Here's something I've been wondering (a question for anybody): Would Shakespeare's style, in so far as plays go, work today? Not his language, per se. But his style of writing in romantic and flowery and witty and poetic ways. Surely people didn't talk that way back then in ordinary daily conversation. Yes, they recognized the language (it was their own), but the style was not common in daily usage, was it? Today we seem to require realism in our stage characters. We want them to speak the way we speak, we want the conversations to seem real. I'm trying to imagine if the equivalent of a Shakespearean style, even updated to modern, let's say American English, would be received by audiences that want realism, and not poetic, romantic dialogue.


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