Comments on the Twelfth Night screening thread gave me the idea for this.
The idea that Shakespeare is the greatest writer in the English language and (chauvinistically) the greatest writer in ANY language EVER, seems to have great currency, in Britain (or, 'England') especially.
Yet, I have to confess there are large swathes of his output I just don't like at all: and whilst I'm on board for most of the Tragedies (with the exception of the youthful and overwritten Romeo & Juliet, which does contain some striking writing and effective scenes) and most of the Histories, I find the Comedies very hard to love - particularly so in the case of Twelfth Night and (especially) Much Ado About Nothing.
The latter strikes me as being such a poor piece of work, I seriously can't believe it was writen by the same person who wrote Hamlet and Othello. As Peter Shaffer once commented, 'it reads like a first draft' (the fact that it's all in prose doesn't help). Whilst I suppose Shakespeare deserves kudos for inventing the 'romcom' half a millennium early, that doesn't excuse the fact that the characters are tedious and unlikeable (non-couples who 'pretend' not to fancy each other are tedious in real life, why should it be any different on the stage?). And Dogberry has to be the bard's most contrived and banal 'comic' character - has anyone ever found his scenes with Verges and the Watch funny?
The fact that Shakespeare's comedies are not, generally speaking, very funny has never bothered me, as my idea of 'comedy' is more closely aligned to the Chekhovian model (and I've found it fairly easy to locate the laughs in Ibsen - they are there, if you look for them!). But when watching things like T.N., Comedy Of Errors, Much Ado, I've frequently wondered why anyone could be bothered to write them....
I think the first Shakespeare play you encounter probably influences how you feel about him: my first (thankfully) was Macbeth, which is perfect for an 11-year old (as I was at the time). Some years later, my class at school was introduced to him via Midsummer Night's Dream (which is one of the better Comedies but perhaps not ideal for teenagers). My own favourite Comedy is As You Like it (a bit of a mess as a play, but Rosalind is my favourite Shakespearean character bar none)
There are also misfiring Tragedies such as Timon Of Athens (which is rarely performed, for several good reasons) and others that cannot be adequately performed nowadays because the talents required to produce them have been lost (Troilus and Cressida is arguably the greatest Shakespeare play but the number of good/great productions of it can be listed on the fingers of one hand).
The idea that Shakespeare is the greatest writer in the English language and (chauvinistically) the greatest writer in ANY language EVER, seems to have great currency, in Britain (or, 'England') especially.
Yet, I have to confess there are large swathes of his output I just don't like at all: and whilst I'm on board for most of the Tragedies (with the exception of the youthful and overwritten Romeo & Juliet, which does contain some striking writing and effective scenes) and most of the Histories, I find the Comedies very hard to love - particularly so in the case of Twelfth Night and (especially) Much Ado About Nothing.
The latter strikes me as being such a poor piece of work, I seriously can't believe it was writen by the same person who wrote Hamlet and Othello. As Peter Shaffer once commented, 'it reads like a first draft' (the fact that it's all in prose doesn't help). Whilst I suppose Shakespeare deserves kudos for inventing the 'romcom' half a millennium early, that doesn't excuse the fact that the characters are tedious and unlikeable (non-couples who 'pretend' not to fancy each other are tedious in real life, why should it be any different on the stage?). And Dogberry has to be the bard's most contrived and banal 'comic' character - has anyone ever found his scenes with Verges and the Watch funny?
The fact that Shakespeare's comedies are not, generally speaking, very funny has never bothered me, as my idea of 'comedy' is more closely aligned to the Chekhovian model (and I've found it fairly easy to locate the laughs in Ibsen - they are there, if you look for them!). But when watching things like T.N., Comedy Of Errors, Much Ado, I've frequently wondered why anyone could be bothered to write them....
I think the first Shakespeare play you encounter probably influences how you feel about him: my first (thankfully) was Macbeth, which is perfect for an 11-year old (as I was at the time). Some years later, my class at school was introduced to him via Midsummer Night's Dream (which is one of the better Comedies but perhaps not ideal for teenagers). My own favourite Comedy is As You Like it (a bit of a mess as a play, but Rosalind is my favourite Shakespearean character bar none)
There are also misfiring Tragedies such as Timon Of Athens (which is rarely performed, for several good reasons) and others that cannot be adequately performed nowadays because the talents required to produce them have been lost (Troilus and Cressida is arguably the greatest Shakespeare play but the number of good/great productions of it can be listed on the fingers of one hand).
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