Some parents are upset with a theater company's stripped down version of a Shakespeare classic.

The Torn Out Theater company is set to perform a nude and all-female production of The Tempest at Prospect Park in Brooklyn, New York next month.

The theater company has performed this same stripped down version of the play in Manhattan's Central Park, but that hasn't stopped it from being controversial issue a second time around.

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A theater company in New York will be performing a nude, all-female, production of Shakespeare's The Temptest in Prospect Park next month. Above, a view of the theater company's performance of the play in Central Park in May

Some parents are upset that a nude production will be taking place in a public park. Above another picture from the May production

Some of the actresses will be clothed during the performance. The partial nudity is to draw upon the themes of alienation in Shakespeare's final play

The all-female cast also say it's a great way to preach body acceptance, while de-stigmatizing nudity

'My son, he’s 5 years old,' Brooklyn mom Adelle Cekic told CBS New York. 'He might ask questions that I would not be able to answer him.'

Other parents were a little more accepting of the bold interpretation of the Shakespearian text.

'I wouldn’t have a problem with it,' said Rasha Dalbah. 'I mean, you explain to them that it’s art. They’re, you know, expressing themselves. It’s a performance.'

The company explains that the nudity is meant to mirror the play's theme of alienation.

'My son, he’s 5 years old,' Brooklyn mom Adelle Cekic told CBS New York . 'He might ask questions that I would not be able to answer him.'

'In nearly all of his plays, Shakespeare touched in one way or another on the collision between old and new, ordinary and radical,' said co-director Pitr Strait, a graduate of Columbia as well as The New School for Drama, on the production website.

'His final play is no exception. Because of that, “The Tempest” will always speak to an audience ready for new ideas. We hope our audience will leave our Tempest as transformed as our characters.'

The all-female cast also say it's a great way to preach body acceptance, while de-stigmatizing nudity.

While full nudity is illegal in New York, the law does not pertain to artistic performances

Torn Out Theater will perform The Tempest every night between September 7 and 10.