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Byline: Adam Green
The Public Theater kicked off its celebration of the fortieth anniversary of the Summer of Love with Shakespeare's poetic take on teenage yearning and the generation gap, Romeo and Juliet, in which things-and I hope I'm not spoiling it-don't turn out so well for the kids. A happier ending awaits the young lovers of A Midsummer Night's Dream, who lose their minds and find their soul mates in the Athenian woods. Filled with high romance and low comedy-not to mention mischievous sprites, hallucinogenic herbs, and a fairy queen who's got the hots for a guy with a donkey's head-Shakespeare's blissful frolic was tailor-made for an ...