My Shakespeare study, which began in earnest in 2010,
will likely last the rest of my life. There will always interesting books on the subject, as well as new productions and film adaptations to enjoy. Here are notes
on a few of the books I’ve read recently.
William Shakespeare’s The Merry Rise Of
Skywalker, Star Wars Part The Ninth by Ian Doescher – I’ve been a fan
of
Star Wars since 1977, and was
excited when Ian Doescher began combining that series with another passion of
mine, the work of William Shakespeare. However, when Disney bought
Star Wars and destroyed it, my interest
in any new
Star Wars films
evaporated. After the pointless
The Force
Awakens, I stopped watching. My interest in Shakespeare, on the other hand,
has only increased. And I’ve continued to enjoy Ian Doescher’s series of books.
While I never saw
The Rise Of Skywalker,
I did work on it as a production assistant for one day of re-shoots. (Worst
craft service ever.) Anyway, the book begins with a Chorus, whose speech is a
sonnet. The rest of the book is divided into five acts, as were Shakespeare’s
plays, and presented largely in iambic pentameter. As with the other books in
the series, there are references and nods to Shakespeare’s works. For example,
the first line of the first scene is “Two rivals, both alike in dignity” (p.
10), a nod to the first line of
Romeo And
Juliet, “Two households, both alike in dignity.” That line is repeated
throughout Kylo Ren’s first speech. When someone asks Rey’s family name, she
says: “I’m call’d plain Rey./And bonny Rey and sometimes Rey the curst” (p.
38), borrowing from Petruchio’s lines to Kate in
The Taming Of The Shrew. C-3PO uses the lines of Othello, saying “It
is the cause, it is the cause, my soul” (p. 72). Zorii borrows from Hamlet,
telling Poe “Methinks it is a consummation, Poe,/Devoutly to be wish’d” (p.
75). Kylo Ren also quotes Hamlet, saying “The cat will mew, and dog will have
his day” (p. 93). Poe borrow from
Love’s
Labour’s Lost: “Thou art the books, the arts, the academes,/That show,
contain, and nourish al the world” (p. 102). After Leia dies, Maz utters a
variation of Horatio’s line, “Goodnight, sweet princess” (p. 111). Palpatine
chooses as his last words part of a speech from Aaron in
Titus Andronicus: “If one good deed in all my life I did,/I do
repent it from my very soul” (p. 153). Then Rey and Ben’s final scene together
borrows heavily from the end of
Romeo And
Juliet. The book also contains some illustrations.
William Shakespeare’s The Merry Rise Of Skywalker, Star Wars Part The
Ninth was published in 2020.
Shakespeare In A Divided America: What Is
Plays Tell Us About Our Past And Future by James Shapiro – This country
took a nosedive into stupidity and corruption in 2016 when it elected the
racist conman Donald Trump. The introduction of James Shapiro’s new book touches
upon that production of
Julius Caesar
held in New York’s Central Park the summer after Donald Trump took office.
Shapiro writes, “Like Trump, Caesar seemed easily persuaded by the last person
who speaks to him” (p. xxii). And he too is subject to flattery. But this book
is not just about the current division in our country. It is a look at
different and specific points in the nation’s history, and how Shakespeare
relates to those moments. The first chapter, for example, is about
miscegenation in the 1830s, and of course relates
Othello to that subject. The second chapter, about the idea of
manifest destiny, also deals with
Othello,
and a production put on by the military in which Ulysses S. Grant rehearsed the
part of Desdemona, and about female actors portraying Romeo in
Romeo And Juliet. The third chapter
recounts the deadly riot that occurred in New York over a performance of
Macbeth by William Macready.
