Did you think we were going to make it through 30 Days of Shakespeare without mentioning Shakespeare in Love? DID YOU?
Just drawing this comic makes me want to watch it again RIGHT NOW.
Did you think we were going to make it through 30 Days of Shakespeare without mentioning Shakespeare in Love? DID YOU?
Just drawing this comic makes me want to watch it again RIGHT NOW.
There are a lot of strong female characters in Shakespeare. Today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare entry often gets overlooked in favor of your Beatrices or Lady Ms, but she’s arguably one of the most badass of the bunch.
Don’t mess with Emilia. She will ruin you.
I’m dipping my toe into some controversy with today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare pick, but hear me out!
There are plenty of people who think The Taming of the Shrew is among those plays that just should not be performed anymore, and I completely see their point. It is SO toxic. But how productions deal with that toxicity always intrigues me.
I have to admit that I often feel bored when I walk into a theatre for yet another Romeo and Juliet or yet another Julius Caesar. Yes, they are great plays, but there is only so much to can do to them to differentiate them from what has gone before. Whereas every time I see a Shrew I am excited to see how they are going to deal with this landmine of a play. Are they going to do the "love at first sight" sting? Are they going to make the sun/moon scene a joke or abusive? Is Kate going to be in on the bet at the end or will her spirit genuinely have been broken? How is she going to make "I am ashamed that women are so simple" work? There are so many different directions it can go in and that potential to see something different this time excites me.
You’re never going to be able to “fix” The Taming of the Shrew, but you can explore a lot of interesting stuff while playing around with its brokenness.
I’ve got a lot of biographies of Shakespeare on my bookshelf, and I actively dislike most of them. But I’m always happy to revisit today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare entries.
Shapiro has also written Shakespeare in a Divided America, which I am looking forward to reading as soon as the title stops making me anxious.
Today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare highlight is one of the most epic and memorable experiences in my entire theatre-going history.
12 hours of solid history plays. I was in heaven. I think some part of me is still chasing the high of this incredible experience.
‘Nuff said.
There are very few Shakespeare-related opinions that I will completely reject out of hand. Enjoyment of Shakespeare is wonderfully subjective, and if you happen to like or dislike different productions, actors, and interpretations than me, that’s totally fine! Don’t care for Henry IV, part 1? That’s allowed! Enjoyed the Ethan Hawke film of Cymbeline? Wow, I’m glad someone did. You do you! Think it’s ok when productions of The Winter’s Tale don’t actually show the bear? No problem, everyone is entitled to be wrong sometimes!
But if you don’t like Emma Thompson’s Beatrice, it’s all over between us.
Today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare installment celebrates one of the most pointless words in Shakespeare!
There are several really fun ways to flex on fellow Shakespeare geeks. This is one of them. I’ll get to at least one other later this month.
My working premise for this 30 Days of Shakespeare project was to highlight Shakespeare-related moments that bring me joy. Today’s pick doesn’t really bring me “joy”, but it’s still worthy of inclusion!
If it wouldn’t alarm people, I would totally go around randomly shouting “SPEAK HANDS FOR ME!” It’s such a great line.