatre in Jackson. It's a very nice fit. The shows have been directed so that they will work in both places with- out much cutting or changing" Ball is playing Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream, Falstaff in Henry IV and Sir Anthony Absolute in The Rivals. "I like that there's something different about each role," says Ball, whose appearances in pro- ductions with Jewish themes have shown him in Fiddler on the Roof, Conversations with My Father and Meshuggah, among others. Bottom, coming across as a fool, adds to the comedy. Falstaff, a large and iconic character, brings an expressive range. Sir Anthony is a disapproving father. Ball, an artistic associate with the festival, auditioned while finishing his master's degree at Wayne State University. He earned his bachelor's degree at the University of Massachusetts. "This is my fifth season with the festival:' says the actor, 51 and single. "They had Detroit audi- tions at Wayne, and I was lucky enough to get cast. I've been here every summer since then and feel it is an artistic home for me. "The company follows a cer- tain plan each year. One play [A Midsummer Night's Dream] is among eight or 10 well-known Shakespeare plays, and one play [Henry IV] is something else from the Shakespeare canon that isn't done quite as often. The third play is not by Shakespeare but still clas- sical. "In this way, we're not doing the same plays over and over. It opens up the world to us in terms of plays they produce. In five years, I've done 10 new plays." The production schedule allows patrons to see two different shows in one day. Each attending group will receive one complimentary ticket for the coordinator or bus driver. Ball's interest in theater started at a Jewish day camp in Massachusetts, where the entice- ment for a 5-year-old was going on boat rides with the older kids. The stage experience whetted his appetite for more, and the deci- sion to act professionally was made in his teen years. Ball's first professional work was in Michigan. For the Hope Summer Repertory Theatre in Holland, the actor appeared in The School for Scandal, Camelot and Strider. "I've done a few tours and a lot of regional theater; says Ball, whose 150 productions reach from The Misanthrope to Barnum. "I've performed in 45 states:' Ball, nephew of bluegrass fid- JN dler Fred Weisz, shares stage inter- ests with his father, Jay, a retired electrical engineer who appears in community theater. His mother, Erica, suggested they appear together in a production of Mitch Albom's Tuesdays with Morrie. "I'm a member of Actors' Equity, but I was able to do this with my dad:' he says. Traveling for work between six and 12 months a year, Ball enjoys photography for relaxation. This past May, the actor, along with his father and brother, traveled to Arizona to pursue the camera hobby they share. After summer roles in Michigan, Ball moves on to West Virginia, where he will take on two characters — Polonius in Hamlet and The Man in Veronica's Room. He follows up in West Side Story staged in Chicago. "In high school, I started car- ing about telling a good story and became less of a performer and more of an actor; he says. "From college on, I pursued what I con- sidered to be the art of acting. "Telling a deeper story, discov- ering things about myself and helping audiences discover things about themselves and each other are the things that I hope theater can do. "That's why I love Shakespeare. He deals with fundamental ques- tions about who we are, what we want and what we care about:' ❑ July 23 • 2015 45