Please consider subscribing to our channel - ruclips.net/user/ShakespeareNetwork New Film adaptation - MISANTHROPOS - www.misanthropos.net - Timon of Athens - Shakespeare on Film! Adapted by Maximianno Cobra, from Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens", the film exposes the timeless challenge of social hypocrisy, disillusion and annihilation against the poetics of friendship, love, and beauty.
Once we release ourselves from the tyranny of the Author-Ship Question, we are free to dive deeper into an aging Lear with the brilliant actor and articulator of process. Even Bate rises to the occasion where he is happiest. Free from his own part time job defending a single author, he effortlessly centers into the inquisitive, articulate, objective, scholar that he is. Kudos, Bate. This one is a timely power tool to save Shakespeare and hand it off to a new generation of Shakespearean devotees. and this late interview with the great Ian Mackellan is a perfect message for an aging generation in uncertain times.
A brilliant and humane conversation between two giant Shakespearians, each bringing insights from a lifetime of study and engagement -- thank you for uploading this.
Kent''s ending lines are variously dealt with in different productions but I have wondered for years about why, when Kent enters, he asks to see Lear, 'To bid my king and master aye goodnight'. Saying goodbye. I wonder, therefore, if he was injured in the battle and is dying. It makes sense of his last line, 'I have a journey, sir, shortly to go; / My master calls me, I must not say no.'
Please consider subscribing to our channel - ruclips.net/user/ShakespeareNetwork
New Film adaptation - MISANTHROPOS - www.misanthropos.net - Timon of Athens - Shakespeare on Film!
Adapted by Maximianno Cobra, from Shakespeare's "Timon of Athens", the film exposes the timeless challenge of social hypocrisy, disillusion and annihilation against the poetics of friendship, love, and beauty.
Once we release ourselves from the tyranny of the Author-Ship Question, we are free to dive deeper into an aging Lear with the brilliant actor and articulator of process. Even Bate rises to the occasion where he is happiest. Free from his own part time job defending a single author, he effortlessly centers into the inquisitive, articulate, objective, scholar that he is. Kudos, Bate.
This one is a timely power tool to save Shakespeare and hand it off to a new generation of Shakespearean devotees. and this late interview with the great Ian Mackellan is a perfect message for an aging generation in uncertain times.
A brilliant and humane conversation between two giant Shakespearians, each bringing insights from a lifetime of study and engagement -- thank you for uploading this.
Kent''s ending lines are variously dealt with in different productions but I have wondered for years about why, when Kent enters, he asks to see Lear, 'To bid my king and master aye goodnight'. Saying goodbye. I wonder, therefore, if he was injured in the battle and is dying. It makes sense of his last line, 'I have a journey, sir, shortly to go; / My master calls me, I must not say no.'