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Clockwise from top left: Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, The Merchant of Venice, Othello, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Macbeth, Much Ado About Nothing, The Tempest - all currently on BBC iPlayer |
April 23rd
Every year (from 23rd March which is my Mum’s birthday) I start to
anticipate 23rd April – yes, St George’s day, but more profoundly for me, the day when Shakespeare died and the day when he was likely born (given that he was baptised on 26th April 1564 and the common practice in Elizabethan times was to baptise three days after the birth.) In the front room in my childhood home there was
the family Bible, a set of encyclopedias and a Complete Works of William Shakespeare, complete with Fuseli plates. I never thought to ask my parents (and it is now too late) how Shakespeare got into our house. But the book proved, for me, a doorway to a
surprising, inspiring, mind-bending landscape of love, friendship, murder, passion, betrayal, pride, violence, jealousy, redemption, tenderness and magic. Every story was told with
memorable language,
sometimes exquisite poetry, sometimes
impenetrable jokes or confusing grammar; but, despite some difficult bits, on every page,
certain words and phrases bounced out and tickled my fancy…. What a pleasure it has been to revisit some of the productions I’ve seen on the
BBC iPlayer (Shakespeare in Quarantine) or as part of the
NTLive YouTube broadcasts.
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NT Live screenings of: Twelfth Night and Antony and Cleopatra |
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