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Ghostly Fragments: Essays on Shakespeare and Performance PDF

333 Pages·2021·12.813 MB·English
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Ghostly Fragments Ghostly Fragments Essays on Shakespeare and Performance Barbara C. Hodgdon Edited by Richard Abel and Peter Holland University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor Copyright 2021 by Richard Abel and Peter Holland All rights reserved For questions or permissions, please contact um.press. [email protected] Published in the United States of America by the University of Michigan Press Manufactured in the United States of America Printed on acid- free paper First published February 2021 A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978- 0- 472- 13229- 4 (hardcover : alk. paper) ISBN 978- 0- 472- 12836- 5 (ebook) Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments ix Introduction by Peter Holland 1 I. TeachIng ShakeSpeare 7 Introduction by Miriam Gilbert 7 Bernie on Hamlet 10 Making Changes/Making Sense 13 The Last Shakespeare Picture Show or Going to the Barricades 24 II. analyzIng STage performanceS 39 Introduction by W. B. Worthen 39 Rehearsal Process as Critical Practice: John Barton’s 1978 Love’s Labour’s Lost 42 Making It New: Katie Mitchell Refashions Shakespeare- History 70 Re- Incarnations 89 I Sing the Body Artifactual: Prologue, Meditations, and Jig 108 Un- Marking, Re- Marking, and Difference 117 III. edITIng ShakeSpeare TexTS 129 Introduction by Margaret Jane Kidnie 129 Dream Talk 132 Who Is Performing “in” These Text(s)?; Or, Shrew- Ing Around 146 New Collaborations with Old Plays: The (Textual) Politics of Performance Commentary 158 vi conTenTS IV. analyzIng ShakeSpeare fIlmS 173 Introduction by Richard Abel 173 Kozintsev’s King Lear: Filming a Tragic Poem 176 Replicating Richard: Body Doubles, Body Politics 186 William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet: Everything’s Nice in America? 210 The Shakespearean Phonograph 226 V. “ShoppIng” In The ShakeSpeare archIVeS 239 Introduction by Pascale Aebischer 239 Bride- ing the Shrew: Costumes That Matter 242 (You)Tube Travel: The 9:59 to Dover Beach, Stopping at Fair Verona and Elsinore 261 Spectral Traces in the Archive 278 Paper Worlds: A Story of Things Left Behind 289 Published Writings by Barbara C. Hodgdon 307 Contributors 311 Index 313 Digital materials related to this title can be found on the Fulcrum platform via the following citable URL https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.11631033 Illustrations Fig. 1. Barbara Hodgdon, 1986 8 Fig. 2. Barbara Hodgdon, 1988 14 Fig. 3. The Princess and her Embassage (2.1) 45 Fig. 4. Letter scene (4.1) 47 Fig. 5. The Locals (5.1) 50 Fig. 6. Rosaline and Berowne (5.2) 54 Fig. 7. Worthies’ show (5.2) 55 Fig. 8. Sir Nathaniel descending with the horse (5.2) 59 Fig. 9. The Suitors (5.2) 62 Fig. 10. The final songs (5.2) 65 Fig. 11. Dulle Griet by Pieter Bruegel the Elder 79 Fig. 12. Queen Margaret, Henry VI, soldier, and Edward, Prince of Wales prepare for battle 82 Fig. 13. Edward IV attempts to rape Lady Elizabeth Grey 84 Fig. 14. Poster for Barbara’s 1984 A Midsummer Night’s Dream student production, Drake University 135 Fig. 15. Al Pacino as Richard III, tent soliloquy, in Looking for Richard, 1996 193 Fig. 16. Al Pacino rehearsing Richard III’s tent soliloquy, in Looking for Richard, 1996 193 Fig. 17. Ian McKellen as Richard III, tent soliloquy, in Richard Loncraine’s Richard III, 1995 200 Fig. 18. Dominic West as Richmond at the close of Richard Loncraine’s Richard III, 1995 203 Fig. 19. Ian McKellen as Richard III falling to his death in Richard Loncraine’s Richard III, 1995 203 Fig. 20. Wedding costume for Katherina displayed on mannequin, worn by Alexandra Gilbreath in Greg Doran’s RSC The Taming of the Shrew production, 2003 243 Fig. 21. Ada Rehan as Katherina in Augustin Daly’s The Taming of the Shrew, 1887 249 Fig. 22. Peggy Ashcroft as Katherina and Peter O’Toole as Petruccio in John Barton’s The Taming of the Shrew production, Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, 1960 251 viii IlluSTraTIonS Fig. 23. Alexandra Gilbreath as Katherina in the final moments of Greg Doran’s RSC The Taming of the Shrew production, 2003 254 Fig. 24. Lantern owned by Henry Irving 290 Fig. 25. Ralph Koltai’s set model for Howard Davies’s RSC Troilus and Cressida production, 1985 293 Fig. 26. One of Peggy Ashcroft’s gowns for Glen Byam Shaw’s Cleopatra production, 1953 295 Fig. 27. Satin cloak from Peter Brook’s RSC A Midsummer Night’s Dream production, 1970 299 Fig. 28. Snug’s mask made by the RSC’s Properties Workshop under William Lockwood for Peter Brook’s RSC A Midsummer Night’s Dream production, 1970 300 Fig. 29. Mallet made by the RSC’s Properties Workshop under William Lockwood for Snug the Joiner (Barry Stanton) in Peter Brook’s RSC A Midsummer Night’s Dream production, 1970 301 Acknowledgments This collection of Barbara Hodgdon’s writings obviously is a labor of love, but we are very grateful that so many others eased its path to publication. LeAnn Fields, acquisitions editor at the University of Michigan Press, encouraged our proposed book from the beginning. Despite working half- time as she moved toward retirement, LeAnn strongly supported the pro- posal, argued persuasively for its acceptance by the press’s editorial board, and kept us apprised of what we needed to submit and when to do so for final approval. Editorial associate Anna Pohlod efficiently handled prepara- tion issues and questions as we readied the manuscript for submission; man- aging editor Marcia LaBrenz took care of last-m inute details and expertly directed all stages of production; and Heidi Dailey designed a lovely front cover framing our chosen image. Anne Taylor performed as an unusually thorough, careful, and caring copyeditor. We could not be more pleased that this collection is part of the press’s highly regarded Theater and Performance series— and Barbara would be surprised and pleased as well. We are so grateful to the three anonymous reviewers of our proposal, all of whom enthusiastically agreed that Barbara’s influential work deserved such a collection. They especially praised our decision to organize the book into five sections representing the wide range of her writing and to include unpublished pieces and less accessible essays. We also thank the colleagues, given their expertise and personal experi- ence with Barbara, who were excited to write short introductions to four of those sections. Besides those colleagues— Miriam Gilbert, W. B. Worthen, Margaret Jane Kidnie, and Pascale Aebischer— others such as Carol Rutter, Amy Rodgers, Skip Shand, and Robert Shaughnessy offered valued support. Permission to reproduce illustrations came from the Shakespeare Birth- place Trust, the Royal Shakespeare Company, and Harvard University’s

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