Hamlet - The Complete Shakespeare - HD Restored Edition

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 дек 2020
  • EDUCATIONAL AUDIOBOOKS - HD Remastered - Restored Edition - Timeline: Act I: 0:00 / Act II: 44:37 / Act III: 1:20:29 / Act IV: 2:09:50 / Act V: 3:00:05
    Hamlet - The Complete Shakespeare - HD Restored Edition
    Please consider subscribing to our channel for More Insights: ruclips.net/user/Shakespe...
    The Complete Plays of William Shakespeare is a series of audio drama presentations of all 38 plays of William Shakespeare. They were first released from 1998 by Arkangel and the BBC . The plays are unabridged and based on The Complete Pelican Shakespeare, published by Penguin Classics.
    Most of the actors are past or present members of the Royal Shakespeare Company including: Sir John Gielgud, James Reynard, David Tennant, Eileen Atkins, Ciaran Hinds, Imogen Stubbs, Damien Lewis, Adjoa Andoh, David Harewood, Maggie Robertson, Maureen Beattie, Shirley Dixon, Niamh Cusack, Victoria Hamilton, Joe Fiennes, Bob Peck, Adrian Lester, Jennifer Ehle, Jamie Glover, Don Warrington, Patterson Joseph and many more.
    This recording is for educational purposes only and is covered under Fair Use doctrine - Copyright - All rights reserved to their respective owners.
    Your donations keep our Educational and Editorial projects freely available to everyone. Shakespeare Network Website is free of advertising.
    _______________________________
    Read the unabridged plays online: shakespearenetwork.net/works/...
    Screen Adaptation - Co-Production : MISANTHROPOS - Official Website - www.misanthropos.net
    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.
    Donate with PayPal today
    shakespearenetwork.net/compan...
    Why Donate?
    Donations to Shakespeare Network help sustain free knowledge and educational programs on Shakespeare Network and our ecosystem of Shakespeare Network projects. Your contributions ensure these resources remain accessible and valuable for all. Thank you.
    25% Direct support to website:
    Keeping the Shakespeare Network websites online is about more than just servers. It also includes ongoing engineering improvements, product development, design and research, and legal support.
    25% Administration and governance:
    We manage funds and resources responsibly to recruit and support skilled, passionate staff who advance our communities and values.
    Our operating budget:
    Transparency is core to our organization. The Shakespeare Network develops our annual plan and operating budget through open processes, which are subject to feedback from our volunteers and
    Board approval.
    50% Direct support to communities:
    Shakespeare Network projects exist thanks to the communities that create and maintain them. We strengthen these communities through grants, projects, and training programs.
    Contact us for further info.
    Updated Date Variants - The Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works (Second Edition) Published in print: 2005 (first ed. 1986)
    1589-91
    The Two Gentlemen of Verona;
    1590-1
    The Taming of the Shrew;
    1590-2
    Henry VI, Part III;
    1591
    Henry VI, Part II;
    1592
    Henry VI, Part I;
    Titus Andronicus;
    1592-3
    Richard III;
    1592-4
    The Comedy of Errors;
    1594-5
    Love's Labour's Lost;
    1595
    Midsummer Night's Dream;
    Richard II;
    Romeo and Juliet;
    1596
    King John;
    1596-7
    Henry IV, Part I;
    The Merchant of Venice;
    1597-8
    Henry IV, Part II;
    The Merry Wives of Windsor;
    1598-9
    Henry V;
    Much Ado About Nothing;
    1599
    Julius Caesar;
    1599-1600
    As You Like It;
    1600-1
    Hamlet;
    1601
    Twelfth Night;
    1602
    Troilus and Cressida;
    1603-4
    Measure for Measure;
    Othello;
    1606
    Antony and Cleopatra;
    Macbeth;
    Timon of Athens;
    1606-7
    All's Well That Ends Well;
    1607
    Pericles;
    1608
    Coriolanus;
    1609-10
    The Winter's Tale;
    1610
    King Lear;
    1610-11
    Cymbeline;
    The Tempest;
    1613
    Henry VIII;
    The Two Noble Kinsmen.

