I'd have liked the last part of Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream to close the performance, but (unless I missed it somewhere) it was nowhere to be seen/heard.
Royal Shakespeare Company
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Originally posted by Stanley Stewart View PostProbably inevitable that Puck's entreaty to the audience would close the performance.
"...So, good night unto you all,
Give me your hands, if we be friends,
And Robin shall restore amends." (exit)
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Originally posted by Stanley Stewart View PostIndeed, mercia, the Guardian quote says it all. Thank you.
Apart from a few longueurs this was a dazzling evening. Anyone who've been in the biz will realise the energy required to organise these one-offs, particularly during an on-going season. Groups rehearsing in every corner of a large site with last night's performance riding on a wing and a prayer throughout. .... Reminders last night from Simon Russell Beale, Ian McKellen and Judi Dench on the importance of clear enuniciation which used to be the norm.
Other than that (i.e. the remaining 2 hours ) I still think that the results of all that energy were disappointing.
I also disagree about the Guardian quote
Originally posted by mercia View PostDespite many intrinsic challenges, Shakespeare Live! was an apt and vivid reminder of the playwright’s chameleon brilliance, his astonishing powers of assimilation, and the way in which the inspired juxtapositions of his language and poetry can ignite the cortical synapses of the imagination like no one in our literature
Guardian
Billington is closer to the mark in the same paper, I think."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostThat RSC Celebration was a load of tosh1 "Could have done better!!" (My school could have! :)) Admitterdly there were some golden momnents, but like mary chambers said, not enough!
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostI kept thinking "Is this the best we can manage?". It was a very uneasy juxtaposition of popular culture and 'high culture' (not an expression I like, but I can't think of another).
Frankly, I don't think Shakespeare belongs on the stage any more. He desperately needs to be relegated to the reading room in order to be saved from the current wave of 'interpreters'.
The only great Shakespeare productions I've seen are the ones I've seen in my imagination.
Another depressing aspect of last night's Shakes-jamboree was the way the 'names' got rounds from the audience as soon as they appeared. I thought that hoary old practice died out decades ago? The implication was clear: the audience was comprised largely of people who were there to see 'stars' and weren't all that fussed about what those 'stars' did, or how well they did it.
The Bostridge-Pappano moment that Mary mentions was probably the highlight: just a voice, a piano and words. With the three artists concerned, it was all that was needed.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThat happened at the cinema relay of the Met's Roberto Devereux last week. I had never seen it in an opera house before.
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Originally posted by jean View PostHas anyone done the Globe Shakespeare Walk anywhere?
Discover things to do and watch from Shakespeare's Globe in London. Accessible plays, performances, guided tours, family events, talks and courses all take place in our two iconic theatres – the Globe Theatre and Sam Wanamaker Playhouse.
37 x 10 minute films. Perhaps they will go online so we can view them at home.
beg pardon, I see its in Liverpool too
Commissioned by Shakespeare’s Globe, The Complete Walk is a series of 37 short films, one for each of Shakespeare’s plays, which will be shown free throughout Liverpool city centre on the 23 and 24 April. The below productions will be on show at the following venues, to find out more information about each event including...
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