The edition I read was the Samuel French publication, the
play revised to the original two acts, and includes a note by David Rabe at the
end.
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.
Friday, September 30, 2016
Shakespeare References in In The Boom Boom Room
Shakespeare references continue to pop up in most of the
things I read. While Shakespeare and his works aren’t actually referred to in
David Rabe’s play In The Boom Boom Room,
Shakespeare is mentioned twice at the beginning of the book. The first
reference: “In The Boom Boom Room was first produced Off-Broadway by Joseph
Papp on December 4, 1974 at The New York Shakespeare Festival Public Theater
under the direction of Robert Hedley” (p. 5). The second reference is in the
description of the set: “The set should be a space with areas and levels
similar to a Shakespearean stage, but all within a metaphor of bars and go-go
dancing” (p. 8).
Monday, September 26, 2016
William Shakespeare’s Tragedy Of The Sith’s Revenge: Star Wars Part The Third by Ian Doescher (2015) Book Review
Revenge Of The Sith
was far and away the best of the three Star
Wars prequels. Ian Doescher combines that screenplay with the work of William
Shakespeare to create William
Shakespeare’s Tragedy Of The Sith’s Revenge: Star Wars Part The Third,
completing the six-book series. As with the other volumes, this book is divided
into five acts and is presented mostly in iambic pentameter.
The prologue is delivered by the Chorus as a sonnet. As
in other books in the series, lines are given to characters that don’t speak in
the films. For example, in this book, the vulture droids speak. And of course,
there are many references to the works of Shakespeare. Anakin Skywalker turns
to Julius Caesar when speaking with
Dooku: “Cowards die many times before their deaths;/The Jedi never taste of
death but once” (pages 23-24). Of course, in Act II scene ii Caesar says, “The
valiant,” not “The Jedi.” Later Anakin has a little play on the title of All’s Well That Ends Well when he says, “Methinks
all’s well – that might have ended worse” (p. 27). He also quotes Romeo: “I
have more care to stay than will to go” (p. 39).
Anakin turns to Titus Andronicus as well: “If I did tell
my sorrows to the stones,/Who, though they cannot answer my distress,/Yet in
some sort are better than the Council,/For that they will not intercept my
tale:/When I do weep, they humbly at my feet/Receive my tears and seem to weep
with me;/And, were they but attired in grave weeds,/Coruscant could afford none
like to these./A stone is soft as wax, the Jedi harder,/A stone is silent and
offendeth not,/Whilst Jedi by decrees doom me to shame” (p. 57). Of course
these lines are slightly different than the original speech by Titus in Act III
Scene i: “Therefore I tell my sorrows to the stones,/Who, though they cannot
answer my distress,/Yet in some sort they are better than the tribunes,/For
that they will not intercept my tale./When I do weep, they humbly at my
feet/Receive my tears, and seem to weep with me;/And, were they but attired in
grave weeds,/Rome could afford no tribune like to these./A stone is as soft wax,
tribunes more hard than stones;/A stone is silent, and offendeth not,/And
tribunes with their tongues doom men to death.”
Palpatine, interestingly, takes the role of Hamlet when
he instructs the players to perform a certain piece for Anakin. He says to
Player 1, “I heard thee speak me a speech once, but ‘twas/Ne’er acted; or, if ‘twas,
not above once” (p. 64). Player 1 plays the role of Oedipus as a Tusken Raider.
Then Anakin use Hamlet’s words about being played “as one would play a pipe”
(p. 67). The story of Darth Plagueis is performed by the players, an
interesting choice. Anakin turns to Hamlet again when talking to Padme: “I have
of late – but wherefore I know not – /Lost all my mirth” (p. 78). And once
Anakin becomes Darth Vader, he quotes from Act IV Scene iii of Timon Of Athens: “the moon’s an arrant
thief,/And her pale fire she snatches from the sun” (p. 104). Vader also turns
to Othello when he goes to the Jedi
temple to dispatch the young Jedi: “I would not kill your unprepared spirits;/No,
heav’n forfend! I would not kill your souls” (p. 116). The first youngling responds
with Desdemona’s line, “Talk you of killing?” Vader also quotes King Lear: “I am a man more sinn’d
against than sinning” (p. 143), before returning once again to Hamlet: “Aye, there’s the rub” (p. 143).