Interestingly, many riots of that time originated at theatres, and Shapiro
explains why. The fourth chapter deals with the assassination of Abraham
Lincoln by actor John Wilkes Booth, and Lincoln’s passion for certain plays and
speeches by Shakespeare. Shapiro writes, “If any American reader of Shakespeare
has truly felt – through meditating on the tormented words of guilt-ridden
characters like Macbeth and Claudius – the deep connection between the nation’s
own primal sin, slavery, and the terrible cost, both collective and personal,
exacted by it, it was Lincoln” (p. 113). The fifth chapter deals with immigration
in the early 1900s and the relation of
The
Tempest to the subject, including the belief that in the play Shakespeare
was writing about America. The sixth chapter deals with marriage and women’s
place in the work force at the end of World War II, here related to
The Taming Of The Shrew and
Kiss Me, Kate. The seventh chapter uses
Shakespeare In Love to discuss thoughts
on adultery. The final chapter takes us to that 2017 production of
Julius Caesar mentioned in the
introduction.
Shakespeare In A Divided
America: What Is Plays Tell Us About Our Past And Future was published in
2020.
Shakespeare Insult Generator by Barry
Kraft – This book is a collection of words used by characters in
Shakespeare’s plays to insult one another. It is organized so that there is one
word per card, and three cards per “page,” two adjectives and one noun, so that
you can flip various cards for many different combinations. On the back of each
card is a brief definition of the word. Also two symbols are used, one to
indicate words that were first used in print by William Shakespeare (and likely
coined by him), and one to indicate words that Shakespeare employed only once
in his works. I wish the author also included the name of the play, and perhaps
the act, scene and line numbers, where each word can be found, particularly for
words that were used only once. But it is a fun book, and a useful one,
particularly in these strange days when half the population is made up of
lumpish, barren-spirited miscreants. This book was published in 2014.
Deadpool: The World’s Greatest Comic
Magazine Volume 7: Deadpool Does Shakespeare by Gerry Duggan and Ian
Doescher – This book collects three issues of
Deadpool. Only the last of the three is related to Shakespeare. It
is titled “Much Ado About Deadpool,” and it was written by Ian Doescher, the
person responsible for the Shakespeare
Star
Wars book series. It is presented in five acts. The first page is a drawing
of Deadpool as Hamlet, holding Yorick’s skull, but pointing a gun at it with
his other hand. Each act has a title, the first being “Something’s Rotten in
the State of Deadpool.” Deadpool is confused about his location, and about his
inability to cease speaking in iambic pentameter. When William Shakespeare
himself starts to explain the situation, Deadpool shoots him with a crossbow.
The ghost of Deadpool’s father shows up to urge him to revenge, for which
Deadpool is of course ready and willing. The second act is titled “Wherefore
Art Thou Deadpool?” And, yes, Deadpool has stumbled into
Romeo And Juliet, with a bit of
The
Taming Of The Shrew thrown in for good measure. And there is a play on the
word “wherefore.” Soon
Macbeth is
mixed into the batch. Act III is titled “King Leery,” and yes, Deadpool finds
himself speaking with King Lear, not the king he was seeking to kill. Lear manages
to behead Deadpool before being chased off by a bear (yes, a reference to
Shakespeare’s most famous stage direction from
The Winter’s Tale). Act IV is titled “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
are Deadpool,” and it begins with an appearance by Prospero, followed by an
appearance by the Porter from
Macbeth.
The fifth act is titled “All’s Well That Dies Well.” And, as you might imagine,
there is a whole lot of death.
Deadpool:
The World’s Greatest Comic Magazine Volume 7: Deadpool Does Shakespeare was
published in 2017.
