King LearApplause Books, 1996 - 220 sider (Applause Books). These popular editions allow the reader and student to look beyond the scholarly reading text to the more sensuous, more collaborative, more malleable performance text which emerges in conjunction with the commentary and notes. Each note, each gloss, each commentary reflects the stage life of the play with constant reference to the challenge of the text in performance. Readers will not only discover an enlivened Shakespeare, they will be empowered to rehearse and direct their own productions of the imagination in the process. |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 40
Side 27
... fear that his whole life and cred- ibility is about to be destroyed . However some trick- ery is now acceptable to ... fears are easier to talk about than the more personal fears that he has been too credulous and his love mis- placed ...
... fear that his whole life and cred- ibility is about to be destroyed . However some trick- ery is now acceptable to ... fears are easier to talk about than the more personal fears that he has been too credulous and his love mis- placed ...
Side 52
... fear , Not fear still to be taken . ° I know his heart . What he hath uttered I have writ my sister ; If she sustain him and his hundred knights , When I have showed th ' unfitness- 300 305 Enter OSWALD . How now , Oswald ? What , have ...
... fear , Not fear still to be taken . ° I know his heart . What he hath uttered I have writ my sister ; If she sustain him and his hundred knights , When I have showed th ' unfitness- 300 305 Enter OSWALD . How now , Oswald ? What , have ...
Side 53
... fear . The fool's response is fearful and fatalistic : he cries out after Lear , but delays for a desperate , con- cluding performance - a busy little verse about death and judgment . In Lear's absence , he says ( or sings ) it to ...
... fear . The fool's response is fearful and fatalistic : he cries out after Lear , but delays for a desperate , con- cluding performance - a busy little verse about death and judgment . In Lear's absence , he says ( or sings ) it to ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
actor Alack Albany Albany's answer Anthony Hopkins arms attention audience Burgundy cester Charles Laughton Cordelia CORNWALL curse danger daughters David Garrick death disguise dost duke Duke of Cornwall echo Edgar Edmund Exeunt Exit eyes F omits father fear feeling fiend follow fool fool's fortune France GENTLEMAN give Glou Gloucester Gloucester's gods half-line hast hath hear heart heavens Henry Irving incomplete verse-line James Earl Jones John Gielgud Kent Kent's kill King Lear knave kneels Lear's leaves letter look lord madam master messenger mind night nuncle Old Vic OSWALD pain pause perhaps Peter Brook pity play poor Poor Tom Pray probably question reply scene servant sexual Shakespeare silent sister soliloquy speak speech spoken stage stands storm Stratford-upon-Avon suffering sword talk tears thee thine thou thoughts tion tragedy trumpet turns villain voice weep words