Комментарии • 15

  • @ShakespeareNetwork
    @ShakespeareNetwork  Год назад +2

    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.

  • @blackboymed8744
    @blackboymed8744 21 день назад +1

    I used these audiorecordings to prepare for my exam. Probably the most natural and dramatic I have ever heard.

  • @tallowengart5156
    @tallowengart5156 2 месяца назад +5

    This is just what I've been looking for. A dramatised audio of the play to guide me through writing my thesis chapter on Hamlet ... extremely helpful. Thanks guys

  • @davidworobec1673
    @davidworobec1673 3 года назад +18

    Thank you so much for posting these! This one, I particularly love because it stars one of my favorite actors: Simon Russell Beale in the title role. I had the pleasure of seeing him play this role on stage many years ago. Absolutely brilliant!!

  • @xerxez-dg2dz
    @xerxez-dg2dz 7 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for making these available! Absolutely loved it, each actor couldn’t have been better portrayed.

  • @jesspende421
    @jesspende421 Год назад +5

    Thank you thank you thank you for making these. Hearing it makes a huge difference and the performances are just 💯

  • @LoneStarGemini
    @LoneStarGemini 3 месяца назад +2

    My favorite of Shakespeare’s plays, though the only character I would want to be is Horatio. 💀

  • @johnraymond-pz9bo
    @johnraymond-pz9bo Год назад +1

    Great job!

  • @conradbaker
    @conradbaker Месяц назад +1

    amazing amazing

  • @metalhand199
    @metalhand199 3 дня назад

    Act 1, Scene 1: 0:00 - 7:55
    Act 1, Scene 2: 8:10 - 21:34
    Act 1, Scene 3: 22:01 - 29:13
    Act 1, Scene 4: 29:39 -
    Act 1, Scene 5:
    Act 2, Scene 1:
    Act 2, Scene 2:
    Act 3, Scene 1:
    Act 3, Scene 2:
    Act 3, Scene 3:
    Act 3, Scene 4:
    Act 4, Scene 1:
    Act 4, Scene 2:
    Act 4, Scene 3:
    Act 4, Scene 4:
    Act 4, Scene 5:
    Act 4, Scene 6:
    Act 4, Scene 7:
    Act 5, Scene 1:
    Act 5, Scene 2:
    Act 1, Scene 1: Elsinore. A platform before the castle.
    Act 1, Scene 2: A room of state in the castle.
    Act 1, Scene 3: A room in Polonius' house.
    Act 1, Scene 4: The platform.
    Act 1, Scene 5: Another part of the platform.
    Act 2, Scene 1: A room in POLONIUS' house.
    Act 2, Scene 2: A room in the castle.
    Act 3, Scene 1: A room in the castle.
    Act 3, Scene 2: A hall in the castle.
    Act 3, Scene 3: A room in the castle.
    Act 3, Scene 4: The Queen's closet.
    Act 4, Scene 1: A room in the castle.
    Act 4, Scene 2: Another room in the castle.
    Act 4, Scene 3: Another room in the castle.
    Act 4, Scene 4: A plain in Denmark.
    Act 4, Scene 5: Elsinore. A room in the castle.
    Act 4, Scene 6: Another room in the castle.
    Act 4, Scene 7: Another room in the castle.
    Act 5, Scene 1: A churchyard.
    Act 5, Scene 2: A hall in the castle.

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps 2 года назад +4

    Cast at 3:22:03.

  • @ishmaelforester9825
    @ishmaelforester9825 Год назад

    'Who's there?'
    I love this but the actor playing the Prince needs to be more badass. Hamlet sounds more weak and hysterical than he was written, in my opinion. Hamlet is played as trembling and cowardly when he is supposed to be a tragic hero. He should have more spine; all the lines and speeches land better with more fierceness and bite in them.

    • @drymant
      @drymant 10 месяцев назад +7

      In your opinion. So, you are open to fact that the director's and/or actor's opinion in this interpretation is also correct and that both of you could be right and both of you could be wrong.

    • @goodlookinouthomie1757
      @goodlookinouthomie1757 10 месяцев назад +1

      I agree in that if you've just listened to the Brannagh version then this one is rather less dramatic. But of course the character is always open to interpretation.