Players of Shakespeare 

Players of Shakespeare 

Players of Shakespeare edited by Robert Smallwood The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, ,UK West th Street, New York, –, USA Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, , Australia Ruiz de Alarc´on , Madrid, Spain Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town , South Africa http://www.cambridge.org C Cambridge University Press This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge Typeface Plantin ./ pt. System LATEX ε [] A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress cataloguing in publication data Players of Shakespeare ; edited by Robert Smallwood. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. . Shakespeare, William, – – Stage history – – . Shakespeare, William, – – Characters. Theater – England – History – th century. .Royal Shakespeare Company. Acting. Title: Players of Shakespeare five. Smallwood, R. L. (Robert Leo) . Royal Shakespeare Company. . –dc hardback Contents List of illustrations page vi Preface ix Robert Smallwood – Introduction Philip Voss – Prospero in The Tempest Ian Hughes – Dromio of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors Aidan McArdle – Puck (and Philostrate) in A Midsummer Night’s Dream Zo¨e Waites and Matilda Ziegler – Viola and Olivia in Twelfth Night Alexandra Gilbreath – Hermione in The Winter’s Tale Antony Sher – Leontes in The Winter’s Tale, and Macbeth David Tennant – Romeo in Romeo and Juliet Michael Pennington – Timon of Athens Simon Russell Beale – Hamlet Nigel Hawthorne – King Lear Richard McCabe – Iago in Othello Frances de la Tour – Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra Production credits v Illustrations Philip Voss as Prospero with Nikki Amuka-Bird as Miranda, The Tempest, Act , Scene ii: ‘I have done nothing but in care of thee / Of thee, my dear one, thee my daughter.’ page Philip Voss as Prospero, The Tempest, Act , Scene i: ‘As I was sometime Milan.’ Ian Hughes (right) as Dromio of Syracuse with David Tennant as Antipholus of Syracuse, The Comedy of Errors, Act ,Sceneii:‘Fortwo,andsoundonestoo...’ Ian Hughes (left) as Dromio of Syracuse with Tom Smith as Dromio of Ephesus, The Comedy of Errors,Act, Scene i: ‘I see by you I am a sweet-faced youth.’ Aidan McArdle as Philostrate (just prior to transformation into Puck) and Sirine Saba as an Athenian courtier (just prior to transformation into First Fairy/Peaseblossom), A Midsummer Night’s Dream,Act , Scene i (prelude). Aidan McArdle (left) as Puck with Nicholas Jones as Oberon, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act , Scene ii: ‘Still thou mistakest.’ Matilda Ziegler (left) as Olivia and Zo¨e Waites as Viola/Cesario, Twelfth Night, Act , Scene v: ‘Make me a willow cabin at your gate.’ Matilda Ziegler (left) as Olivia and Zo¨e Waites as Viola/Cesario, Twelfth Night, Act , Scene i: ‘Love sought is good, but given unsought is better.’ Alexandra Gilbreath (right) as Hermione with Antony Sher as Leontes, The Winter’s Tale, Act , Scene ii: ‘Read the indictment.’ vi L I Alexandra Gilbreath (right) as Hermione with Antony Sher as Leontes and Estelle Kohler as Paulina, The Winter’s Tale, Act , Scene iii: ‘’Tis time: descend.’ Antony Sher as Leontes, The Winter’s Tale, Act , Scene iii: ‘Nor night nor day no rest!’ Antony Sher as Macbeth with Harriet Walter as Lady Macbeth, Macbeth,Act, Scene ii: ‘I am afraid to think what I have done.’ David Tennant (left) as Romeo with Adrian Schiller (centre) as Mercutio and Anthony Howell as Benvolio, Romeo and Juliet,Act, Scene iv: ‘Nay, good goose, bite not.’ David Tennant as Romeo with Alexandra Gilbreath as Juliet, Romeo and Juliet, Act , Scene v: ‘I must be gone and live, or stay and die.’ Michael Pennington (left) as Timon with Richard McCabe as Apemantus, Timon of Athens, Act , Scene iii: ‘If thou wert the lion, the fox would beguile thee . .’ Michael Pennington as Timon, with his epitaph, Timon of Athens, Act , Scene i: ‘Sun, hide thy beams. Timon hath done his reign.’ Simon Russell Beale as Hamlet, Hamlet, Act , Scene iv: ‘Angels and ministers of grace defend us.’ Simon Russell Beale as Hamlet with Sara Kestelman as Gertrude and Sylvester Morand as the ghost of old Hamlet, Hamlet, Act , Scene iv: ‘Nothing but ourselves...’ Nigel Hawthorne as King Lear with Robin Weaver as Cordelia, King Lear, Act , Scene i: ‘Come not between the dragon and his wrath.’ Nigel Hawthorne as King Lear with Hiroyuki Sanada as the fool, King Lear,Act, Scene ii: ‘A poor, infirm, weak, and despised old man.’ Richard McCabe (left) as Iago with Aidan McArdle as Roderigo, Othello, Act , Scene iii: ‘Put money in thy purse.’ Richard McCabe as Iago with Ray Fearon as Othello, Othello, Act , Scene iii: ‘She did deceive her father, marrying you.’ vii L I Frances de la Tour as Cleopatra with Alan Bates as Antony, Antony and Cleopatra, Act , Scene i: ‘If it be love indeed, tell me how much.’ Frances de la Tour as Cleopatra with Rachel Joyce (left) as Charmian and Hermione Gulliford (right) as Iras, Antony and Cleopatra, Act , Scene ii: ‘And it is great / To do that thing that ends all other deeds.’ Sources : Photograph, Hugo Glendinning; C The Royal Shakespeare Company. and : Photographs, Catherine Ashmore; C Catherine Ashmore. All other illustrations: Photographer, Malcolm Davies, The Shake- speare Centre Library, Stratford-upon-Avon; C The Shakespeare Birth- place Trust. viii Prospero in The Tempest P V is an Associate Actor of the Royal Shakespeare Company and played Prospero in James MacDonald’s – touring produc- tion of The Tempest at the Pit Theatre (Barbican), at The Other Place in Stratford, and on a national and international tour. A wide range of earlier parts for the RSC has included Shylock, Malvolio, Ulysses, Menenius, Peter Quince, Worcester and the Lord Chief Justice in and Henry IV, Bassanes in The Broken Heart, Monticelso in The White Devil, and Sir Epicure Mammon in The Alchemist. Roles for Shared Ex- perience include Dr Dorn in The Seagull, Chebutykin in Three Sisters, and Kochkaryov in Marriage. He has also worked extensively for the National Theatre and for the Royal Court. Among his films is Four Weddings and a Funeral and he has done a considerable range of work for television. His essay on his performance of Menenius in the RSC’s production of Coriolanus was published in Players of Shakespeare . (O you wonder) The Tempest has had more labels pinned to it than any other Shakespeare play that I have ever worked on: ‘It’s about colonialism – absolutely.’ ‘Jacobean expansionism – without a doubt.’ ‘It’s about Shakespeare laying down his pen.’ ‘It’s a play of mystery.’ ‘It’s anti-Faustian.’ ‘White magic against black.’ ‘Surely it is about the oppressed gaining their freedom from the oppressors.’ Then there is Prospero: ‘Is he Shakespeare?’ ‘Is he James the First?’ ‘Definitely Caliban is his dark inner self, Ariel the light.’ P S It is the first play printed in the first Folio, so I assume Heminges and Condell thought it significant. It is unusual. No one goes mad at the end or dies. There is a betrothal and forgiveness of an unsatisfactory sort. To Antonio Prospero says ‘For you (most wicked Sir) whom to call brother / Would even infect my mouth’ (.i.–). This, preceding the line of forgiveness, doesn’t make it seem wholehearted to me; and even ‘I do forgive’ is followed by the continuing bitterness of ‘Thy rankest fault – all of them’ (.i.). I don’t believe Prospero makes that vital self-healing leap of real forgiveness. Nor is there any great event to end the play; just a lonely (old, in my case) man asking for applause. I was offered the part in the usual way through my agent and accepted without putting down the phone – not always a wise thing to do. It was a tour, I was told: Japan, Portugal, Virginia. I met the director, James MacDonald, for lunch the following day and the details of the tour expanded to include the inner and outer reaches of the United Kingdom – and we were to play in leisure centres in a module. Terrific! During the meal I also learned that James intended it to be a company production, working along vaguely Stanislavskian principles. He had seen me many years before in the Shared Experience production of Marriage by Gogol and admired it hugely. Was a company production a threat to me, I wondered. So I was cast and I was hooked. I have used a particular hybrid version of Stanislavsky since discovering the process with Mike Alfreds in . Often I use the system in a secretive sort of way, but with this director maybe I would be able to discuss motives and objectives openly – which, in the event, proved to be the case. I read the play – four times. When writing about Menenius in Players of Shakespeare I set out the procedure in fullish detail, and that is the course I embarked on with Prospero – and pretty quickly, for I realized that the opening duologue with my daughter, Miranda, was incredibly difficult. I made my four lists: facts about Prospero; what other people said about me; what I said about myself; and what I said about other people; then the conclusions. I soon learnt the scene with Miranda – out of fright at its complexity. As a rule I would never start to learn anything until at least a couple of weeks into rehearsal. We had six weeks to rehearse, which is too short for my liking. At that time I thought I would be playing a strict disciplinarian, bookish and aloof.

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