‘Things long past’

2nd September 2013

The Royal Shakespeare Company’s Richard II cast is one week into rehearsals. Thoughts on the first day follow below, but first it’s my pleasure to introduce to you our Production Diary. Each week between now and the Live from Stratford-upon-Avon cinema broadcast on 13 November we are going to release a short video. Episode 1 features an interview with director Greg Doran (who is also, of course, Artistic Director of the RSC) and he does a very good job of explaining how the production diary will work across the next three months.

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Links for the weekend

1st September 2013

I am not sure if Jonathan Bate’s list of 100+ of the Best Books on Shakespeare has been around for a good while, but it’s new to me – and that feels like sufficient reason to feature it at the head of today’s Links. (Apologies by the way for absences in the past couple of weeks; I’m back for the start of the new term.) Bate is among the very best Shakespearean scholars writing today and one of the editors of The RSC Shakespeare Complete Works from Palgrave Macmillan (this is the one-volume edition I use most frequently, although nothing beats the individual volumes in the Arden series). He is also the author of The Genius of Shakespeare (1997), which if I had to recommend to someone just a single book about the Bard, this would be the one. It is described here as ‘a biography of the idea of Shakespeare and perceptions of his greatness’. Fortunately, we can all read many more than just one – and this list is a great place to start. There are many more links below, with thanks this week to @AndyKesson, @footage@cinetourist@KarlinMarc@zilkerfilms@filmstudiesff and @Z. read more »

‘I will first be there’

26th August 2013

Rehearsals for Richard II start tomorrow, so this week’s blog is, as it were, a little previous. (New readers should know that I am producing the Live from Stratford-upon-Avon cinema broadcast of the production on 13 November, and I am chronicling the journey towards that in regular posts on Mondays.) The past week has seen a lot of preparation across all departments but the company will only come together for the first time on Tuesday. As far as the filming goes, Chris McGill at Dusthouse has been editing the trailer, which is exciting, and we have been working with Greg Doran on the first of the production diary films. Look out for that on Friday. Also this week the RSC confirmed the full cast for the production, and I have included that, along with some further notes, below. read more »

‘Sound and fury’ #MIFMacbeth

22nd August 2013

To the Gate Notting Hill tonight for an NT Live encore screening of the Manchester International Festival Macbeth. I was away when this production with Kenneth Branagh and Alex Kingston was shown live in cinemas, and so I missed the discussion that it prompted then. As I’m coming to it late, perhaps it need not detain us long, but I do want to note the things about the cinema broadcast that I thought were good – and those that for me were not so good (primarily the theatre production itself). Before that, though, you might like to read press reviews by Michael Billington for the Guardian, Kate Bassett for the Independent and Dominic Cavendish for the Telegraph, as well as Peter Kirwan’s thoughtful piece for his website The Bardathon. read more »

Everything you always wanted to know about John Lyly…

20th August 2013

At the end of last week I posted the introductory video to the Shakespearean London Theatres (ShaLT) project. As I wrote then, we have been working with ShaLT for more than a year to make a series of short films about Elizabethan and Jacobean theatre in London beyond the Globe. The first bundle of these films have now been released, and their focus is the playwright and entrepreneur John Lyly. Lyly is a profoundly significant but – outside academic circles – comparatively little-known figure, although there is a growing awareness of his importance, and this will be furthered with the publication next month of new book by Andy Kesson (who is one of our contributors), John Lyly and Early Modern Authorship. This is our film that introduces John Lyly – and then there are three further films below:

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‘Thus play I in one person many people’

19th August 2013

Rehearsals for the Royal Shakespeare Company’s new Richard II with David Tennant start a week tomorrow, Tuesday (the cast get the Bank Holiday off too). And we deep in the preparations for the Live from Stratford Upon Avon broadcast to cinemas on 13 November. During the past seven days we confirmed our on-screen host (hurrah!), shot the trailer and began to film the weekly production diary which will start to appear online on 30 August. But before we begin things proper I thought it might be interesting to offer a little background about previous British screen versions of the play. To date, there has been no feature film – Rupert Goold’s highly cinematic treatment for television’s The Hollow Crown (2012) comes the closest, while the 1949 Ealing Studios film Train of Events features an amateur dramatics society performing the play’s last scenes. Including The Hollow Crown, there have been seven full-length small-screen productions so far. read more »

