Archive for the ‘In Search of Shakespeare’ Category

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In Search of Shakespeare Streaming

Mercredi, avril 28th, 2010
In Search of Shakespeare Streaming. In Search of Shakespeare Streaming.

Movie Title: In Search of Shakespeare
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“What a piece of work is man!

How noble in reason!

How infinite in faculties!

Buy,Download, Or Stream In Search of Shakespeare! Click Here

In form and moving, how express and admirable!

In action, how like an angel!

In apprehension, how like a god!

The beauty of the world!

The paragon of animals!”

The man this program is in search for is the one who wrote the above beautiful words and, as well, wrote many verses and words like it. His name: William Shakespeare (1564 to 1616), “[a man] not of an age, but for all time.”

Surprisingly, not much is known of Shakespeare’s life, until now. The enthusiastic Michael Wood takes us on a wonderful trek to discover just who Shakespeare was. We learn about such things as follows:

his parentage; his birth; his times, the politics and religion of the time; his youth; his marriage and loves; his “lost” years; his London years; his career; and his plays and sonnets.

There are four parts to this program (originally aired on the Public Broadcasting Station). Each includes a very brief introduction that I will reproduce here:

(1) A Time of Reformation (9 scenes including introduction and credits)

“Like all stories in history, this is a search for ghosts. A quest for the people that made us what we are. And for one man in particular. William Shakespeare is the most famous writer of all times…Yet his life is still shrouded in mystery…This is a historical detective story…searching for the life of William Shakespeare of Stratford Upon the Avon.”

This is the only part where Wood gives a summary. He says,

“There’s the first nineteen years of Shakespeare’s life. [Wood then proceeds with his brief summary…] and that’s just the beginning of the story!”

(2) The Lost Years (8 scenes)

“How did a poor country boy…become such a celebrity so soon after he arrived in London? It’s one of the great mysteries of Shakespeare’s life…Ten years before Shakespeare had been…in Stratford with no job and few prospects. How did he do it? How did he make that leap? And what did he do in those ten years?”

(3) The Duty of Poets (8 scenes)

“In the 1590s the English theatre entered its golden age and for the next twenty years its brightest star was William Shakespeare. But back in the early 1590s, Shakespeare was one of many gifted young poets. What was it that transformed him in the next few years to the greatest thing anybody had ever seen. What happened to him in his career and his private life?”

(4) For All Time (8 scenes)

“For William Shakespeare, 1603 was a very good year. Writer, actor, director, he was now the artist and chief of Elizabethan theatre. He created some of the greatest characters in literature…In [England], theatre wasn’t just entertainment, it was popular and political - it had a thrilling and dangerous power. Shakespeare…is…in his late thirties…Out of the experience of his life and the turbulent times through which he lived, the new worlds and the lost worlds, he pulls it all together in some of the greatest works of literature ever written. It’s that last story and the mysterious end to his career that we’re going to uncover.”

Wood travels extensively to different places, talking and interviewing people. He even reads from the actual historical documents that indicate something about Shakespeare, some of it uncovered only recently!

The cinematography is breathtaking. The photography inside actual buildings of Shakespeare’s time is fantastic. The background music compliments Wood’s narrative.

Special mention should be given to the Royal Shakespearean Company who travel with Wood. They act out bits of not only Shakespeare’s plays but other plays of that time (such as those of his rival, Christopher Marlowe). You’ll hear bits of his plays from each of these categories:

the Romantic Comedies (example: “A Midsummers Night Dream”); the Histories (example: “Henry IV,” Part 1); Tragedies (example: “Macbeth”); and the Tragicomic Romances (example: “The Tempest”). (There was no example from his “Problem” plays.)

There is one DVD extra (about twenty minutes) that has eight scenes. It is quite good.

The DVD’s picture and sound quality were perfect. There were no distracting artifacts.

Finally, if you’re a William Shakespeare fanatic like I am, then you’ll enjoy this program. I learned a lot of new things that I was not aware of before. If you’re a newcomer to Shakespeare’s life then I envy you. This program is the best introduction to his life, in my opinion, that there is.

In conclusion, be sure to view this program and find out why Shakespeare discovered that the duty of poets was “to speak what we feel and not what we ought to say!”

(2003; 4 hours; 2 discs; made for TV; wide screen)

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It is more than quarter of a century since Michael, nearly fresh out of Oriel College Oxford, first appeared on our TV screens. Clad in unfusty denim, he hurled himself about the great English outdoors, enthusiastically telling us about Eric Bloodaxe and Co in the BBC series ‘In Search of the Dark Ages’.

Since then, Michael has been abroad with ‘In Search of the Trojan War’, ‘In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great’, and … well, you get the general picture.

Now he’s back in England — mostly Warwickshire, Lancashire and London, actually — and he’s ditched the denim in favour of the Barbour ‘Bushman’ jacket and Karrimor backpack. This four-part programme is as much a celebration of England’s landscape and ancient buildings as it is the story of our greatest playwright. The photography is exceptional, the music well-composed, and Michael is always a pleasant companion to escort us around the key sites. We also spend much time in the company of the RSC, as they travel around the more authentic venues to perform excerpts from Othello, Henry IVth Part Two, Romeo & Juliet etc.

There’s always latent demand on British TV for Shakespeare insmall, digestible chunks. It is one of the regrets of so many adults that they wished they liked Shakespeare more … if only it wasn’t so much work to appreciate him, compared to ‘Friends’ etc. Here Michael makes him very digestible. If you could cope with ‘Shakespeare in Love’, then you can handle this series. The problem for me is that, having now viewed it once, when will I next want to watch it again? Probably in a couple of years’ time. This is really a DVD to buy, watch once, and then lend to friends and family.

One intriguing moment: in the College of Arms sequence, William Hunt, who used to run the HAC recruits course, takes Michael through the creation of the Shakespeare coat of arms. For the final shot, Mr Hunt is suddenly wearing his mess kit — why??

But back to the real world: one of the strengths of this series is that it shows the audience so clearly entranced and enjoying themselves. If this series doesn’t have you rushing out to buy a copy of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, it should at least persuade you to stop watching the telly and go out to the theatre, which can be no bad thing.
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