Vader also refers to Macduff’s line toward the end of Macbeth when he says, “But from that home, that mother, was I ta’en,/Untimely
ripp’d from her beloved arms.”
Ian Doescher adds a scene in which two Jedi discuss the
mysterious Order 66, which was missing from the written codes. This is a nice
bit of foreshadowing, which of course is interesting, because it’s unlikely
that anyone who reads this isn’t already familiar with the Star Wars films. And for that reason, the foreshadowing becomes
rather humorous.
In addition to Shakespeare, this book makes some other
playful references. For example, Mace says, “Prithee, listen not to how the
black/Snake moaneth unto thee” (p. 100). Black
Snake Moan stars Samuel L. Jackson, the actor who plays Mace in the Star Wars films. Mace
then says, “A time to kill hath, in its time, arriv’d.” (A Time To Kill is another film starring Samuel L. Jackson.)
William
Shakespeare’s Tragedy Of The Sith’s Revenge: Star Wars Part The Third was
published in 2015 by Quirk Books.
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
William Shakespeare’s The Clone Army Attacketh: Star Wars Part The Second by Ian Doescher (2015) Book Review
Attack Of The
Clones had possibly the weakest script of the six Star Wars films (yes, six, as I don’t count that awful Force Awakens movie), but combining that
material with Shakespeare certainly helps a great deal. For example, it
improves upon those awful lines about sand being coarse. As with previous
books, The Clone Army Attacketh is
divided into five acts and is presented largely in iambic pentameter.
The prologue is delivered by the Chorus as a sonnet, and
its first line contains a reference to Macbeth:
“All hurly-burly goes the galaxy” (p. 7). In the first scene of Macbeth, the second witch says, “When the
hurlyburly’s done.” Padme’s first line is the first line from The Merchant Of Venice (in that play,
spoken by Antonio): “In sooth, I know not why I am so sad” (p. 10). This book
jokes lightly with the fact that in the film Anakin was played by a different
actor than in The Phantom Menace
while Padme was played again by Natalie Portman (with only three years between
films): “Though I feel I have ag’d but little since/I last did see him, back on
small Naboo,/The change in him doth tell of many years/That evidently fill’d
the interim” (p. 18).
As in The Phantom
Of Menace, here Jar Jar Binks, when left alone, speaks with eloquence, his
clown speech a sort of disguise. “I chose, aye, long ago, to play this role/And
I shall play the part unto the end./What would they say if Jar Jar suddenly/Spoke
as they do, or show’d an aspect wise?/Why, they would think me mad e’en as I
spoke/More sanely than I ever did before” (p. 22). And later Jar Jar even
refers to Hamlet’s speech to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern: “They would play me
as though I were a pipe,/With stops and whistles made for their employ” (p.
113). As in earlier volumes of this series, characters who did not speak in the
films are given speeches here, such as Zam Wesell’s probe droid. Also, the
Reek, Acklay and Nexu speak, acting as the three witches from Macbeth (the Acklay has the “hurlyburly’s
done” line).
This book contains plenty of direct references to
Shakespeare’s works. Palpatine, in an aside, says, “What fools these Jedi be!”
(p. 39), which is a play on Puck’s “Lord, what fools these mortals be!” from A Midsummer Night’s Dream. And Rumor
later refers to Puck when he says “to my puckish will shall he be bent” (p.
62).
