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Thread: Shakespeare Stage and Screen Pictures

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    Registered User sofia82's Avatar
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    Shakespeare Stage and Screen Pictures

    The performing aspect makes drama different from other literary genres. Since ancient times, drama was written to be performed in public, rather than being read in private. This element demands studying drama from a performing aspect, in addition to a literary one. Moreover, drama became an individual art, categorized as performing art.

    In the course of discussing The Winter's Tale in the Summer Discussion Group, I realized it would be interesting if we pay attention to this aspect of art and expression, in addition to the literary one. Through the years, there have been many fine productions, both stage and screen, based on Shakespeare's plays; in addition, there have been operas, ballets, TV productions, movie posters, movie programs, etc. There exists a wealth of photos from these productions. These would be of great interest to those that appreciate Shakespeare's amazing body of work and enjoy the visual aspect of the performing arts, based upon those great works.

    Please include:

    Play title
    Place/Location
    Date
    Actor or Actors (in the photo)
    Any additional information that might add interest to your photo

    And if interested, visit the Summer Discussion Group (The Winter's Tale) here

    And with special thanks to Janine!
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    Our wee Olympic swimmer Janine's Avatar
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    Sophia, this is wonderful! I will be posting some more photos tonight. Thanks for my 'thank you' line; I was happy to help.

    Since you mentioned "The Winter's Tale" discussion, here is a DVD of a production; available through Kultur:



    Royal Shakespeare Company, Barbican Theatre (2005)
    starring Sir Antony Sher


    The Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Winter's Tale, performed at the Barbican Theatre, London, presented here for the first time in a complete and un-edited edition. This landmark production was hailed by critics and played to packed houses both in Stratford and London.

    Sophia, believe it or not; I just ordered this online. I should probably become poor, posting on this thread.
    Last edited by Janine; 06-24-2008 at 05:19 PM.
    "It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

    Chapter 7, The Little Prince ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

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    Registered User sofia82's Avatar
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    Smile

    Quote Originally Posted by Janine View Post
    Sophia, this is wonderful! I will be posting some more photos tonight. Thanks for my 'thank you' line; I was happy to help.
    You're welcome. and thank you for sharing the photo.

    Since you mentioned "The Winter's Tale" discussion, here is a DVD of a production; available through Kultur:



    Royal Shakespeare Company, Barbican Theatre (2005)
    starring Sir Antony Sher
    Janine, this site was blocked here yesterday.


    The Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Winter's Tale, performed at the Barbican Theatre, London, presented here for the first time in a complete and un-edited edition. This landmark production was hailed by critics and played to packed houses both in Stratford and London.

    Sophia, believe it or not; I just ordered this online. I should probably become poor, posting on this thread.
    Oh, dear , so try to use online photos, I don't want you to be poor sharing your photos in this thread . Thank you!
    Last edited by sofia82; 06-25-2008 at 02:41 AM.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    Our wee Olympic swimmer Janine's Avatar
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    Sophia, You mean Lit Net was blocked yesterday? I could get on this site, but several days ago, I was blocked from the site for some reason. So were many others I know. Sorry you could not get on the forum.

    You misunderstood me; I did copy and paste the photo from the internet - that was free. I bought the DVD for my collection. I have a nice collection of Shakespeare film adaptations/memorabilia. I love them! I need a film of "Romeo and Juliet" - the ballet version. I have it in my 'wishlist' on Amazon, as well as an older version of "Midsummer Night's Dream" - also the ballet. I can't wait to get a hold of each of those. I saw a version tonight of the first, and will tell you all about it. Tomorrow I will post a photo of the woman who starred in this ballet in another production of R&J. You will love it. She was amazing and so lovely, graceful.
    Last edited by Janine; 06-25-2008 at 02:42 AM.
    "It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

    Chapter 7, The Little Prince ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

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    Registered User sofia82's Avatar
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    Post Stage History of The Winter's Tale

    When Simon Forman saw the play at the Globe in May 1611 he was struck by its plot (if not by the statue scene, which he does not mention) and specially by Autolycus ('the rogue that came in all tattered like colt-pixie . . . Beware of trusting feigned beggars or fawning fellows').

