Sonnet 138 -- Trevor Nunn coaches David Suchet for master class

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • This is a chunk of archival gold from British television, circa 1979. As part of an "in-studio master class" on speaking Shakespeare, Trevor Nunn takes actor David Suchet through building a performance out of Sonnet 138

Комментарии • 73

  • @rodwendilain
    @rodwendilain 14 лет назад +32

    I love David Suchet and this is completely brilliant!

  • @khi590
    @khi590 13 лет назад +43

    David Suchet has a rather erotic voice...I love it ...Quite something hear him reciting Shakespeare.....
    And I love his Poirot acting.....Everything he manages rather perfect...

  • @ikonkaar
    @ikonkaar 7 лет назад +10

    A masterclass in expressing the sonnets. Brilliant!

  • @SB-sg4em
    @SB-sg4em 3 года назад +14

    I wish they'd do something similar to this again. May be with Rupert Goold and a few of our current prominent Shakespearean actors (Adiran Lester; Kenneth Branagh; David Tennant; Mariah Gale; Maggie Smith, etc). There's an old video of Peter O'Toole, Orson Welles at a roundtable discussing Shakespeare, it's so insightful. Would love to see that done again as well.

    • @markdisney260
      @markdisney260 2 года назад

      That Peter-Orson interview is wonderful. O'Toole had just finished Lawrence of Arabia (hair still blond) and it's obvious that Welles is in love with him. ruclips.net/video/smMa38CZCSU/видео.html

  • @JD-jc8gp
    @JD-jc8gp 2 года назад +3

    David Suchet has the patience of a saint.

  • @beverlyfletcher4458
    @beverlyfletcher4458 4 года назад +6

    What a treat. I saw DS in the RSC production of Troilus & Cressida and its stayed in the memory. TN - an absolute genius in interpreting Shakespeare. Thanks for posting such a gift for us.

  • @jcfbell3001
    @jcfbell3001 14 лет назад +7

    suchet is like, wow...i don't understand a word of shakespeare, until someone like him reads it...inflection is everything

  • @iomediastudio
    @iomediastudio 5 лет назад +9

    Tone of voice and meaning, facial expressions, body language and analysis of characters...

  • @Zero0791
    @Zero0791 11 лет назад +30

    It's so weird to see Suchet in something other than a Savile Row suit and with a mustache. He played a wonderful Poirot.

    • @914Rocky
      @914Rocky Год назад +1

      The best. The quintessential Poirot.

    • @patriciajohn8196
      @patriciajohn8196 3 месяца назад

      Right!? And who knew he was this sexy gorgeous

  • @thomassimmons1950
    @thomassimmons1950 6 лет назад +8

    Love David Suchet!

  • @DreamControl
    @DreamControl 14 лет назад +9

    what a treasure! Thank you for sharing it with us :o)

  • @914Rocky
    @914Rocky Год назад

    This is fascinating. Both the acting and directing were sublime.

  • @Tails7212
    @Tails7212 3 года назад +4

    Even this early on, David is a master

  • @sutherlandjoan
    @sutherlandjoan 10 лет назад +6

    Yes, many thanks! David Suchet is now playing "The Last Confession" at the Royal Alex in Toronto, Ontario and I'm going to try to get there for it.

  • @annamaree93
    @annamaree93 14 лет назад +3

    We watched this in my Shakespeare Acting Class. This is fucking brilliant.

  • @justintai8725
    @justintai8725 5 лет назад +1

    Brilliant, very insightful.

  • @mollitoff
    @mollitoff 15 лет назад +2

    Thank you so much!

  • @oolala53
    @oolala53 2 года назад

    I loved everything except the pauses in the early versions. Glad most of them were gone by the end. But I wouldn’t expect less. This sonnet seems like one of the more obvious to deliver, but no less satisfying.

  • @sandracr21
    @sandracr21 8 лет назад +1

    I just love this!

  • @tonisessentials9297
    @tonisessentials9297 4 года назад +1

    evoke much ? My goodness! love it 😍

  • @missbabyice
    @missbabyice 15 лет назад +4

    It's funny because David Suchet DOES play a university lecturer who's a bit suss in 1992, in 'Oleanna' by David Mamet. And looks like he'd do a good job.

  • @cbrusharmy
    @cbrusharmy 14 лет назад +1

    Simply amazing

  • @johannetinggraf7237
    @johannetinggraf7237 10 лет назад +2

    THANK YOU!

