Line-up includes The Tempest, Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead, Two Gentlemen of Verona, and Romeo & Zooliet

The St. Louis Shakespeare Festival announcedtodayits line-up for their 26th Season of free Shakespeare with THE TEMPESTas the mainstage production in Forest Park. Directed by the Festival’s former artistic director Rick Dildine and featuring Nancy Bell as Prospero, THE TEMPEST, will begin free public performances in Shakespeare Glen on Wednesday, May 27 and run Tuesday – Sunday nights through June 21.

The romance and comedy-forward 2026 season lineup includes the previously announced CONFLUENCE NEW PLAY FESTIVAL (March 19-21), TourCo, a free and outdoor public parks tour of TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA directed by Rebekah Scallet (August 4-September 6), ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD (March 26-April 11), in association with Albion Theatre, and the return of and updated and refreshed ROMEO & ZOOLIET (Fall 2026). The annual Shakespeare in the Streets community storytelling event will return in 2027 in DOGTOWN. During the 2026 season, the Festival will also host the return of Boozy Bard with THE RECLAIMING OF THE SHREW at Schlafly Tap Room. 

Tom Ridgely, Artistic Director: “From Hollywood to London, Shakespeare is once again having a moment. His stories and poetry continue to shape our culture in subtle and profound ways. They connect us by illuminating our most defining experiences: love and loss, rupture and reconciliation. This season is about sharing those riches with more of St. Louis than ever before – and celebrating St. Louis’s unique contributions to Shakespeare in America.”

Kate Tichelkamp, Executive Director: “After celebrating a record-breaking 25th anniversary, we’re stepping into 2026 with tremendous momentum. This season builds on the energy, ambition, and community support that have shaped the Festival over the past 25 years, while continuing to expand what’s possible for Shakespeare in St. Louis. We’re excited to carry that success forward and to keep creating experiences that bring people together through extraordinary storytelling.”

The St. Louis Shakespeare Festival’s commitment to radically accessible free theater is made possible through the support of hundreds of Festival supporters throughout the year. Lead support of the 2026 Season comes from Edward Jones, Regional Arts Commission ARPA for the Arts, Whitaker Foundation, Switch, Missouri Arts Council, and Pershing Charitable Trust. 


SEASON DETAILS

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK is the Festival’s flagship production and the unofficial start of the summer season in St. Louis. As one of the world’s largest free and outdoor Shakespeare productions, the show is accessible for everyone, always. This summer, THE TEMPEST, directed by Rick Dildine, returns to Shakespeare Glen for the first time in 20 years.

“Returning to Forest Park feels like coming home. Shakespeare Glen is one of the most inspiring outdoor spaces in the country to share this work, and I’m deeply honored to be invited back to direct The Tempest for the people of St. Louis,” said Rick Dildine. “Having previously staged Twelfth Night and A Midsummer Night’s Dream here, I know how powerfully these plays live under the open sky – where the city, the landscape and the audience all become part of the story. I can’t wait to make theater in St. Louis again.”

Nancy Bell (Prospero): “Years ago, I directed a motley cast of elementary students in an abridged version of The Tempest. On opening night, the third-grade girl who played Prospero held up her  cardboard magic wand and said the line, “I’ll break my staff.” She snapped it in half. Her voice broke and she bowed her head. It was one of the most thrilling moments I’ve ever seen in the theatre. It was as if this young person was somehow channeling an elderly Renaissance sorcerer. It made me realize that the play, like many of Shakespeare’s is truly – maybe literally magic.”

