WHO’S A GOOD BOY???
Crab is easily the best thing about The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
WHO’S A GOOD BOY???
Crab is easily the best thing about The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
Today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare highlight is one of the most epic and memorable experiences in my entire theatre-going history.
12 hours of solid history plays. I was in heaven. I think some part of me is still chasing the high of this incredible experience.
‘Nuff said.
There are very few Shakespeare-related opinions that I will completely reject out of hand. Enjoyment of Shakespeare is wonderfully subjective, and if you happen to like or dislike different productions, actors, and interpretations than me, that’s totally fine! Don’t care for Henry IV, part 1? That’s allowed! Enjoyed the Ethan Hawke film of Cymbeline? Wow, I’m glad someone did. You do you! Think it’s ok when productions of The Winter’s Tale don’t actually show the bear? No problem, everyone is entitled to be wrong sometimes!
But if you don’t like Emma Thompson’s Beatrice, it’s all over between us.
Today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare installment celebrates one of the most pointless words in Shakespeare!
There are several really fun ways to flex on fellow Shakespeare geeks. This is one of them. I’ll get to at least one other later this month.
My working premise for this 30 Days of Shakespeare project was to highlight Shakespeare-related moments that bring me joy. Today’s pick doesn’t really bring me “joy”, but it’s still worthy of inclusion!
If it wouldn’t alarm people, I would totally go around randomly shouting “SPEAK HANDS FOR ME!” It’s such a great line.
One of the things I love to do as a Shakespeare geek is seek out behind-the-scenes stories of productions. While I enjoy the finished product that I see onstage, I also very much want to know HOW that product was created. As someone who has never been involved in acting or directing, much of it remained a mystery to me… until I saw today’s 30 Days of Shakespeare pick.
Let me be clear: I very much don’t believe that Shakespeare needs to be “unlocked” for you by some white man in order for you to “properly” understand and appreciate him. Nor do I believe Barton’s style of playing Shakespeare is the only way he should be played. However, the collective experience of this amazing group of actors, crystalized through Barton’s knowledge and insights, legitimately increased my appreciation of Shakespeare’s text and helped me understand a lot about how contemporary actors can bring his words to life.
If you haven’t seen Playing Shakespeare yet, I strongly encourage you to check out the full series on YouTube. The picture quality is rather fuzzy… much like John Barton.
My celebration of Shakespeare Month continues with this charming (?) little throwaway line from Hamlet.
Will never not be morbidly amusing.
Hey everyone! It’s Shakespeare’s birth/death month, and I wanted to do something special to celebrate it this year. As you’ve probably noticed, I’ve been having a really hard time creating new comics lately. I think the <gestures vaguely to indicate pandemic/impeding world war/social injustice/toxic politics/apocalyptic climate> has been getting to me and creating comics has just felt frustratingly impossible and pointless.
But the fact of the matter is that I really like creating comics and I feel empty when I don’t create comics. So, in an attempt to reconnect with what inspired me to start creating comics in the first place, every day this month (hopefully) I will be drawing something from the Shakespearean world that brings me joy. I’m starting things off with one of my earliest Shakespearean memories.
If you want to watch the charge, it starts around 1:37 on this video. Make sure you have the sound on.
If you’ve got moments from the Shakespeare world that bring you joy — a performance, a character, a line, a fun fact, anything goes — leave a comment below! Let’s all share the Shakespeare joy this month.