    Whatever features of the play pleased contemporaries, it was well liked at court, where it was acted in November 1611, during the celebrations of Princess Elizabeth's wedding over Christmas 1612-13, in 1618, possibly 1619, in 1624, and in 1634. After this, however, it fell from favour (though it may have formed the basis of a droll called Dorastus and Fawnid), and when it was revived in the 18th century it generally appeared only in truncated pieces. The play was performed whole, briefly, at both the semi-legal Goodman's Fields theatre and at Covent Garden during the 'Shakespeare boom' of 1741, but thereafter was usually reduced to its pastoral scenes, with more or less of the fifth act grafted hastily on as an ending: Macnamara Morgan produced the first such adaption of the second half of the play as The Sheep-Shearing; or, Florizel and Perdita (1754), which excludes Leontes and has the Old Shepherd turn out to be Antigonus after all. He was successfully emulated by David Garrick, whose popular afterpiece Florizel and Perdita: A Dramatic Pastoral (1756) restores both Leontes and much of the ending: the Sicilian King is washed up in Bohemia after a shipwreck, where he helps Florizel and Perdita, and the statue scene is conducted by an expatriated Paulina. Attempts to reclaim the whole play (by Charles Marsh, whose 1756 adaptation was never acted, and by Thomas Hull in 1771) were less popular, and it was only restored by Kemble in 1802 (who still used Garrick's ending until 1811).

    The play was little revived in the 19th century, though Macready, Phelps, and (briefly) "Irving all experimented with the role of Leontes: two conspicuous productions, however, were those of Charles Kean and Mary Anderson. Kean adopted Hanmer's long-discredited emendation of 'Bohemia' to 'Bithynia', setting this most historically eclectic of plays in a consistent ancient Greek period, his 1856 production decorated by meticulous reference to artefacts in the British Museum. This revival was vividly and meticulously burlesqued by the Brough brothers' Perdita; or, The Royal Milkmaid (1856). In 1887 Mary Anderson drew notice by doubling Hermione and Perdita (a distracting trick which would be repeated by Judi Dench in Trevor Nunn's production of 1969). Ellen Terry played Hermione in Beerbohm Tree's condensed three-act production of 1906: Granville-Barker's attempt to restore a full text in 1912 was a critical failure. It would still be hard to name a stage production that had been genuinely popular rather than not discreditable, or that had done equal justice to the play's elements of tragedy and of comedy, though Peter Brook's production of 1951, with John Gielgud as Leontes, impressed many critics, as did Declan Donellan and Nick Ormerod's production for the Russian Maly company in 1999. Notable performers as Leontes have included Patrick Stewart (icily obsessive, 1983),
    Jeremy Irons (relapsing into infantile insecurity, 1986), and Antony Sher (pathologically jealous as if for medical reasons, 1998).

    The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare, M. Dobson and S. Wells (Eds.)
    Last edited by sofia82; 06-25-2008 at 03:23 AM.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    Registered User sofia82's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Janine View Post
    Sophia, I don't think your quotes worked - you put the slash after the quote at the end, instead of before. Also you missed enclosing my ending quote about the play; funny, it should have automatically quoted those for you. You can easily edit your post, to fix it.
    Thank you fore mentioning that, I fixed it.

    You mean Lit Net was blocked yesterday? I could get on this site, but several days ago, I was blocked from the site for some reason. So were many others I know. Sorry you could not get on the forum.
    No, not Forum fortunately. But the photobucket. A few days ago I told one of my friend from Tehran where photobucket was blocked there, "it is not blocked here," and now it is blocked.

