Who Is Natalie Richardson?

This is a bit of a silly topic for a post, but I’m intrigued.

Sometimes I’ll cruise through the “Shakespeare” credits on IMDB to see what kind of movies are coming up. There’s always a large selection of shorts and indie movies being generated but every now and then you see a star-studded one to watch, so I’ll often just open up a bunch of them and scan through the credits to see what’s interesting.

We’ve got several Hamlets, Macbeths and Love’s Labour’s Losts coming (odd, that last one).  A Lear, a Measure for Measure, a Taming of the Shrew, a Twelfth Night and … wait a second.

I’m looking at the credits for Measure for Measure to see if I recognize anybody. I don’t.  But something looks familiar.  Natalie Richardson.  Getting a weird sense of deja vu…

That’s because she’s also in the upcoming Twelfth Night.

Now I’m curious. I check her bio and I see that she’s got a Macbeth to her credit as well – last year. And those three Shakespeare credits are literally the only things in her bio.

Part of a series, perhaps? Is there a production group out there that is doing all the works?  Not at all, as far as I can tell. They are completely unrelated, except for this woman. This mystery woman just appeared in three back to back unrelated Shakespeare movies.  How can we let that go?

I really, really want to interview this woman now.  There’s got to be some connection between these production. I’m dying to see what she’s going to do for her fourth IMDB credit! Hey, it’s a small world, maybe somebody out there even knows exactly who we’re talking about?

Shakespeare Take 2 : Hamlet and Ophelia in Couple’s Therapy

I was sent this video from the producer/creator/Ophelia, Emily Newhouse, and I found it amusing enough to post for Shakespeare Day.

What if Hamlet and Ophelia went to couples therapy?  Yes, “You killed my dad!” / “Why can’t you let that go?!” does come up.

[ Full link here, in case the player’s not working properly for you. ]

I think my favorite part (which happens to be in the screenshot, I notice) is when Hamlet shifts over to puppets, and puppet Hamlet is also manning tiny puppet Ophelia and puppet Hamlet.

Of course, counseling or psychoanalyzing Shakespeare’s characters has been popular fodder for ages. Who can forget Monty Python’s Hamlet at the Psychiatrist?

Gnomeo and Juliet : The Sequel (Yes, Really)

Yeah, I couldn’t believe it when I saw it either!

Watch our Marvel Universe! Gnomeo and Juliet 2 : Sherlock Gnomes is scheduled for January 2018, according to IMDB.

I had to get my head around that one.  At first I thought, “Ok, it’s a different literary genre that takes place in the same talking-gnome world.” I could live with that.  Lots of room to work.

But no – it’s the same characters.  They’re just adding Sherlock Gnomes, played by Johnny Depp of all people?!

I’m going to put this on my list to keep an eye on, and see if I can’t get some plot.  If they do any kind of mashup where the “missing gnomes” are actually more Shakespeare characters, then I’m all in.  But if there’s literally no Shakespeare in this other than the two title characters, it’s a big missed opportunity.

Reade Him, Therefore; and Againe, and Againe.

I thought a story with a headline like “How Shakespeare’s Works Were Nearly Lost To Us” was going to be about David Garrick, honestly.  But I was wrong. We all know that the First Folio was published by Heminges and Condell seven years after Shakespeare died.  But how often do we get to hear the details of how it all went down?

I’m not going to recap the story here, because I think you should go read it. Bonus points to the author who lists the official number of “known” folios as 235 because apparently he’s been keeping up with the news :).

The FF is about as close to a Shakespeare Bible as we have.  It is not just the text, it is “The Text”. I have a copy on my bookshelf, and recently my daughter asked if I ever “use” it.  No, I don’t pick it up and flip through it like Asimov or Shapiro.  I treat it like a work of art.  Opening it for me is like a visit to the museum.  When a question comes up about what Shakespeare said or Shakespeare meant, it is the first place I go.  I like seeing the old typeface and non standard spelling that makes me sit and think for a minute before I understand what I’m looking at.  I like that connection to history.

I’ve also been in the presence of Folio #1, The Most Beautiful Book In The World, estimated to be worth over $10 million.

“You look so happy!” she said.  “Look how happy you look!  It must be amazing to be that passionate about something that it can make you that happy.” 

Yes.  Yes it is.

My Kids Have Never Read The Plays (Part 2)

So, what to do?  An expectation has been set – by me, by my daughter, by her friends – that since she’s grown up with this stuff, she will walk through Romeo and Juliet. Then she opens the text and is lost just like everybody else.

I knew what I had to do.  I fired up the home video server and went to the 1968 Zeffirelli movie, which I’m pretty sure they’re going to watch in class (some classes have already sent around a permission slip because of the infamous nude scene).

I quickly realize this isn’t going to work, because they’re not on the text. My daughter’s got the text in her lap and fully plans to use the video as a supplement to the source material, and right from the start, this movie is writing its own text.

Well that’s not going to work.  Hello again, Mr. DiCaprio.  I don’t think I ever would have imagined using Baz Luhrmann’s 1996 Romeo+Juliet to help my daughter with her homework, but here we are.  Say what you want about the acting and the directing, but the thing is they actually are using the text. And I think that’s important.  Right within the first few minutes, during the showdown at the gas station, the whole “bite your thumb at us” scene really gets the point across.  There’s real tension there, like it could all explode at any moment.  Which it does, by the way, as if this was a Michael Bay film.

Picture it.  I’m there manning the remote control, pausing and declaring, “Shh! This is the best part!” every other scene.  I realize I sound like my son when we tell him to turn off the YouTube video he’s watching for the twentieth time, but I don’t care.  To me they are all the “best” parts because what I really mean is, “This is something you should not miss.”

This is how the afternoon went.  My daughter’s got the text in her lap, and periodically looks up at the screen, then flips a page to catch up to where they have skipped. She’s clearly not doing that thing teachers fear where the students say “Forget this, why read it if I can watch the movie?”  We’re doing this voluntarily before the assignment has even begun specifically so that she can deep read the text later.

While the movie is going on, we get to what’s always been my big point.  Friar Laurence comes on scene, and I pause.  “Something to consider,” I tell her, “Is whether you think Friar Laurence is a good guy or a bad guy.”  Or why some people chose to interpret Mercutio as gay. Or whether Lord Capulet is a good father who has a bad moment later in the play, or if he never really meant everything he said to Paris in the early scenes.  “This particular movie,” I tell her, “will make choices for all of those questions.  A different production would make different choices. When you read the text, you get to decide for yourself which interpretations you think are correct, for your vision of the play.”

I just realized, writing this, that I also have the Norma Shearer / John Barrymore 1936 Romeo and Juliet.  May have to fire that up and see how it handles the text, for comparison!  Can’t have her seeing just the one version and using that as her baseline for future interpretation.

We’re on school vacation so it’s still a few days before they actually start studying the text for real. I have no idea if the teacher is going to do what they did to me thirty years ago, working through it a line at a time and not letting any word go unanalyzed.  “What do you think he means by carry coals?”  “Who cares?”  Maybe teaching methods have gotten a little more … flexible, since my time?  I have no idea.  Whatever it ends up being, all I know is that I’ll be right there with all the tools at my disposal to make sure she’s got everything she needs.