To mark the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare's death (generally believed to be April 23rd), Portsmouth Point blog asked PGS staff to tell us their favourite (and least favourite) Shakespeare plays, favourite characters and favourite productions. Here are choices from Mrs Kirby and Dr Purves.
Mrs Kirby
Mrs Kirby
1. What is your
favourite Shakespeare play and why?
Othello - no matter how many times I teach
it, I always end up reading it differently (King Lear is a close runner-up).
2. What is
your least favourite Shakespeare play and why?
Merchant of Venice. I find it
tedious and depressing (apologies to any Year 11 pupils currently studying
it!). I've also never particularly enjoyed Cymbeline.
3. Who is the
greatest Shakespeare character and why?
Beatrice (Much Ado). She's smart, funny
and refreshing.
4. Who is the
greatest Shakespeare villain and why?
Iago, without question. No other villain
is quite as compelling or enigmatic.
5. Which
Shakespearean character would you be most likely to fall in love with and why?
When I was younger, I always had a soft spot for Mercutio (possibly because
Romeo was unimpressive by comparison).
6. What is the
best production of a Shakespeare play that you have seen and why? I was lucky enough to see Jude Law play
Hamlet at the Donmar and was blown away by the whole production. My favourite
film adaptations include Kenneth Branagh's Henry V and Trevor Nunn's Twelth
Night.
Dr Purves
Dr Purves
1 1. What is your favourite Shakespeare play and why?
I don’t think I have a single favourite, and it can vary so much
from one production to another that I might pass on this one.
2. What is your least favourite
Shakespeare play and why?
I do not feel that I know them well enough to have a least
favourite overall. From the productions I have seen my least favourite
would be The Merchant of Venice. Although this was probably less to do
with the play itself and more the setting and audience. It should have
been idyllic, a ferry over to Brownsea Island on a balmy summer evening,
followed by a picnic, a play, and then a ferry back to Poole. I didn’t
mind the torrential rain so much, and the bats that flew across and around the
stage added to the outdoor experience, but the laughter at the most racist
aspects of the play made it an unpleasant experience.
3. Who is the greatest Shakespeare
character and why?
I will have to limit this to my knowledge of Shakespeare, which
is not quite what the question is asking. Furthermore, it really does
depend on what is meant by great. I would have thought that Margaret of
Anjou must have a claim of some sort to being a great character, though not
particularly likable. She develops through four of the history plays,
raising armies to push forward the cause of her family, striking allegiances
before seeing the demise of her husband and child and ultimately cursing her
enemies.
4. Who is the greatest Shakespeare
villain and why?
Richard III: single minded, malevolent and genuinely scary!
5. Which Shakespearean character
would you be most likely to fall in love with and why?
One of the strong female characters, so perhaps Viola from
Twelfth Night or Portia from Merchant of Venice. Through all that they do
they show themselves to be at least the equal of all others they encounter.
6. What is the best production of a
Shakespeare play that you have seen and why (theatre, film or both - choose as
many examples as you wish)?Or you could talk about other adaptations (such as
books, poems, etc)
I have been really fortunate to have seen a number of excellent
productions, from Gregory Doran’s Midsummer Night’s Dream to Michael Boyd’s
Richard III with Jonathan Slinger as Richard. For me the best was Richard
III. I can still feel the excitement and tension that had been built from
the end of Henry VI Part 3, which had finished only slightly earlier in the
day, and which was maintained through a powerful, contemporary adaptation with
a despotic Richard. The opening scene built the tension from the end of
the previous play such that everyone in the theatre was perched on the very
edge of their seats. Given a number of the responses that have come before
mine, I feel I should write something in defence of Cymbeline. I saw a
fantastic, dark, comedic production by Kneehigh theatre company, admittedly a
number of the audience decided to walk out fairly early on, but I do think that
was their loss! On a slightly different note, I am not a great ballet fan
in general but I loved the physicality and sense of power from the English
National Ballet’s production of Romeo and Juliet (choreographed by Rudolf
Nureyev), in particular, the Dance of Knights scene was extraordinary.
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