As You Like It (Lecture 1 of 2)

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  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2017

Комментарии • 29

  • @imogen.magenta
    @imogen.magenta 5 лет назад +3

    Very insightful clear and helpful. Thank you

  • @brendoncampbell6457
    @brendoncampbell6457 4 года назад +13

    Enjoyed the lecture very much. Thanks for posting. But must take exception to the speaker's dismissal of the 1936 movie as being not very good. The actress playing Rosalind is wonderful (Elizabeth Bergner?). Missing some scenes from the play, but I thought the film really rather good. Check it out on YT.

    • @nativevirginian8344
      @nativevirginian8344 Год назад

      It’s not the best version available, keep looking!

    • @brendoncampbell6457
      @brendoncampbell6457 Год назад

      @@nativevirginian8344 Thanks. Yes, I will :)

    • @Twentythousandlps
      @Twentythousandlps 10 месяцев назад +1

      BBC TV version with Helen Mirren is preferable, on Internet Archive.

    • @brendoncampbell6457
      @brendoncampbell6457 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you. I will check it out. :)@@Twentythousandlps

  • @annademenok1824
    @annademenok1824 5 лет назад +26

    ”As You Like It” only starts on the 26th minute

  • @goodlookinouthomie1757
    @goodlookinouthomie1757 11 месяцев назад +1

    I live in Stratford on Avon. Not in the town itself, but in the district. The town is even now surrounded by rural countryside. Warwickshire/Oxfordshire; this is is also Tolkien's country also of course. I have cause to work in London occasionally and I feel entirely our of my comfort zone. Actually I hate that place. I describe myself as a hobbit who belongs in the shire, not the city. So I entirely identify with W.S. in feeling like a bumpkin. _How do we keep them in the farm when they have seen Paris?_ Well I'll choose the farm all day long.

  • @nativevirginian8344
    @nativevirginian8344 Год назад

    I just watched the Olivier version, I thought it was pretty bad too, and I have not even read the play. I have better taste than I thought!

  • @TheWhitehiker
    @TheWhitehiker Год назад

    Paul on the beam!

  • @martind349
    @martind349 2 года назад +1

    49:56 These are both Will

  • @sukrucetin9677
    @sukrucetin9677 5 лет назад +1

    sukruuspeare yea it's me :)

  • @jamesduggan7200
    @jamesduggan7200 4 года назад +1

    Listening to these out of order it was confusing which play is discussed before the lecture on AYLI. I have some disagreements with what I heard respecting R&J, but i'll write those down in the appropriate comment section. The most I can say here now is that we shouldn't automatically accept as true self-serving speeches.

  • @sumzypissa4999
    @sumzypissa4999 4 года назад

    37:44

  • @charlespeterson3798
    @charlespeterson3798 5 лет назад +1

    The measure of this man's greatness is his irrelevance. Things change fast.

    • @MrGoogster
      @MrGoogster Год назад

      Who, Cantor or Shakespeare?

  • @andrea-kb9zb
    @andrea-kb9zb Год назад +3

    I respect your insights but the comment about the speaking ability of the actors Rosalind wasn't appreciated.

    • @diogenes3300
      @diogenes3300 Год назад +4

      Her accent is clearly distracting and she frequently doesn't seem to understand what she's saying. He wasn't making an insensitive comment; it was obviously a bad casting decision.

    • @nativevirginian8344
      @nativevirginian8344 Год назад +1

      Get the chip off your shoulder and learn to think critically. I only had a passing acquaintance with the play, & thought the same thing about the Rosalind in the Olivier version. She was French & her reading of Shakespeare was pretty bad.

    • @goodlookinouthomie1757
      @goodlookinouthomie1757 11 месяцев назад

      I know right.... because speaking ability in a relevant language is the last thing we should look for in an actor.

  • @provideme1000
    @provideme1000 2 года назад +1

    the lecturer's sometimes decent insights are diminished by his privileged and cheerful insularity. for many too many people, world wide, the world is horrible, and more than horrible, not just because of the vicissitudes of the natural world but because of the brutality and inhumanity and malice of politics, i.e., the manipulation of power without regard to people.

    • @TheWhitehiker
      @TheWhitehiker Год назад

      please!

    • @antonbruckner7329
      @antonbruckner7329 Год назад +1

      Edgy goth bro

    • @goodlookinouthomie1757
      @goodlookinouthomie1757 11 месяцев назад

      Seems to me he acknowledges all this stuff. He can hardly help it, since the theme is often taken up by Shakespeare.

    • @lioragal5219
      @lioragal5219 4 месяца назад

      He was such a humble, knowledgeable, and endearing man. He made Shakespeare exciting and relevant.