You Think Maybe He Meant Macbeth?

I see so many random Shakespeare references all day long that I’ve learned to ignore most of them.  Then again, sometimes they’re funny enough to merit a report.  Here we have a seemingly innocuous story about Verizon and Google getting together to create an iPad rival tablet.  What’s this I see in the middle of the article?

Best Case

Google’s ready to prove its tablet mettle, and Verizon wants an answer to AT&T’s iPad. It’s Shakespearean, almost, kind of! Within months, AT&T and Verizon will fall deeply in love, and commit suicide due to an easily avoidable misunderstanding. No, wait, wrong play. I wanted the one where EVERYONE FIGHTS EVERYONE, AND IT IS AWESOME.

You see, people?  Make your Shakespeare references funnier and I’ll link them more :).  I’m looking at you, Huffington Post.

The Shakespeare Marionette Company

http://www.marionette.com/ I don’t really know what this is.  It doesn’t appear to be a store (there is no catalog, and no prices), but there’s not nearly enough material for it to be a gallery.  It’s Shakespeare marionettes, which is cool – Macbeth, Bottom, the witches, etc…. But it’s also paintings, in a similar style.  Perhaps they paint it first and then make the marionette? Either way, it’s some neat stuff to look at that I’d not seen, and I’ve been scanning the net for Shakespeare links for a long long time.

Merchandise Sneak Peek!

Thanks to everybody that took part in my little survey.  I’m happy to see that “merchandise” was beating all the other choices pretty soundly (although "tip jar" made enough of a showing that you’ll notice one over in the left margin, in case you have enough t-shirts and bumper stickers … )
I’ve actually had a store set up for quite some time, but after consulting with some folks that make their living at such things I realized how out of my league I was.  I had ideas for a handful of slogans, and they’re telling me to have a minimum of 100 products before I open my doors. Holy cow.
But that presents a problem, since I don’t know what people want.  So, I’m going for it.  Please feel to check out what I’ve got so far and see if you like.  Give me some feedback?  Be gentle, it’s a work in progress.
Thanks! UPDATED: Peak? Did I really title this post Sneak Peak last night? I’m going to plead sleep stupidity on that one, I’m normally a very good speler. 😉

Shook-Up Shakespeare Movies

Finally!  I can’t remember the last time I saw an interesting and well researched list of Shakespeare-ish movies.  Thank you ReelzChannel for providing the “Shookup Shakespeare” list, their way of saying “inspired by”.  All your favorites are here, from Ran and Throne of Blood to O and Ten Things.  Not one of them is a “modern version with original text” like Romeo+Juliet.  I can just imagine the crowd that sees this list either being those that saw and loved Ten Things and have never heard of Kurosawa, or vice versa.  Which is sort of the point of Shakespeare as unifying factor, no?

When Burbage Played

[ Twice now in the last couple days another Shakespeare blog has linked me first while simultaneously offering something of independent value that I want to link back.  We are not all ganging up to play link exchange, it’s just kinda working out that way. ]

When I was in college writing for the theatre group known as New Voices, I had no theatre experience.  I didn’t know how to format a script.  I’m pretty sure that for my very first play I messed up “stage left” and “house left”.  What they gave us to work with was a bare stage.  Your walls were black, and your only objects were black wooden boxes.  Anything else you carried on and off with you.  If you put something on a box it was a table, if you sat on it it was a chair, if you put two together and lie down it was a bed.  That’s how I learned to write, and one of the ways that I learned to love the idea of telling your story entirely in what the characters say.

With that I point you to JM’s discovery, When Burbage Played:

When Burbage played, the stage was bare
Of fount and temple, tower and stair,

Two broadswords eked a battle out;

Two supers made a rabble rout;

The throne of Denmark was a chair!