Wednesday 2 March 2011

How Do You Like Your Shakespeare?

Yesterday evening I went to hear a colleague give his inaugural lecture as Professor in Shakespeare Studies.  John actually received his chair almost two years ago but it's taken the powers that be this long to get round to organising the event and we're all still trying to work out just why it was scheduled for a lecture theatre in the School of Sport and Exercise rather than the School of English, but as John is also a mountaineer it wasn't, perhaps, that inappropriate.  John is one of the great textual scholars and has worked on many of the best known editions of plays not only by Shakespeare but also by his contemporaries.  His most recent work is the just published Sir Thomas More for the Arden Early Modern Drama series and I can't wait to get my hands on a copy to see what he has to say about those scenes which are now thought to be by Shakespeare and which it appears we have in the Bard's own hand.

Last night, John chose to talk to the title Sit Down For Shakespeare and if that seems a somewhat unusual choice then you have to see it in the light of the Royal Shakespeare Company's recent educational thrust that aims to engage children through the performance aspects of the works and which is called Stand Up For Shakespeare.

Now, you can't teach Shakespeare in Stratford and not acknowledge that what the man was doing was writing plays and writing them to be performed.  Not only would none of us even think of taking an opposing stance but much of the work in the department is specifically performance based and, what is more, aimed at exploring what the performance practice of Shakespeare's time would have been.  However, John is a man who has given his working life to a close examination of the text and what he was exploring last night was the dynamic that comes about when you remember that, to quote him, 'Shakespeare is a book' and as such can repay the sort of close attention to detail which it is sometimes difficult to pick up in the hurly burly of live performance.  This isn't an example he gave but think of the number of times that Richard III is likened to specifically nasty animals throughout the play that bears his name.  In performance you are unlikely to pick this up, but when you realise what is going on you can see that one of the things Shakespeare wants us to know about the man is his bestial nature.  I could ask is he a man or is he an animal, but that would be unfair on some very nice animals I've known.

Citing that example allows me to take the point about the essential dynamic between textual study and performance a stage further because no serious actor would ever approach a part like Richard III without exploring the text in exactly the sort of detail John would prescribe and then utilising what they find to inform their interpretation.  In my memory we've had the bottled spider of Anthony Sher and the toad-like Richard of Simon Russell Beale, both direct reflections of elements of the text.

Taking the issue of dynamics a step further something that John did look at was Juliet's speech in Act II Scene iii of Measure for Measure.  Juliet, you will remember, is imprisoned along with her lover, Claudio, for having anticipated their marriage.  She, for the moment, is 'safe' because she is pregnant, but the disguised Duke has just come to tell her that Claudio is to die the following day.  Her response in just about every edition you will find is:

Must die to-morrow!  O, injurious law,
That respites me a life whose very comfort
Is still a dying horror.

I love this.  The Duke, disguised as a friar, has been trying to reconcile Juliet with her position and she tells him exactly what she thinks of the so called mercy she is being offered.  BUT, that word law is an emendation, substituted by generations of editors who thought that the word used in the First Folio of 1623 had to be an error, because what the First folio reads is

Must die to-morrow!  O, injurious love,
That respites me a life whose very comfort
Is still a dying horror.

Now, we could argue forever as to which is the more likely word for Shakespeare to have written.  Law, clearly fits, but so too does love and in more ways than one because it is the loving mercy of the church that the friar is offering (whatever you might think of the form it takes) and it is also the love between Juliet and Claudio that has resulted in her pregnancy which has saved her life.  But, why do we have to select one or the other?  Yes, of course, in a text or a performance you are going to have to make a decision, but if as a member of the audience (for which ever medium) you can hold the two in your mind together then think of the dynamic which that creates.  It is the very dynamic between the rule of love and the rule of law that is the central concern of the play as a whole.

No one is ever going to persuade me that Shakespeare was not first and foremost a man of the theatre, but equally I know from personal experience that close reading of the text can illuminate a performance for me in ways that would not have been possible if I had not taken the time to explore the detail of the words on the page.  So, I like my Shakespeare both ways, thank you, and I'm just so grateful that I have the opportunity to experience the performance and the textual aspects at the hands of such erudite practitioners in both disciplines.


7 comments:

  1. Sounds like a wonderful lecture. When I was in school my classes would always first study the play and then we'd go see a performance of it. It really makes all the difference in one's ability to notice the nuances of plot and character when a live performance is flashing by.

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  2. I totally agree Annie, I get certain things from the performance, visual enhancements and signifiers, but close reading highlights the text in its full glory. I studied Shakespeare for a whole year, as well as plenty of other times during my degree, but I can still miss dialogue for various reasons during a performance, either distracted by visuals or simply zoning out. I love both ways of appreciating Shakespeare, and like you I have been fortunate to indulge both.

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  3. you can hold the two in your mind together then think of the dynamic which that creates.

    I love this. I love experiences of art that ask me to hold two (perhaps seemingly mutually exclusive) realities in my mind at the same time, an let them interact. Not just negative capability (tolerating the unresolved), but actually glorying in it. Such a valuable life skill, not to expect all contradiction to be neatly wrapped up.

    And re: the performance versus close textual study issue, I strongly agree that they both reinforce each other. One experiences a different kind of richness in performance (timing, vocal timbre, etc.) and in reading (the poetic meter, for example, which is often somewhat obscured in performance, and the ability to SLOW DOWN and savor the delicious texture of the words).

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  4. I once ran a class that worked like that, Stefanie. We would study the text of the play, then its stage history and then see a current production. One of the most interesting aspects of that was to see how stage interpretations had changed according to the cultural and social mores of the time.

    Leah, one of the things I value most about having a good working knowledge of the text before I see a performance is being able to appreciate the emphasis that the director has placed on specific elements with the play. It gives you the opportunity to appreciate the nuances of thought behind the work that has gone on. Of course, the standing joke at Stratford is that at least half the audience knows the play word for word and will prompt if any of the actors has a problem!

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  5. Emily, one of the reasons I first started to blog (elsewhere and quite some time ago) was precisely because I wanted to explore the relationships that become apparent between different works of art (used 'art' in its broadest sense) and which throw up new questions about a work that you may have almost begun to take for granted. It is that very sense that there is something happening that you can't quite pin down because it is still in the process of growing that excites me most.

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  6. Love the law/love issue. Thanks for sharing that. The performance/text issue is an interesting one. I agree that the text is important - it is the starting point after all - and I enjoy close textual analysis - but as the intent is performance I think it's a shame that student so often don't see the plays they study.

    My young teenage daughter (at the time) fell in love with Romeo and Juliet. It was around the time the Baz Luhrmann version came out. She watched every (film) version she could find and one theatrical one (including the Olivia Hussey as Julia one) read the text over and over and developed her own ideas about the play and the interpretations. (Can't recollect her conclusions now but it was wonderful seeing her so engaged.)

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  7. WG I couldn't agree more about the importance of seeing the plays on the stage and I think for most children that is where the experience should start. Then you can move on to the text and the synergy that comes from holding the magic of the two forms together. It is that tension and what comes from it that excites me most. I have terrible problems with 'Romeo and Juliet' (which I will be seeing again the weekend after next). I always think that this time, if I wish hard enough, it might just work out all right, but it never does:)

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