When we took Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” into a maximum security woman’s prison on the West Side…there’s a scene there where a young woman is told by a very powerful official that “If you sleep with me, I will pardon your brother. And if you don’t sleep with me, I’ll execute him.” And he leaves the stage. And this character, Isabel, turned out to the audience and said: “To whom should I complain?” And a woman in the audience shouted: “The Police!” And then she looked right at that woman and said: “If I did relate this, who would believe me?” And the woman answered back, “No one, girl.” And it was astonishing because not only was it an amazing sense of connection between the audience and the actress, but you also realized that this was a kind of an historical lesson in theater reception. That’s what must have happened at The Globe. These soliloquies were not simply monologues that people spoke, they were call and response to the audience. And you realized that vibrancy, that that sense of connectedness is not only what makes theater great in prisons, it’s what makes theater great, period.
— Oskar Eustis on ArtBeat Nation (he told the same story on Charlie Rose)
  6693

bevsi:

hamlet&ophelia

shakespeare’s use of tragedy is different from the classical; what makes him care about his tragic characters is not that they are good, as greek protagonists fundamentally are, but that they might have been.
— john vyvyan, the shakespearean ethic (via oephelia)

sportvieux:

Romeo And Juliet 1996

  2033

cervidaelilium:

MOODBOARD: juliet capulet

‘tis but thy name that is my enemy. thou art thyself, though not a montague. what’s montague ? it is not hand, nor foot, nor arm, nor face, nor any other part belonging to a man. o, be some other name !

kakumei-no-tomoshibi:

unexpected-imperial-inquisition:

I want a sitcom which is just every single Shakespeare character as college students in a dorm building. 

image

I tried to argue that Ophelia resonated because Shakespeare had made an extraordinary discovery in writing her, though I had trouble articulating the nature of that discovery. I didn’t want to admit that it could be something as simple as recognizing that emotionally unstable teenage girls are human beings. …

When Ophelia appears onstage in Act IV, scene V, singing little songs and handing out imaginary flowers, she temporarily upsets the entire power dynamic of the Elsinore court. When I picture that scene, I always imagine Gertrude, Claudius, Laertes, and Horatio sharing a stunned look, all of them thinking the same thing: “We fucked up. We fucked up bad.” It might be the only moment of group self-awareness in the whole play. Not even the grossest old Victorian dinosaur of a critic tries to pretend that Ophelia is making a big deal out of nothing. Her madness and death is plainly the direct result of the alternating tyranny and neglect of the men in her life. She’s proof that adolescent girls don’t just go out of their minds for the fun of it. They’re driven there by people in their lives who should have known better.

— B.N. Harrison, from “The Unified Theory of Ophelia
(via shakespeareismyjam)

glitter-gut:

stabmeintheneck:

this dudebro in my english class said that ophelia deserved to die because “she led hamlet on” and my teacher threw her book against the wall

your teacher’s aim sucks

  4100

OTHELLO : —and I will kill thee,
And love thee after.
— William Shakespeare, Othello (via rhaegartargaryen)
  7218

vegaofthelyre:
“  Okay, Ophelia by Jeannine Hall Gailey.
”

vegaofthelyre:

Okay, Ophelia by Jeannine Hall Gailey.

  2033

cervidaelilium:

MOODBOARD: juliet capulet

‘tis but thy name that is my enemy. thou art thyself, though not a montague. what’s montague ? it is not hand, nor foot, nor arm, nor face, nor any other part belonging to a man. o, be some other name !

nightlock:

Romeo and Juliet: Act II Scene VI

times it is acceptable to say the m-word

susiephone:

  • when you are actually performing The Scottish Play
  • when the M-word appears in the script of the play you’re doing
  • that’s it
  • it is not acceptable at any other time
  • seriously do not fuck with that it is some bad shit
  • do
  • not
  • say
  • the
  • m-word
  • even if you’re not in a theater
  • all the world’s a stage, bitch
Shakespeare Tragedies Renamed for the Modern tumblr Teen

liduenfell:

my-tardis-sense-is-tingling:

Titus Andronicus: “Well That Escalated Quickly” 
Romeo and Juliet: “Shut Up, You’re Like 12” 
Julius Caesar: “I Came Out Here to Run the Roman Empire and I Am Honestly Feeling So Attacked Right Now” 
Hamlet: “[AGGRESSIVELY PRETENDS TO GO INSANE AND IN THE PROCESS GOES ACTUALLY INSANE MAYBE]” 
Othello: “Othello: Is my wife cheating on me?? Iago: Bitch, she might be.” 
King Lear: “Shows Up To Realization of Commonality with Humanity and Renouncement of Titles as Identity-Definers 15 Years Late With Starbucks”
Macbeth: “Did It For the Vine” 
Antony and Cleopatra: “Much Rome. Very Egypt. Such Different. Wow.”

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