The love story between Anakin and Padme (one of the film’s
weaknesses) makes use of The Taming Of
The Shrew. Anakin says, “Come, come, thou wasp: thine hidden secret shout”
(p. 72). Padme responds, “If I be waspish, best beware my sting.” Anakin says, “My
remedy is, then, to pluck it out.” This, of course, refers to the famous wooing
scene of the play. (Anakin will return to Shrew
later when he says, “He that knows better how to tame a beast,/Now let him
speak; ‘tis charity to show.”) The Anakin and Padme love story makes references
to other plays as well, including The Two
Gentlemen Of Verona, when Anakin says “What light is light, if Padme be not
seen?/What joy is joy, if Padme be not by?” (p. 74). (In the play, Valentine
says, “What light is light, if Silvia be not seen?/What joy is joy ,if Silvia
be not by?”) Anakin also quotes Love’s
Labour’s Lost, saying, “They are the books, the arts, the academes,/That
show, contain, and nourish all the world” (p. 75), words spoken by Berowne in
Act IV. Anakin also borrows a line from Lysander from A Midsummer Night’s Dream: “The course of true love never did run
smooth” (p. 77). Padme gets into the game too, using the words of Rosalind from
As You Like It: “I pray thee, do not
fall in love with me,/For I am falser than vows made in wine” (p. 78), though
actually Rosalind says, “I pray you, do not fall in love with me.” She also
quotes Viola from Twelfth Night: “O,
time! Thou must untangle this, not I;/It is too hard a knot for me t’untie” (p.
79).
At Shmi’s death, Anakin borrows much of Macbeth’s famous speech,
saying, “My mother, O! She should have died hereafter,/There would have been a
time for such a word./Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow/Creeps in this petty
pace from day to day/To the last syllable of recorded time,/And all our
yesterdays have lighted fools/The way to dusty death. On, on, lightsaber!” (p.
101). Of course, Macbeth says, “Out, out, brief candle,” not “On, on
lightsaber.” And Owen, upon learning of Shmi’s death, sings a funeral dirge that
might remind you of Ophelia’s first song of Act IV. Anakin soon quotes from Othello, mentioning “the green-eyed
monster, jealousy” (p. 106). And then from Hamlet,
“they did make love to this employment” (p. 106).
C-3PO also refers to Hamlet when he says, “O, what a
piece of work’s humanity –/How infinite in faculty! In form/And moving, how
express and admirable!” (p. 121). C-3PO then acts the part of Mercutio from Romeo And Juliet, saying, “Aye, ask for
me/Tomorrow, you shall find me a scrap droid!” (p. 123). (Mercutio says, “ask
for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man.”) C-3PO even acts as Bottom
from A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
saying: “Have they all stolen hence, left me asleep?/R2, I’ve had a most rare
vision, yea:/I’ve had a dream, past wit of droid to say/What dream it was: aye,
I were but an akk,/If I did go about t’expound this dream./Methought I was –
yet no droid can tell what./Methought I was – and too, methought I had – /But I
am a patched fool, if I/Will offer to say what methought I had./The eyes of
droids have never heard, the ears/Of droids have never seen, droids’
circuitry/Not able been to sense, nor programming/Conceive, nor e’en droids’
core to make report,/What my dream was. I’ll speak no more of it” (p. 143). And,
if you hadn’t caught wind of the reference, R2 adds, “It seems the droid hath
bottom’d out his sense” (p. 143).
Even the stage directions bring to mind certain plays, as
Doescher writes, “Obi-Wan hides behind an arras” (p. 95), making us think of
poor Polonius. Ian Doescher adds a scene between two Jedi, a scene in which he
plays with the idea of these stories being told at some point in the future in
a “galaxy far, far away” (p. 110). Doescher mixes in other, non-Shakespearian
references as well. For example, he has C-3PO say, “We’re not in Tatooine,/Not
anymore: O, there’s no place like home!” That’s obviously a reference to The Wizard Of Oz. And at one point
Obi-Wan Kenobi actually refers to a popular Kenny Rogers song: “’Tis good to
know when holding maketh sense,/’Tis better yet to know when one should fold,/’Tis
best to know when one should walk away,/Yet now the time hath come for me to
run!” And if you might have not have caught the reference yet, he adds, “I’ll
join the others – yea, no gambler I!” (p. 133).