BOOZY BARD’S “THE RECLAIMING OF THE SHREW”, marks the return of the wildly popular 2025 event, this time taking on Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew at Schlafly Tap Room on February 5, 6, 12 & 13. During an evening with Boozy Bard, an inebriated performer voluntarily struggles to reconstruct a character in a Shakepeare plan after imbibing several shots of whiskey while the remaining sober performer try to keep the story on track. Tickets for this 21+ event are now on sale

THE CONFLUENCE NEW PLAY FESTIVAL was created in 2018 to further foster a culture of playwriting in the Midwest by supporting emerging writers in Missouri and Illinois with a fellowship and weekend-long celebration of new works at the Confluence New Play Festival each spring. Under the direction of St. Louis’s own Drama Desk-nominated playwright Deanna Jent since 2022, Confluence has commissioned 19 new plays, six of which have gone on to world premieres around the country. Current fellows include Zachariah Ezer, Pamela Morgan, and Catherine Yu. The Festival will present staged readings of their plays and take place March 19-21, 2026.

ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD, written by Tom Stoppard, directed by Tom Ridgely, and presented in association with Albion Theatre (Robert Ashton, Artistic Director), arrives in St. Louis in spring 2026. What happens when you’re not the hero of the story? Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead flips Hamlet on its head, following two side characters who suddenly find themselves trapped inside a story they don’t fully understand. As events spiral around them, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern wrestle with fate, free will, friendship, and the unsettling realization that they may have very little control over what happens next. Performances begin at the Kranzberg Arts Center’s Black Box Theater on March 26 and close April 11, 2026. 

ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Dramatists Play Service. www.concordtheatricals.com

TOURCO, the free touring program, TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA written by William Shakespeare and directed by the New Jewish Theater’s Rebekah Scallet, features six actors performing a 90-minute free and outdoor adaptation in parks around the region. One of the largest free Shakespeare tours in the country, TourCo will run for a record 5 consecutive weeks in 2026, opening August 4. TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA is complete with disguises, misunderstandings – and one very scene-stealing dog – and takes on friendship, forgiveness and the hilarious messiness of growing up.

“I am so thrilled to be able to work with the St. Louis Shakespeare Festival on this production of Two Gents. I have a deep passion for Shakespeare, and this will be my first opportunity to direct one of his works in St. Louis,” said Rebekah Scallet. “This play is also one of my favorites – though it is one of his earliest works, it is full of hints at what it is to come with amazing comic characters and touching love stories — it even has Shakespeare’s first balcony scene! There is truly something for everyone in this coming-of-age adventure, and it will be a perfect show to share with audiences across St. Louis this summer.”  

Nisi Sturgis as Juliet’s mother in “Romeo and Zooliet” last summer.

ROMEO & ZOOLIET, written by Jennifer Joan Thompson and directed by Tom Ridgely, is eyeing a return to St. Louis in fall 2026 at a soon-to-be-announced location. In this updated and refreshed production, the animals and back and sillier than ever. ROMEO & ZOOLIET is a vibrant family comedy filled with laughter, friendship and larger-than-life puppets from world-renowned Michael Curry Design. It’s a playful celebration of curiosity, courage and connection – perfect for audiences of all ages.

SHAKESPEARE IN THE STREETS, the internationally recognized community engagement program, that most recently visited East St. Louis will arrive in DOGTOWN in 2027. Shakespeare in the Streets is a grassroots theatrical experience that invites St. Louis neighborhoods to tell their stories. A Festival-selected creative team leads the neighborhood in developing an original play based on one of Shakespeare’s works – a play with themes that reflect the community’s character.

Tickets for ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD will go on sale to the general public on Monday, February 2, 2026. Reserved seats and boxes for THE TEMPEST in Shakespeare Glen will go on sale in April 2026. 

Visit STLShakes.org/Current-Season for more information.

“A Late Summer Night’s Stroll” in Forest Park during the pandemic in 2020.

Biographies

The St. Louis Shakespeare Festival strives to foster community and joy across the St. Louis region through the Shakespearean tradition of art for all. Since 2001, the Festival has grown from producing a single production of Shakespeare in Forest Park to a year-round season of impactful programming in exciting and accessible venues throughout the bi-state area. Artistic and education programs reach over 50,000 patrons and students each season. Their award-winning work has been featured in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Bloomberg News.