Shakespeare: The Truth by Patrick Barlow
– This is a humorous book that takes the facts of Shakespeare’s life as we know
them and plays with them. For example, Patrick Barlow exaggerates the
significance of his father’s work with gloves: “In fact, many whole plays were
inspired by his father’s obsession with constantly inventing new kinds of
gloves. In particular, the woollen glove which inspired
The Winter’s Tale (see Chapter III, ‘Early Days In Sheep Street’),
the measuring glove which inspired
Measure
For Measure, the animal-handling glove which inspired
The Taming Of The Shrew and, of course, the rubber glove which
inspired
Pericles – Prince Of Tyre”
(pages 6-7). He also plays with the fact that Anne Hathaway was older than
Shakespeare, having Shakespeare’s mother ask, “But is she not about
forty-eight?” (p. 20). There are also plays on the idea of the foul papers and
on the fact that few stage directions are included in Shakespeare’s plays. And
of course much is made of the so-called lost years, which the author claims
Shakespeare spent in Tibet. Sprinkled throughout the book are playful fake
quotes from Shakespeare. In particular, I like the one that starts the chapter
about the Globe: “Oh that this too, too wooden Globe would melt!” (p. 91). It
plays both on
Hamlet and on the fact
that the Globe burned down. Patrick Barlow also attempts to improve some
Shakespeare’s works, offering, for example, a new version of Julius Caesar in
which Julius Caesar does not die. The book includes illustrations. The drawing
depicting the end of the Spanish Armada made me laugh.
Shakespeare: The Truth was published in 1993.
The Age Of Shakespeare by Frank Kermode
– This book contains information on Shakespeare’s work and the English world
during his time, including the changing religious views. Regarding the
so-called “mystery plays,” Kermode writes: “Solemnity was mixed with broad
humor, and some stock characters became famous – when Hamlet tells the
traveling actors not to out-Herod Herod, he is alluding to the traditional rant
of that character in the Corpus Christi plays” (p. 17). Kermode also stresses
the importance of the line of succession, and gets a bit into Essex and that
infamous performance of
Richard The
Second. The book also gets into the process of acting itself and the likely
changes in style from the time of Shakespeare’s earliest works to the time of
Hamlet and
Macbeth. The plays themselves are also discussed. Regarding
The Taming Of The Shrew, Kermode reminds
us that “It needs to be read or watched without reference to modern feminism,
and one should also remember that the taming of Katherina takes place in a play
within a play, which puts the story at another remove from reality” (pages
78-79). He talks about how the entire thing is like the training of a hawk. “Katherina
behaves like an untrained hawk, ‘bating’ (a mad rush of angry activity,
endangering the precious integrity of the feathers) and generally resisting the
trainer, until at last tamed into the condition of a model wife, returning to
the glove of the trainer without the aid of the creance. One needs to see the
wife-taming in the light of this elaborate joke, which would have been
appreciated by the groundlings as easily as a modern audience would accept a
comic football metaphor” (p. 79). Regarding
The
Merchant Of Venice, Kermode writes: “Sometimes it is hard to see in which
direction our sympathies are being solicited: for example, are we expected to
approve of the conduct of Jessica, a thief and a runaway?” (p. 97). And
regarding
Measure For Measure,
Kermode writes: “It is set in Vienna, but Vienna is a surrogate for London, and
the inns and brothels of the low-life scenes belong to Southwark, right next to
the theater” (pages 142-143).
The Age Of
Shakespeare was published in 2003. I read the Modern Library Edition of
2004.
In Possession Of Shakespeare: Writing Into
Nothing edited by Theresia de Vroom – This is an interesting and
unusual book. As editor Theresia de Vroom indicates in the introduction, it “contains
essays, poems, autobiographical reflections, and a musical composition” (p. 2),
by writers who have been influenced in one way or another by Shakespeare. But
the pieces aren’t all necessarily about Shakespeare. She also explains the book’s
subtitle: “It is an evocation of Cordelia’s ‘nothing,’ which defines the
essential inability of the bond between a child and her father to be named. The
resulting silence is a void that is immediately filled by apocalyptic tragedy.
All the contributors to this book are writing into nothing, into the inexpressible,
and the sometimes tragic” (p. 6). Before each piece is a quoted passage from a
Shakespeare play, most lines coming from
King
Lear. And at the end is a musical adaptation of
King Lear that focuses on the relationship between Lear and
Cordelia. The book includes a compact disc of that adaptation, with Wole
Soyinka providing the voice of Lear. There are also illustrations throughout
the book.
In Possession Of Shakespeare:
Writing Into Nothing was published in 2012.