  • @dokaduka
    @dokaduka 11 лет назад +1

    Soo many details and subtleties to pay attention to. I think I d SIMPLY forget my lines.. ;)

  • @TootightLautrec
    @TootightLautrec 6 лет назад +1

    WOW, WOW, WOW. I love this!

  • @Lytton333
    @Lytton333 6 месяцев назад +1

    ".. That was great David.. but now I want you to imagine that you're an ice-cream seller who has lost all passion for his cornets.. Then we'll move on to Hamlet on roller-skates.."

  • @robertbarton5731
    @robertbarton5731 4 года назад

    Beautiful

  • @agnesdeque
    @agnesdeque 13 лет назад +2

    @rodwendilain Tout à fait d'accord avec vous.Moi aussi j'ADORE David Suchet

  • @bazcuda
    @bazcuda Год назад +1

    It's difficult to listen to such things now without immediately hearing Stephen Fry's and Hugh Laurie's parodies of them in "A Bit of Fry and Laurie".....
    mark it for me, lovelet....mark it 😂

    • @Herblay63
      @Herblay63 Год назад +1

      I think Fry had Trevor in mind...

    • @bazcuda
      @bazcuda Год назад

      @@Herblay63 Definitely! 🤣

  • @josephburke4322
    @josephburke4322 11 лет назад +5

    @John Carpenter
    That's just not true. Shakespeare's plays aren't card houses that topple down from the slightest mistake. Certainly, the best performances are true to the pentameter, but minor errors in an actor's speech will never bring the whole thing crumbling into ruin.

  • @imwatching2960
    @imwatching2960 4 года назад

    Amazing!!!

  • @dorrenes.missdthetruthtell5342

    EXCELLENT COMMUNICATION!

  • @CymbalRush
    @CymbalRush 12 лет назад +2

    I wish I WAS a university professor!

  • @mokiemori
    @mokiemori 10 лет назад +11

    Is that Patrick Stewart sitting in a chair beyond where the two are speaking together between about 2:00 - 3:00?

    • @jmacleve
      @jmacleve 9 лет назад +2

      Yes, if this is the same masterclass I've seen before -- Ian McKellan might be here too (although that could be a different video).

  • @patriciajohn8196
    @patriciajohn8196 3 месяца назад

    ❤😍🥰

  • @skraidantysprotezai9007
    @skraidantysprotezai9007 Год назад

    💝

  • @davidlevesque9137
    @davidlevesque9137 3 года назад +1

    Liked him as Poirot

  • @914Rocky
    @914Rocky Год назад

    Hard to believe that’s Poirot. What an actor.

  • @Звездноенебо-ю1о
    @Звездноенебо-ю1о 3 года назад +2

    😊 вкуснятина!!!!!!!

  • @mirhaneimarlija5333
    @mirhaneimarlija5333 9 лет назад +2

    Are there more videos like this?

  • @simonedevlin7710
    @simonedevlin7710 4 года назад

    Double entente c'est magnifique

  • @KevinKindSongs
    @KevinKindSongs 2 года назад

    The last reading feels better BUT I don't think the ending couplet would be written as measured, civilized resignation, acceptance, but furious/angry, spiting? frustration. The impossible question of whether S-speare wrote from his personal experience just lies out in the void....lol. It feels real but the best art always does.

  • @annaelsebarbelgoldbeck-low3659
    @annaelsebarbelgoldbeck-low3659 6 лет назад

    very fond of that ...

  • @humanbeing4893
    @humanbeing4893 4 года назад

    who else watching in Shakespeare RN

  • @totm2001
    @totm2001 3 года назад +12

    This is such crap. A perfect example of the way in which 'directors' try to make themselves important, even essential to the process of acting. It's ridiculous. In the first instance, Suchet gives a beautiful, natural, unmediated reading of the text. It rings with clarity, with truth. It comes from his instinct, effectively from his heart, and from many years of experience with 'verse'. He knows how to let the text speak for itself, simply by speaking it. In this way, the text 'reveals' itself to him as he speaks it. And what he says is unique, for one time only, never fixed, eternally alive. And then, Trev gets all clever, imposing his narrative speculations on the spontaneous reading of the text, and the result is a confused actor, congested, blocked, and playing externally, 'out there', rather than intimately, 'in here'. The verse will reach across the gap and find the audience. You don't need a superimposed dramatic context.The actor should simply 'allow' the verse to do the work. Worst of all, there is a shameless pretence that this process somehow 'releases ' the text, 'frees' the actor. But it's bollox. You don't free an actor by imposing upon him from outside. Too much 'clever Trevor'.

