Welles’ Greatest Shakespeare Film … Available At Last?

Shakespeare Geeks may or may not know the story of Chimes At Midnight, Orson Welles’ conflagration of so many history plays that I don’t even have an accurate count (although I’m sure someone will correct me).

On the one hand, it is Welles’ masterpiece – he himself called it his favorite of all his films, and many believe it to be the greatest Shakespeare film yet made.  This is not even counting the technological achievements, such as the first use of “shaky cam” for the battlefield scenes.

The problem is that, due to a nightmare of legal issues, the film is not available in a US version.  If you’ve seen it, chances are that you have seen the Brazil import.

Well good news!  It looks as though people have been trying to sort out the ownership red tape for years, and have finally gotten it straight (for now?).  The article says that the film has been “restored” as well as re-released, so I wonder whether that refers just to the quality of the print, or the possible edition of new material?

YouTube’s Got (Shakespeare) Talent

As I sit here entertaining myself on Twitter late on a Wednesday, after having watched the America’s Got Talent results show (go Snap Boogie!), I had an idea.

For any given “famous scene” of Shakespeare, you can find many clips on YouTube. What’s interesting is that once you weed through all the famous ones – Olivier’s King Lear, Branagh’s Henry V, etc,… – what you get is just plain old people.

So here’s the challenge I’m extending. Dig through some regular people doing Shakespeare, and provide some links to the good ones. Let’s see if we can’t give some credit. If you want to play, even if you can’t find any links of your own, you at least have to watch the ones that are provided and vote for those you like the best.  I have no prizes to offer, but maybe we can give somebody a boost in views and make their day.

Scene choice is up to you. Maybe we can keep it separated between comedy and tragedy or something (though I expect that “dramatic readings” will almost always come from a tragedy). I recommend picking people who have actually picked a soliloquoy of some sort and then pointed the camera at themselves. Audience shots of stage productions don’t tend to be very good quality.

Get the idea? Ok, show me what you can find!

Sherwood Schwartz Has Died

Granted that the man was 94, but still a sad day. Sherwood Schwartz, creator of 1970’s iconic television shows like Gilligan’s Island and The Brady Bunch, has died.

At times like this we like to celebrate such a person’s contribution to Shakespearean culture. It seems only fitting, then, to include this clip. You know what’s coming. Everybody, sing along. “I ask to be, or not to be, a rogue or peasant slave is what you see….”

( I hate that YouTube allows you to disable embedding of video clips. If they’d started out that way, they wouldn’t be what they are today. )

Bonus, here’s Marcia Brady as Juliet. Although that clip isn’t nearly as fun as the previous one.  Although, as I listen more, interesting bits come up:

* Harold (Romeo) says that “he’s almost 15, same age as Romeo.”

* Juliet completely butchers that “is it thy arm thy hand thy foot thy face” line – I had to dig to figure out what she was supposed to be saying.

* Love the parents’ advice that “even the greatest actress in the world doesn’t change Shakespeare.”

* “If only she didn’t think she was junior high’s answer to Sarah Bernhardt.”  Nice!

* One of the boys (Peter?) practices his line, “Hark! Who goes there!” but isn’t that Hamlet?

I need to get back to work, I could go through the whole episode like this.