William Shakespeare’s
The Clone Army Attacketh: Star Wars Part The Second was published in 2015
by Quirk Books.
Monday, September 12, 2016
Shakespeare References in Can’t Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes The Way We Think And Feel
Jean Kilbourne’s Can’t
Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes The Way We Think And Feel (originally
published as Deadly Persuasion: Why Women
And Girls Must Fight The Addictive Power Of Advertising) contains several
Shakespeare references. Even the cover contains a Shakespeare reference, as it
lists the foreword as being “By Mary Pipher, Author of Reviving Ophelia.” In that foreword, Pipher writes, “They need to
learn not only that all that glitters is not gold, but also that it is
sometimes poison” (p. 13). That is a reference to The Merchant Of Venice, when the gold casket is opened and the
message inside is read. That message begins, “All that glisters is not gold.”
The next reference is to All’s Well That Ends Well. Jean Kilbourne writes, “Writer and
cartoonist Mark O’Donnell suggests that someday there will be tie-ins in
literature as well, such as ‘All’s Well That Ends With Pepsi,’ ‘The Old Man,
Coppertone and the Sea,’ and ‘Nausea, and Periodic Discomfort Relief’” (p. 61).
A little later Kilbourne writes, “And an ad for shoes says, ‘If you feel the
need to be smarter and more articulate, read the complete works of Shakespeare.
If you like who you are, here are your shoes’” (p. 65). Then: “‘Deny yourself
an obvious love affair?’ asks an Audi ad, featuring a picture of the car. ‘Didn’t
you read Romeo & Juliet?’” (p.
98). Yes, Shakespeare is mentioned in several advertising campaigns. Kilbourne
writes: “A 1997 Lexus campaign, introduced just before Halloween, looks like an
ad for a slasher film. In one version, the car emerges, as if from flames, from
a forest of bare, blackened trees against an orange sky. The copy, in the
script of witchcraft and alluding to Shakespeare’s Macbeth, says: ‘Distant thunder, cold as stone,/a V8 screams down
from its throne./One by one, each car succumbs./Something wicked/This way comes’”
(p. 105). It is interesting that the witch’s line “Something wicked this way
comes” is presented as two lines in the ad. The book contains another reference
to Macbeth: “Alas, the parody ‘Absolut
Impotence’ comes closer to the real relationship between alcohol and sex.
Perhaps Shakespeare put it best when he said that drink ‘provokes the desire,
but it takes away the performance’” (p. 249). That is a reference to the Porter’s
speech. In the notes at the end of the book, Kilbourne writes: “‘Perhaps Shakespeare put it best’:
Shakespeare, W. Macbeth. Act 2, Scene
3” (p. 329). The book also contains a reference to The Tempest: “O brave new world, where Addiction is Freedom and
Conformity is Rebellion” (p. 310).
There are even a couple of Shakespeare references in the bibliography.
The first: “Mohl, B. (1999, January 13). Lend them your ear, and your call is
free. Boston Globe, A1, A10” (p.
343). “Lend them your ear” is of course a reference to the beginning of Antony’s
famous speech from Julius Caesar. The
second is another reference to Reviving Ophelia: “Pipher, M. (1994). Reviving Ophelia: saving the selves of
adolescent girls. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons” (p. 345).
By the way, unrelated to Shakespeare, but related to
another passion of mine, Mary Pipher, in the foreword, writes: “As songwriter
Glen Brown wrote, we are all living in ‘one big town’” (p. 13). She meant, of
course, Greg Brown, who has a song (and an album) titled “One Big Town,” and a
line from that song goes, “One big town/We're
living in one big town.” You’d think as this book was previously published
under another title, that by now she would have corrected that. Oh well. If you
get a chance to see Greg Brown in concert, you should definitely check him out.
Can’t Buy My Love:
How Advertising Changes The Way We Think And Feel was published in 1999.
The edition I read was the Touchstone Edition from 2000.
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