26.6.24

Coriolanus

Coriolanus (The New Cambridge Shakespeare)Coriolanus by William Shakespeare
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

An exceedingly well-designed political play – with scenes echoing each other in powerfully ironic ways. Coriolanus is allergic to explaining himself, he is a public figure who must be interpreted by the other characters and the audience. Lee Bliss’s introduction in the New Cambridge edition captures how his inflexibility in the world of public affairs makes him so wrong-footed and easy to manipulate. The ambivalences in the text, and the multiple meanings that can be generated from the way the play is acted and staged, makes this a play worth re-watching and re-reading. I like the charismatic Richard II a bit better, but Coriolanus is up there with Shakespeare’s best portrayals of the grubby compromises involved in politics.

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16.6.24

As You Like It

As You Like ItAs You Like It by William Shakespeare
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Such a delight. Not fully sold on James Shapiro’s theory that Orlando sees through Rosalind’s disguise before the final scene. His simpleness doesn’t detract from his merits, and he learns to be witty enough. There’s a lot of emphasis at the beginning on the interaction between nature and fortune (as we might put it: nature and nurture) which maps broadly over the timeless virtues of the country vs the workaday tribulations of the court. Agnes Latham’s introduction makes a good case for Arden being as magical a location as the fairy-infested forest in Midsummer Night’s Dream, with a god of marriage at its heart to bless the weddings at the end. The forest is the true touchstone of the play, testing and mending all who venture in it.

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12.6.24

King Henry VIII

King Henry VIII (All Is True): The Arden Shakespeare Third SeriesKing Henry VIII (All Is True): The Arden Shakespeare Third Series by William Shakespeare
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Gordon McMullen’s good-humoured case for the subtleties of this play in the Arden edition is interesting, but ultimately failed to convince me. The material should have furnished a more interesting play than the one we get. All Is True is a provocative title, but in performance it’s pretty clear which advisors are on the side of truth and which are not, and there’s only so much Shakespeare and Fletcher do to destabilise the impression that the Catholics are the bad guys and the Protestants the good guys. Henry’s wives, historically interesting personalities, are here rendered strangely bloodless. The cursing queens of the early histories, who provide actors with powerful dramatic parts, have been silenced. Shakespeare is adept at navigating the fraught political circumstances in which his political plays were performed, but here the edges were sanded down a bit too much.

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4.6.24

King Richard III

King Richard IIIKing Richard III by William Shakespeare
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Richard’s power to compel those who have excellent reasons to hate him strains credulity, and requires significant charisma in an actor to pull off. On the page his tricks are funny but hard to take seriously. He is still a bit of a stock character – a personification of Vice rather than an actual person. The most interesting choice Shakespeare makes is to contrast Richard’s rise to power with a chorus of female queens who curse him for destroying their families – a foreshadowing of the way Macbeth’s fall is prophesied by the witches. The women have their revenge at the end, although the abrupt ending eludes catharsis. Basically, Richard III walked so Macbeth could run.

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