Purchase of the day

So today Kerry and I went to “Building 19”, which is the local “fire sale” place where they sell everything cheap cheap cheap, and maybe only a little damaged. We were on the hunt for a rug for our new room, and were told that this place has got the good rugs. Sure enough, we found one we liked. And then felt like browsing. I see this rack of tiny books labelled “Classics” and I see stuff like “The Man in the Iron Mask”, “Robinson Crusoe”, “Taming of the Shrew”…

Wait a second, back up. Taming of the Shrew? Cooool. I open it up – and it’s basically an el cheapo ‘graphic novel’ approach to the play. Each page has about 4-6 graphic panels with characters speaking in lines close to Shakespaere, but not the original, as if somebody wanted to write it from scratch but didn’t want to stray too far from the original.
I look at the price tag. 10 cents! Nice. Mind you this is a teeny thing that you could read in 5 minutes, this is not like a text book. But still, what the heck, right? I go digging through the big. Before leaving I came up with Shrew, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear (!), and The Tempest. I’m particularly pleased by those last two, because I am not nearly as familiar with the plot points of King Lear as I would like (who is?), and I have in the past attempted to tell The Tempest to my daughter as a bedtime story, and having a mini freeform script of the play in a pocket reference like this will possibly help me succeed in that attempt.
Not bad for the cost of change in my pocket.

Technorati Tags: Shakespeare

The soul of wit

The soul of wit:

Nothing really new or exciting in this intro article to “What Shakespeare means to us today”, but I like it. All the usual bases are covered – popular quotes, words he invented, and so on. Neat if you didn’t already know most of it.

Technorati Tags: Shakespeare

Shakespeare & Cervantes Become Friends (January 4th, 2006)

Shakespeare & Cervantes Become Friends (January 4th, 2006):

See, now, here’s an intriguing premise for a movie that hopefully won’t come off like a sequel to “Shakespeare in Love.” Many fans and scholars know that there is an odd connection between the man who wrote Don Quixote and the man who wrote Hamlet. The lost Shakespeare play “Cardenio” is believed to have been based on a story by Cervantes. Both men even died on the same day (April 23, 1616).

This fictional story looks at what might have happened during the four years when Shakespeare disappeared from historical records.
I’ll keep an eye out for more news and gossip about this movie.

Technorati Tags: movies, Shakespeare

Shakespeare Resolutions?

Ok, anybody got any Shakespeare related resolutions? Plays you should have read but haven’t? Plays/movies you want to see? Merchandise you want to buy?

I’d like to (note my wording – chicken!) get an application up and running on the web that allows people to tag and comment on various aspects of the plays, ideally in a way that hasn’t been done yet :). I like the idea that somebody (who I think prefers to live anonymously) just passed along about using a voice recorder to brain dump thoughts on various scenes and then put them together into a podcast.

I also want to try my hand at some Shakespeare merchandise, but I need more help with that (like, graphic design). Once I convince myself that it can make more money then it costs I might make it happen.

Technorati Tags: business, idea, money, podcast, 2006resolutions, Shakespeare

When Love Speaks

Oooooo, want this. When Love Speaks is a CD of celebrities doing performances of Shakespeare sonnets and other famous works by you know who. The sample included in this all-flash site is Alan Rickman doing Sonnet 130 (“My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun…”), but the CD also contains Richard Attenborough doing #17 (“Who will believe my verse in time to come…”) which I recited at my wedding, and Joseph Fiennes doing “Our revels now are ended…” from The Tempest.

Technorati Tags: Shakespeare