    You misunderstood me; I did copy and paste the photo from the internet - that was free. I bought the DVD for my collection. I have a nice collection of Shakespeare film adaptations/memorabilia. I love them! I need a film of "Romeo and Juliet" - the ballet version. I have it in my 'wishlist' on Amazon, as well as an older version of "Midsummer Night's Dream" - also the ballet. I can't wait to get a hold of each of those. I saw a version tonight of the first, and will tell you all about it. Tomorrow I will post a photo of the woman who starred in this ballet in another production of R&J. You will love it. She was amazing and so lovely, graceful.
    what a misunderstanding. Watch on behalf of me, too. I'm waiting for that you tell about this production.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    Our wee Olympic swimmer Janine's Avatar
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    Sophia, are we playing hide and seek tonight? I should be in bed by now. I am typing with one eye open. I hope to read what you just posted tomorrow. It looks very interesting.

    I saw you edited and so did I. You post works better now. Thanks.

    Antony Sher (pathologically jealous as if for medical reasons, 1998
    Gee, that is the play I just ordered; what do they mean by that last statement, do you think - he was mad or insane?

    We must be posting the same time.

    Back in here again to edit. - you can view some of the excerpts on You tube tomorrow when I post the direct link; I will make up a page of all "Romeo and Juliet" ballets and then one of the films. Do you have assess to You tube?
    Oh, no wonder Photobucket was so slow today and kept refusing to upload my photos. They must have been having technical difficulties, what do you think?
    Last edited by Janine; 06-25-2008 at 02:51 AM.
    "It's so mysterious, the land of tears."

    Chapter 7, The Little Prince ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

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    Post The Winter's Tale On the Screen

    The earliest film recorded is a ten-minute American silent version (1910), followed by Italian (1913) and German films (1914). A now-scarce film of The Winter's Tale was made in 1960, with Laurence Harvey as Leontes, and there was a BBC TV production two years later, but Jane Howell's production (1980) for the BBC series remains its most satisfactory screen incarnation: for its time it was adventurous in its use of the medium, with stylized settings
    and considerable use of close-up asides to camera.

    The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare, M. Dobson and S. Wells (Eds.)
    Last edited by sofia82; 06-25-2008 at 03:22 AM.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    Registered User sofia82's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Janine View Post
    Sophia, are we playing hide and seek tonight? I should be in bed by now. I am typing with one eye open. I hope to read what you just posted tomorrow. It looks very interesting.
    It seems so .

    Gee, that is the play I just ordered; what do they mean by that last statement, do you think - he was mad or insane?
    So, it is your post about this adaptation. the matter is that he became mad/insane or was?

    Back in here again to edit. - you can view some of the excerpts on You tube tomorrow when I post the direct link; I will make up a page of all "Romeo and Juliet" ballets and then one of the films. Do you have assess to You tube?
    It's not been blocked yet. I hope it won't.

    Oh, no wonder Photobucket was so slow today and kept refusing to upload my photos. They must have been having technical difficulties, what do you think?
    The problem is not with the site it is blocked by ISP's here.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    Registered User sofia82's Avatar
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    Play title: The Winter's Tale
    Place/Location: Loeb Drama Center
    Date: May 12 - June 11, 2000
    Directed by: Slobodan Unkovski
    For more information visit this site: http://www.amrep.org/past/winter/winter.html



    Henry Woronicz (Leontes) and Mirjana Jokovic (Hermione).
    Last edited by sofia82; 06-25-2008 at 03:43 AM.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    The same ...



    Sarah Howe (Perdita), Jeremy Geidt (Old Shepherd), and John Douglas Thompson (Polixenes).
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    The same ....



    Jovan Rameau (Florizel) and Sarah Howe (Perdita).
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    The Same ...



    Mirjana Jokovic (Hermione) and Henry Woronicz (Leontes).
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    The same ...


    Denise Williams, Remo Airaldi, Naeemah White-Peppers, Thomas Derrah.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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    The same



    Jovan Rameau, Sarah Howe, Alvin Epstein, Karen MacDonald, Mirjana Jokovic, Henry Woronicz, John Douglas Thompson.
    Art is a lie that leads to the truth.
    --Picasso

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