8.12.24

The Alchemist

The Alchemist (New Mermaids)The Alchemist by Ben Jonson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Despite Jonson’s interest in seeing this play printed and read, it still belongs best on the stage, where the rapid-fire back and forth and madcap pace is more evident. The plot starts fast and gets faster, as the various gulls first get introduced and then pile up on each other, with the con men having to think of ever more extravagant tricks to separate them from their money. Quite a bit of it is pretty turgid on the page. The jokes need great performances to bring them alive.

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3.12.24

Philaster: Or, Love Lies A-Bleeding

Philaster: Or, Love Lies A-BleedingPhilaster: Or, Love Lies A-Bleeding by Francis Beaumont
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The dramatic trick this keeps playing is to bring characters to the edge of death and then pulling back. The subtitle ‘Love Lies a-Bleeding” gestures towards that – the main couple are both near mortally wounded but recover and are united at the end through a twist that makes less sense the more you think about it. The blood that is shed is proof of their honour. The most radical aspect of the play is that it is the intervention of the people against a tyrannical king that delivers the happy ending. Shakespeare borrowed some elements of this play for Cymbeline and improved on them in almost every way.

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