Anne Rice’s novel
Interview
With The Vampire contains a few Shakespeare references. The first reference
is to Hamlet’s most famous soliloquy. In the section where Louis describes his
limited training as a vampire, Rice writes, “I was reacting too much as if the ‘mortal
coil’ had not been shaken off” (p. 30). The next reference is also to
Hamlet, this time to Horatio’s speech
after Hamlet dies: “‘Good night, sweet prince,’ said Lestat ‘and here’s your
fifty dollars’” (p. 71), a humorous variation on “Good night, sweet prince/And
flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.”
This book also contains a reference to Othello, and specifically to the moment
when Othello is about to kill Desdemona. Rice writes: “‘Put out the light…and
then put out the light,’ Lestat said softly. And then he took her into his arms
like a struggling moth and sank his teeth into her” (p. 79). Clearly Lestat is
a fan of Shakespeare’s works, which surprises Louis. Rice writes, “He loved the
great figure we cut, the three of us in our box at the new French Opera House
or the Theatre d’Orleans, to which we went as often as possible, Lestat having
a passion for Shakespeare which surprised me” (p. 100). There is also a
reference to King Lear, with Rice
writing, “And suppose the vampire who made you knew nothing, and the vampire
who made that vampire knew nothing, and the vampire before him knew nothing,
and so it goes back and back, nothing proceeding from nothing, until there is
nothing!” (p. 121). In Act I, after Cordelia answers, “Nothing,” Lear says, “Nothing
will come of nothing.”
Annie Rice also refers to Macbeth. She writes: “He always wanted me along. I think I must
have seen Macbeth with him fifteen
times. We went to every performance, even those by amateurs, and Lestat would
stride home afterwards, repeating the lines to me and even shouting out to
passers-by with an outstretched finger, ‘Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow!’
until they skirted him as if he were drunk” (p. 129). The “Tomorrow and
tomorrow and tomorrow” line comes from my favorite speech of that play.
Interview With The
Vampire was published in 1976. The copy I read was the Ballantine Books
edition, which was first published in May of 1977. The copy I read was the
thirtieth printing, from October of 1989.