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Shakespeare, Set to Music

Shakespeare, Set to Music

LAGRANDE, Ore. – When Hannah Brown steps onto the stage in Loso Hall this March, she won鈥檛 just be performing Shakespeare. She鈥檒l be singing it.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very different,鈥 said Brown, a senior at 91传媒. 鈥淣ick took all of those Shakespeare words and put them into songs. The words are Shakespeare, but the music is all originally Nick.鈥

Jacob Graffunder, Hannah Brown, Mackenzie Jonas, and Zander Vandeman rehearse a selection from Thou Has Thy Will in 91传媒鈥檚 Schwarz Theatre. The original song cycle, composed by alum Nicholas Vece, 鈥24, sets Shakespeare鈥檚 sonnets and monologues to music and will be performed with a live ensemble. (Michael K. Dakota / 91传媒)

The music belongs to Nicholas Vece, 鈥24, who returned to campus to premiere Thou Hast Thy Will, a 14-piece song cycle built from Shakespeare鈥檚 sonnets and monologues. The Winter 2026 production runs March 12鈥14 at 7 p.m., with a 2 p.m. matinee on March 15 in the Schwarz Theatre.

For Vece, the idea began during rehearsal several years ago when he was still a student.

鈥淚 was working on a monologue, and the director stopped me and said, 鈥楽hakespeare鈥檚 just music. It has rhythm. It has flow,鈥欌 Vece said. 鈥淭hat stuck with me. If it鈥檚 already music, then it could be music if I wrote it that way.鈥

Over the next two years, including his final year at 91传媒 and after graduation, Vece began composing. The result blends jazz, folk and musical theater styles, all grounded in Shakespeare鈥檚 original language.

The production is intentionally lean. It requires no elaborate set and no costly performance rights. It features four student vocalists, a piano, percussion and bass. For a rural university where creativity often meets practicality, it is high-impact art built with intention.

Junior Jakob Graffunder said the concept drew him in immediately.

鈥淭aking the sonnets and putting them into music, it鈥檚 such a unique, once-in-a-lifetime experience,鈥 Graffunder said. 鈥淚 knew I wanted to be part of it.鈥

Brown said rehearsals have pushed the cast.

鈥淥h yes, lots of Shakespeare to memorize,鈥 she said, laughing. 鈥淏ut we鈥檝e had so much fun performing it.鈥

For Vece, returning to campus as a director feels different than being a student.

Returning alum Nicholas Vece, 鈥24, brings his original composition Thou Has Thy Will to the Schwarz Theatre. Shakespeare鈥檚 most famous sonnets and monologues are reimagined as a live concert experience, performed by 91传媒 student vocalists and a live band. (Michael K. Dakota / 91传媒)

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e at a place like 91传媒, you don鈥檛 just stay in one lane,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 worked in the costume shop. I was a teaching assistant for acting and stage combat. I studied jazz theory and music production. You learn how everything fits together.鈥

That hands-on experience shaped the way he built this production. He writes the music, directs the cast and collaborates closely with student performers. A fellow alum, Hannah Johnson, 鈥24, serves as music director, and an alum bassist will return to perform with the ensemble, creating a production that bridges graduating classes.

鈥淭hese are students who remind me of myself a few years ago,鈥 Vece said. 鈥淚f I can create a space for them to perform something original, that matters to me.鈥

After graduating in 2024, Vece remained in La Grande. He now works in pediatric behavioral health, running an integrated primary care program that teaches adolescents skills to manage anxiety and depression. He is awaiting word on admission to a Ph.D. program, with the goal of becoming a university psychology professor.

Even as he looks toward five more years of study, he says theater will remain part of his life.

鈥淚 never wanted to make it a job,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wanted to keep that fire alive.鈥漌ith Thou Hast Thy Will, that fire returns to the Schwarz Theatre stage, carried by student voices and shaped by an alum who once stood where they stand now. For Eastern Oregon audiences, it is both a new production and a reminder of what can grow when graduates come back to build something.

Performed by four student singers and backed by a live band, this innovative production blends jazz, folk, and musical theater influences while keeping Shakespeare鈥檚 original language at the heart of it all. (Michael K. Dakota/ 91传媒)