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  The Juniper Tree at Open Eye Figure Theatre

The Juniper Tree

Open Eye Figure Theatre
506 E. 24th St. Minneapolis

This classic Brothers Grimm story brims with singing birds, dancing bones, and barking trunks. Add a live band to blast the brutish stepmother and soothe the sobbing sister, and you get a not-to-be missed whirl of fairytale fun where everyone (who's supposed to) lives happily ever after.

Thru - Nov 30, 2014



Price: $10-$15

Box Office: 612-874-6338

www.openeyetheatre.org



  The Juniper Tree Reviews

Star Tribune - Somewhat Recommended

"..."The Juniper Tree" is an odd little tale and Sommers' telling is modest and straightforward for the most part. A couple long to have a child. They do, a boy, but the mother dies soon after and is buried - as was her request - beneath the juniper tree. The father remarries a harridan and this union produces a girl."
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Graydon Royce


Twin Cities Daily Planet - Somewhat Recommended

"...I enjoyed the production, but I did have a gnawing unease about the misogyny of the original story. The evil stepmother trope, so prevalent in the Grimm's fairy tales and indeed much of Western folklore, gets really tiresome for a feminist to sit through. Maybe that's why there's been such a movement lately to make these stories more palatable by turning them around, showing the stepmother/witch/evil sorceress from a different perspective. Think Into the Woods, which gives the perspective of the Witch, or even Frozen, which gets rid of the Snow Queen altogether in favor of a story that focuses on two sisters. There's also Maleficent, starring Angelina Jolie, who portrays the witch in Sleeping Beauty as a kind but misunderstood fairy."
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Sheila Regan,


Aisle Say Twin Cities - Somewhat Recommended

"...Unfortunately, this play also makes a few missteps that really prevented me from enjoying it as much as I had hoped. The play's villain, Madame Traum, is not only played by a man but she is portrayed in a way that I can best describe as a comical drag queen. Why the casting choice? It struck me as a poor choice - not because of any shortcomings on actor Robert Rosen's part, or because men can't play women and vice versa, but because this seemed like a way to get cheap laughs. Ha ha, look at the ugly woman with a low voice, I guess. But what exactly are we supposed to take away from this? That a man who wears women's clothing is a joke? That men are ugly and women are pretty? That women can't play over-the-top bad guys? As someone who has a lot of trans-identified friends, this made me uncomfortable."
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Liz Byron



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