Rick Dildine For over 20 years, Rick has led some of the most prestigious theater companies in America. Today he serves as Artistic Director of the Tony Award-winning Children’s Theatre Company, the largest theater in North America dedicated to creating work for multi-generational audiences. Previously, he served as Artistic Director of Alabama Shakespeare Festival and St. Louis Shakespeare Festival. He’s also led Shakespeare & Company, About Face Theatre, and the Stephen Foster Theater.  He is a member of the National Board of Directors of Theatre for Young Audiences/USA. MFA from Brown University/Trinity Rep. Member, SDC. His directing credits include A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night, Macbeth, Romeo & Juliet, and The Tempest. 

Rebekah Scallet is the Artistic Director of the New Jewish Theatre (NJT), a position she has held since 2022. Credits at NJT include: Cabaret, We All Fall Down and The Immigrant.  Other St. Louis credits include The Roommate at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis and Moliére’s The Learned Ladies for the Sargent Conservatory at Webster University. Rebekah was also  the Producing Artistic Director of the Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre for nine years, where she directed many of Shakespeare’s works with some of her favorites being Twelfth Night, King Lear and Macbeth. Other recent credits include The Tempest at the Texas Shakespeare Festival, and The Winter’s Tale for Illinois Shakespeare Festival.  Rebekah received her Bachelor of Arts in Theatre and English from Brandeis University and her Master of Fine Arts degree in Directing from Illinois State University.

Nancy Bell is a theatre artist and writer who is grateful to have had St. Louis Shakespeare Festival as an artistic home for more than a decade. She served as Playwright-In-Residence here for six years, serving under Rick Dildine’s leadership as the first playwright for the Festival’s groundbreaking Shakespeare in the Streets program. She was the founding director of the Festival’s Confluence New Play Festival, and the director of Into the Breeches and 2024’s award-winning As You Like It. She is a familiar performer and director at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, as well. Recent credits there include The Roommate, Athena, and Emma. Other credits nationally include New York Theatre Workshop, Manhattan Theatre Club, South Coast Repertory, The Geffen Playhouse, The Old Globe, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, among many others. TV and film credits from once upon a time include Star Trek Voyager, Guiding Light, Mad About You, Newsradio, and various Law and Orders. She is Professor of Theatre at St. Louis University.

Tom Ridgely is a Drama Desk-nominated director who has developed or presented work at the Public Theater, The Old Globe, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival, Red Bull and more, and his productions have won DFW Theater Critics Forum and ECNY Awards and been nominated for St. Louis Theater Circle, Connecticut Critics Circle and BroadwayWorld Connecticut Awards. He came to the Festival from Waterwell in New York City, the company he co-founded and led from 2002-2018. There he helped create and produce more than a dozen world premieres and adaptations of classics nominated for three IT awards, a Drama Desk, a New York Magazine Culture Award and a Village Voice “Best of NYC”. Since taking over the Festival, he has won a St. Louis Magazine A-List Award for “New Arts Leader” and oversaw the Festival’s shift to developing and producing new work, which also won an A-List Award for “New Programming.”

New Urban-Rural Settings for Shakespeare in the Streets

Rehearsals Begin for ‘Love’s Labors Lost’ – Opens May 31 in Forest Park

The nationally-recognized Shakespeare in the Streets program will highlight the stories of not just one community, but two – Normandy, Missouri and Brussels, Illinois — for Shakespeare Festival St. Louis’ first urban-rural exchange Sept. 12-14. The performances will be inspired by the Bard’s play, “As You Like It.”

Audiences will choose whether to start in Normandy or Brussels — 45 minutes from one another — where Act One will begin at the same time in both locations. Act Two will take place on busses that transport the audience members to the banks of the Mississippi River. The final act will occur on the water between Missouri and Illinois where the actors will unite to share not only the same space but also the same story. Partners include Beyond Housing, the Normandy Schools Collaborative and Brussels High School. Event locations, casting and creative information will be released in July. 

