Google apps
Main menu

Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

1 – 4 of 4
Blogger Thursday said...

When in London 2 years ago, I saw both Julius Caesar and Anthony and Cleopatra at the Globe. The acting in A&C was mediocre, but the people in JC were brilliant, except for the unfortunate fellow who played Brutus. Luke Thompson was particularly notable as Marc Anthony.

23 July 2016 at 07:32

Blogger 360 Decrees said...

We are still being plied with 'gimmick' stagings of operas and Shakespeare plays (i.e. Julius Caesar set in fascist Italy) after so many decades.

One time a gimmick worked for me was in the BBC's 1982 production of the War of the Roses tetralogy, part of their early-80s effort to stage "all the Shakespeare plays".

The stage settings were abstract structures suggesting 15th-century wooden buildings. These were unobtrusive and the viewer's mind filled in the rest of the setting; the costumes were appropriate to the period. The cast included Mark "Zaphod Beeblebrox" Wing-Davey as the Earl of Warwick ("...live how we can, yet die we must."), Julia Foster as Queen Margaret (the tiger's heart wrapped in a woman's hide), Peter Benson as Henry VI, a John-Travolta-like Brian Protheroe as Edward IV, the Dudley-Moore-like Ron Cook as Richard III, a scruffy Trevor Peacock as Jack Cade, and a blazing-faced Arthur Cox as the combative, ill-fated Lord Clifford. After each actor's character died, the actor would soon reappear in a small part, to suggest the operation of a small troupe.

It was televised in installments and I, who had put off buying a Shakespeare compendium for years, was compelled to rush to the local used-book store to buy one and see how it would turn out.

The histories contain the most prose-like dialog of his plays and can be a good starter for the beginning reader-viewer. Once he is comfortable with the rhetorical style it is easier to advance to the more-poetic tragedies.

23 July 2016 at 23:31

Anonymous Hmmm said...

Professional actors need a phenomenal memory to learn their parts and moves and to avoid mistakes

Is the overall long-term decline in intelligence a factor in the decline in ability to do this? Decline in good acting thus provides further support for your hypothesis that intelligence has declined?

25 July 2016 at 14:10

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@H - There is a causal relationship between intelligence and learning ability - and the rapidity with which Shakespeare's company could learn new plays was phenomenal. Also, the Elizabethan theatre audiences seem to have been amazingly intelligent and attentive, when the nature of the drama is considered. So I personally do expect there has been an element of decline of intelligence at work here... But the data are rather 'soft' and the samples were hard to match, so it wouldn't impress a skeptic! Let's just say it is 'consistent with the hypothesis' of a large intelligence decline since 1800.

25 July 2016 at 17:01