Crosswords0 min ago
Favourite Shakespearian Play...
20 Answers
What is your favourite play by William Shakespeare? So far, I've only ever studied Othello and I've now started on Macbeth. I've just started realising how good his works actually are!
Which ones do others enjoy? Any ideas which I should read next?
Which ones do others enjoy? Any ideas which I should read next?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by pauliwauli2. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.For reading pleasure alone, then I agree the comedies are great and the histories not so, but I would recommend watching any or all of them. There is a dynamic in watching a performance that can never be repeated by reading the words. Listening to an actor speed up or slow down their delivery; watching one actor speak over another's lines (because in real life we don't wait for the other person to speak, particularly in an argument); watching how gestures amplify the language of the text - that's something special. I saw Simon Russell Beale some years ago as Richard III. In one scene his council sat at a long table while he paced up and down behind them. If you remember the Al Capone scene near the start of The Untouchables where he beats someone to death with a baseball bat, the atmosphere and the tension was exactly the same. You could see each character tense as the footsteps pausd or stopped behind their chair.
The BBC did a pretty good series of most if not all the plays a few years ago and they are probably available from your local library. Give them a whirl, but if you can a live performance is best.
My favourite rendiition of the history plays is the RSC's The Wars of the Roses (many years back, 1960's I think) with Ian Holm as Richard III and David Warner as Henry VI. It was a condensed version of Henry VI, (1, 2 &3 ) and Richard III.
Hamlet and King Lear sound like good follow ups to Othello and Macbeth
The BBC did a pretty good series of most if not all the plays a few years ago and they are probably available from your local library. Give them a whirl, but if you can a live performance is best.
My favourite rendiition of the history plays is the RSC's The Wars of the Roses (many years back, 1960's I think) with Ian Holm as Richard III and David Warner as Henry VI. It was a condensed version of Henry VI, (1, 2 &3 ) and Richard III.
Hamlet and King Lear sound like good follow ups to Othello and Macbeth
I like Maceth simply because I saw a rendition on tv some years ago starring Sean pertwee and set in a modern fashion. I understood it more watching that than any other rendition.
Not that it's scripting was in modern English but just its setting.
I do like Midsummer nights dream because it's so fancyful.
But the other plays just bore me because I'm not smart enough to understand whats being said most of the time.
Not that it's scripting was in modern English but just its setting.
I do like Midsummer nights dream because it's so fancyful.
But the other plays just bore me because I'm not smart enough to understand whats being said most of the time.
I agree with Dundurn about the "Historical" plays when I was doing my GCEs we read Henry iv part one and I must admit I found it pretty hard work untill we had a trip to Chesterfield to see it performed. You just dont dont get the dynamics from just reading a play Since then I've watched quite a few renditions mainly on TV but some live and Henry iv p1 is still my favorite
As you Like It and Twelfth Night. Have seen both of them several times - and none better than performances I have seen at the (now gone but being replaced) Royal Shakespere Theatre in Stratford ..... something unique about watching it there. Can still quote from both and still laugh when I think of some of the comedy moments in them. Equally as good have been some of the open air amatuer performaces I have seen - look out for one in a Park near you this summer....
-- answer removed --
I've read quite a few of his plays but the ones that I saw performed always stood out for me. I studied a lot for O and A levels (going back 20 ahem years now) and Anthony Hopkins playing King Lear has to be my all time favourite. I also saw him and Judi Dench in Antony and Cleopatra which I found really hard going till I saw their performance and then I was completely engrossed. Macbeth is also another one I liked- again I saw a production of this at the National Theatre (where I've seen most of the plays performed) and it just brought it all to life. I don't think you get the essence of his plays unless you see a performance of them. At the end of the day he wrote them for the stage not to be read.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.