Another Ealing

17th August 2013

Another Saturday, another review of another DVD set from Network’s The Ealing Studios Rarities Collection. Following last week’s engagement with the first release, today’s post is concerned with Volume 2. Here is another quartet of lesser-known British feature films shot mostly (location filming is minimal) on the stages at Ealing between, this week, 1935 and 1942. Embedded below is Network’s trailer for the quartet – and across the jump are my thoughts about each of the four films.

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Beyond the Globe

16th August 2013

For the past year and more, we have hugely enjoyed working with the academic team putting together Shakespearean London Theatres. The ShaLT project is dedicated to telling ‘the full story behind the vast theatrical scene that thrilled London for over fifty years during the reigns of Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I.” As the ShaLT website says,

This project aims to increase public awareness of these sites and to promote their enjoyment by producing, through a partnership between De Montfort University and the Victoria and Albert Museum, a map, a printed ShaLT Guide, interactive software, public talks, and downloadable short films that will enable the public to travel to the modern London locations of these theatres and learn about them.

The excellent website has a wealth of detail, historical analysis and images, and Illuminations has been working on the short films. The first of these films – a general introduction to the project and to the period – has just gone online, and is embedded here. More will appear over the coming days and weeks, and we will be highlighting those here too – as well as discussing further the ShaLT project and our part in it.

Beyond Shakespeare on the small screen

15th August 2013

I am delighted to have been invited to edit a special edition of the journal Shakespeare Bulletin to appear in 2015. Published by The John Hopkins University Press, the journal has as one of its editors Pascale Aebischer, who is the author of the new – and highly recommended – book, Screening Early Modern Drama: Beyond Shakespeare (borrow it from a library, the cover price is a tad steep).

Pascale and I share an interest in screen adaptations of plays by early modern authors other than Shakespeare, and the presentation of these works on television and other screen media (although not movies) is the focus of the issue that we have titled ‘Beyond Shakespeare on the small screen’. This is the call for proposals (which can also be found here) – and then across the jump I discuss the idea a little more, as well as embedding two relevant examples. One is an amazing version of the opening scene of Robert Greene’s The Honourable History of Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay; the other is Bed Trick (with Sinéad Mathews, above), a rather wonderful if also oblique example from The Young Vic and the Guardian of what I’m talking about:

The issue will consider a wide range of adaptations of early modern drama by authors other than Shakespeare produced for media forms that were not primarily conceived for cinema distribution. We are interested in critical and analytical discussions of plays from medieval literature through to the 1630s that have been adapted for broadcast television in Britain or elsewhere, for DVD distribution in either a commercial and/or an educational context, and for other forms of digital or online dissemination.

Proposals of up to 300 words for academic articles should be sent to me (email: [email protected]) by 31 March 2014. I would also be very interested to hear about any projects that you think I and colleagues might consider for discussion. read more »

#DavidBowieis was…

13th August 2013

… a bit, well, ordinary. At least that’s how David Bowie is happening now came across in my £14.20 seat at the Cineworld Wandsworth. Tonight’s 7pm screening was billed as ‘a live nationwide cinema event’ and the ‘finale’ to the V&A exhibition that closed on Sunday. As a ‘live’ cinema event (I’m going to keep using the inverted commas), this followed in the footsteps of Pompeii Live from the British Museum (about which I posted here) in aspiring to present an exhibition on a cinema screen in real time.

As I commented then, Pompeii Live didn’t feel very, you know, live, and neither, if truth be told, did DBihn. This was despite the slightly desperate measure of cutting from the numerous prepared packages back to our uncertain presenters – exhibition curators Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh – leaping up onto a little stage to floor-manager-cued applause. Otherwise, I saw some compelling archive footage, admired some nice video graphics and got told again and again and again what an amazing, transformational, astoundingly original, epoch-defining genius DB is. Yet I didn’t even really feel that I actually saw the exhibition. read more »