YSP in the News

OnMilwaukee.com, December, 2011, "My most inspirational theater person," by Damien Jacques

WI State Journal, 2011, "Young Shakespeare Players stages original 10-hour adaptation of Charles Dickens’ novel Our Mutual Friend"

Channel 27,
"Tackling Shakespeare at an Early Age,"
August 14, 2011

WORT's Radio Literature, June 23, 2011,
(Directors & actors from Our Mutual Friend discuss the production.)

WI State Journal, 2009,
"Understanding Shakespeare"

Capitol Times, 2007,
"The Plot Dickens"

WI State Journal, 2007,
“Dickens Redux”

Wisconsin Woman, 2007,
"Using Shakespeare to Bring Out the Best in Children"

Anew, 2006,
Interview with Anne DiPrima

Madison Magazine, 2005,
"Teaching Tiny Thespians"

WI State Journal, 2005,
"The Bard on Monroe Street"

Milwaukee Journal Sentinal, 2003 "Perchance to Dream"

WI State Journal, 2003, "Shakespeare Through the Eyes of Youth"

WI State Journal, 2001
"Orphans No More"

"The incredible fact is that...kids aged eight to sixteen...were doing Shakespeare with a fervor and understanding that would do justice to graduate students in English." —Wisconsin Academy Review

"Can kids do Shakespeare? Yes - uncut and unbelievable!... [an] annual miracle...an atmosphere in which the children teach each other...All I wish is that I were young enough to join them." —Isthmus, 1997 (read more)

"Anyone who wants to take part is accepted and guaranteed a speaking part. Let there be no mistake, these kids want to be here....A glance tells you these are serious actors performing one of the world's greatest plays with more emotion and understanding than many adults. " Highlights Magazine, 1994 (read more)

HistoryYSP logo

In 1980, The Young Shakespeare Players began as a backyard summer project involving 15 young people doing one full-length Shakespeare play each summer. (What was YSP's first production? Hamlet!) For some years, the program remained small, rehearsals were held in donated space, and performances took place in public parks. During the 1990s, several annual productions were added, and enrollment grew to more than one hundred young actors. 

The Directors (founder Richard DiPrima and his wife Anne DiPrima), both psychologists, moved out of state to start their own clinical practice. Romeo and Juliet However, at the request of participating Madison families, the DiPrimas continued to return periodically to Madison to direct the YSP projects.  Local families incorporated the program as a not-for-profit (501c3) organization. 

By the year 2000, also at the prompting of local families, the DiPrimas agreed to move back to Madison from their home in Charlotte, NC to make YSP a full-time project. Richard DiPrima ceased clinical practice to work on YSP full time.  Anne DiPrima, while continuing to practice as a clinical psychologist in Madison, helps direct YSP and creates all its costumes.

By 2001, as the number of productions increased and enrollment grew to an average of  200 annually, it became clear that YSP needed its own dedicated space. Parents of YSP actors formed a not-for-profit support organization (the YSP Foundation) to help secure a suitable space. The building, 1806 West Lawn Avenue in Madison, now known as the YSP Playhouse, houses all rehearsals and performances.

By 2010, YSP had developed the instructional and performance materials for 16 full plays of Shakespeare, as well as major workshop scenes or segments from another 12 of his plays, and 13 plays by G.B. Shaw.  In 2007, YSP also prepared for and performed a 9 ½ -hour, 2-day adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel, Nicholas Nickleby (as first produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1980).  In addition to 10-12 major productions a year, YSP also offers seminars (Focused Workshops) on critical, literary, and dramatic aspects of Shakespeare’s works, available to veteran actors and adults. The material taught in these seminars is the subject of Richard DiPrima's book, The Actor's (and Intelligent Reader's) Guide to Shakespeare.

YSP has several programs for actors over 18. The Shakespeare Circle offers adults (18 and over) the opportunity, once or twice a year, to have as much fun as the young people in the shape of either a full Shakespeare or Shaw play or a Shakespeare workshop.  The Dickens Dramatic Reading Society, begun in 2008 in order to give staged readings of selections from Dickens' novels and stories, includes veteran and adult actors. An original adaptation of Our Mutual Friend, modeled after the RSC's Nicholas Nickleby and written by Richard DiPrima, will be staged at YSP in 2011 and includes actors 14 and up.

See a complete list of Past Productions!