In October, the Festival will unveil Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn’s 1957 12-part suite titled, “Such Sweet Thunder,” an extraordinary but long-forgotten piece of work inspired by different Shakespearean characters. In 1960, French choreographer Maurice Béjart used it as the score for an avant-garde ballet. The work will be revived in partnership with Jazz St. Louis to reconstruct the score, Big Muddy Dance Company to create new choreography, and the Festival, which will weave the pieces together with Shakespearean scenes and sonnets. A fourth partner, Nine Network, will host the resulting three free performances Oct. 3-5 in its Public Media Commons. Additional details will be released in late summer.

‘Love’s Labors Lost’ – May 31 through June 23

The Bard’s comedic take on love and courtship will resonate throughout Shakespeare Glen when the Princess of France (Kea Trevett) and her ladies arrive in the King of Navarre’s (Sky Smith) royal forest during Shakespeare Festival St. Louis’ production of “Love’s Labors Lost,” May 31 through June 23, in Forest Park. Performances are nightly, excluding Tuesdays, and begin at 8 p.m. Preview performances are scheduled May 29-30. 

Highlights of this lyrical comedic production include original music composed by St. Louis-based Rats & People Motion Picture Orchestra, a diverse cast under the direction of the festival’s Executive Producer Tom Ridgely, and a forested set that blurs that line between stage and park. 

“Love’s Labors Lost” features Shakespeare’s largest cast of comic characters, including four sets of lovers, and is the only one of his plays set in a park. The story revolves around the princess and her ladies who arrive on a diplomatic mission to Navarre, only to be met by the young king and his lords who have taken a vow not to see women. Affairs of state give way to affairs of the heart as Shakespeare reveals with great humor and compassion the way our culture sometimes doesn’t fully prepare us for the realities of love and intimacy. 

“I think Love’s Labors Lost asks the question of what happens when the ideas of love that young people absorb from their culture have totally unprepared them for what it’s like to actually be in a relationship with another human being,” Ridgely said. “The Bard’s advice to young lovers, I think, is how grand gestures don’t always pan out. Nor do disguises. He’s asking them to be curious, to get to know the actual person.” 

         The nightly Green Show will begin at 6:30 p.m. and feature local musicians, family art activities and roving performers. Free backstage tours will begin at 6:30 p.m. in front of the main stage. A 20-minute mini-play of “Love’s Labors Lost” will be performed Friday through Sunday by the Festival’s advanced teen ensemble, the Shakespeare Squadron. 

         Open lawn seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Premium seating, priced at $10 and $20, can be reserved online beginning Wed., May 1, at www.sfstl.com until noon the day of the show, or purchased after 5:30 p.m. in the Glen. Festival souvenir picnic blankets, comfortable for two and pre-set in the blanket seating area, are also available for $40. 

         Picnic fare, including sandwiches, snacks, beer, wine, soda, and water are available for purchase, provided by the Saint Louis Zoo. Audiences will be able to purchase Schlafly’s signature craft beer, available exclusively at the production in Forest Park. Cash, debit, and credit cards are accepted in Shakespeare Glen. 

         Four performances – June 4, 6, 13 and 20 – will be American Sign Language interpreted, thanks to support from Barnes-Jewish Hospital. Mind’s Eye Radio will also audio describe a performance for the visually impaired. 

         For a full cast and creative team list, please visit www.sfstl.com.  

About Shakespeare Festival St. Louis

Shakespeare Festival St. Louis presents Shakespeare and works inspired by his legacy of storytelling. Since 2001, the festival has grown from producing a single production of Shakespeare in the Park to a year-round season of impactful theater in exciting and accessible venues throughout the St. Louis community. The festival’s artistic and education programs reached over 50,000 patrons and students during the 2018 season and have reached over one million since 2001. In 2019, the Festival was recognized as a “What’s Right with the Region” finalist by Focus St. Louis. Leadership support for Shakespeare Festival St. Louis’ 2019 season is provided by the Whitaker Foundation. The festival is also funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Missouri Arts Council, the Regional Arts Commission, and the Arts & Education Council of Greater St. Louis. For more information, please visit www.sfstl.com, or call 314-531-9800. Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/shakesfestSTL Twitter: @shakesfestSTL Instagram: ShakesfestSTL Snapchat: shakesfestSTL