This blog started out as Michael Doherty's Personal Library, containing reviews of books that normally don't get reviewed: basically adult and cult books. It was all just a bit of fun, you understand. But when I embarked on a three-year Shakespeare study, Shakespeare basically took over, which is a good thing.
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Shakespeare References in The Doonesbury Chronicles
The Doonesbury
Chronicles by G.B. Trudeau, a collection of the famous comic strip,
contains a few Shakespeare references. Interestingly, they are all references
to Hamlet. The first occurs in a
strip where B.D. is in Vietnam. He shoots his pistol, and from off frame comes “A
touch, I do confess it,” which of course is what Laertes says during his duel
with Hamlet in the fifth act. The second comes when B.D. is back in the states,
and Boopsie confesses that she is now working for McGovern. She tells him, “I
know you’ll probably want to leave me, but B.D., I remember once reading
somewhere, ‘To thy own self be true.’” That is a reference to Polonius’ advice
to Laertes from Act I Scene iii, when he tells him, “This above all : to thine
own self be true.” The third reference comes after Zonker tells Michael about
his articulate plants. In one strip, Zonker says, “If you listen real closely,
you might be able to hear Ed the geranium recite ‘Gunga Din’!” In the next
strip, the plant says, “Alas, poor Gunga, I knew him well!” That, of course, is
a reference to Hamlet’s famous lines from the first scene of Act V: “Alas, poor
Yorick! I knew him, Horatio.”
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Shakespeare Reference in The Best Little Boy In The World
Andrew Tobias’ memoir The
Best Little Boy In the World (published under the pseudonym John Reid) contains
a reference to Hamlet. Reid writes, “You would never catch me electing art instead of science, playing Hamlet instead of
tennis” (p. 31). The Best Little Boy In
The World was originally published in 1973, then amended in 1976. The copy
I read is from 1979, the fourth printing of the Ballantine Books edition.