  • @ItWILLbeWONDERFUL_THERE
    @ItWILLbeWONDERFUL_THERE 7 лет назад

    1979. Ten Years before the man would be...King? Okay, Poirot.

  • @davidlucey1311
    @davidlucey1311 2 года назад

    So strange to see DS so young

  • @iluvpepi
    @iluvpepi 3 года назад +1

    David Suchet ❤️ I wonder if he is part French.

    • @iluvpepi
      @iluvpepi 3 года назад +1

      @AMT Thanks
      I will.

  • @KevinKindSongs
    @KevinKindSongs 2 года назад

    Huh, older Oxford Don as the voice of the Sonnets!? I don't get that at all.... Remember S-speare was the ONLY Tudor literary light that DIDN"T go to university.

  • @garethsmith3036
    @garethsmith3036 2 года назад

    1:32 she is smitten

  • @iomediastudio
    @iomediastudio 7 лет назад +1

    Therefore I lie (in bed) with her / and she with me... [an older man and young wife] and in our faults, our lies, (false) we flattered be...

  • @pmo1983
    @pmo1983 13 лет назад

    @adamjenson4500
    Your comparision is flawed- You chose the hardest musical profession
    I can play guitar. I would be able to replace most guitarist in most rock bands. I wouldn't be able to replace Vai or Satriani etc
    I can talk. I would be able to replace Keanu Reeves. I wouldn't be able to replace Jacobi or Sher etc
    A highly trained and skilled actor is the same as a highly trained and skilled musician.

  • @KevinKindSongs
    @KevinKindSongs 2 года назад

    Man what vocal richness and depth! I didn't know. I hear the sonnets very differently from the slow, measured, stentorian readings. I hear them as very fast, edgy, winching. As would be a frustrated, neurotic, manipulative young man....

  • @hildalynch741
    @hildalynch741 2 года назад +2

    Oh for fuck's sake it was better the first time round !!

  • @IanMcGarrett
    @IanMcGarrett 8 лет назад +11

    I'm not really convinced by Trevor Nunn's direction. It all struck me as tedious and over analyzed and striving to insert a supposed double meaning where none truly existed. The net result was a bit arch and coy for my taste. So much better if he had just told David Suchet to give it a bit more oomph, let the actor act.

    • @shrimpee502
      @shrimpee502 5 лет назад +5

      How do you play "oomph'? How does one act "oomph"? Nunn's direction was specific. Specificity does not rule out the possibility of bad direction. I appreciate that you phrased your objection subjectively. Indeed, your taste may or may not be correct but it's certainly not difficult for me to see how someone could find this reading coy and arch. However, I object to the assumption that actors can be directed to be brighter, bolder, better, more specific, full of humor, and charismatic on command. Nunn provided Suchet with need. "Why does my character need to say these words at this moment?" is an essential question for any actor. It's not enough to know what I am saying as an actor. I must also know why I am saying it. It's possible that Nunn chose what to you and others may appear a bit extreme or "over-analyzed", as you put it, to prove an educational point.
      To be clear I am not taking issue with your personal response to the piece. However, I feel that Nunn's method was correct. The method he used could potentially contain a hundred variables all resulting in very diverse readings. Some of which we all might like or dislike. Nevertheless, his method was sound and effective.

    • @shrimpee502
      @shrimpee502 3 года назад

      @AMT I understand your opinion. Thanks for sharing.

  • @danremenyi1179
    @danremenyi1179 8 месяцев назад

    Wow! What a waste Poirot was for David Suchet?

  • @TueSorensen
    @TueSorensen 6 лет назад +1

    Where the hell are all the Shakespeare productions starring David Suchet?? Why is that giant talent wasting himself on almost nothing by Hercule Poirot??? It's so tragic.

    • @jonathanmelia
      @jonathanmelia 5 лет назад +4

      Tue Sorensen I saw Suchet play Shylock in The Merchant of Venice at the age of 13, directed by John Barton. He did loads of stuff at the RSC in the 1970s and 1980s, including playing Iago opposite Ben Kingsley’s Othello. But Poirot called, and he started making shitloads of dosh.

    • @loveitloveit122
      @loveitloveit122 3 года назад

      have you heard him read our beautiful BIBLE?☺💕