Shakespeare in Parts
ISBN13: 9780199272051ISBN10: 0199272050
Hardback,
416 pages
Also available:
Paperback
Oct 2007,
In Stock
Price:
$49.95 (06)Description
A truly groundbreaking collaboration of original theatre history with exciting literary criticism, Shakespeare in Parts is the first book fully to explore the original form in which Shakespeare's drama overwhelmingly circulated. This was not the full play-text; it was not the public performance. It was the actor's part, consisting of the bare cues and speeches of each individual role. With group rehearsals rare or non-existent, the cued part alone had to furnish the actor with his character. But each such part-text was riddled with gaps and uncertainties. The actor knew what he was going to say, but not necessarily when, or why, or to whom; he may have known next to nothing of any other part. It demanded the most sensitive attention to the opportunities inscribed in the script, and to the ongoing dramatic moment. Here is where the young actor Shakespeare learnt his trade; here is where his imagination, verbal and technical, learnt to roam.This is the story of Shakespeare in Parts. As Shakespeare developed his playwriting, the apparent limitations of the medium get transformed into expressive opportunities. Both cue and speech become promise-crammed repositories of meaning and movement, and of individually discoverable space and time. Writing always for the same core group of players, Shakespeare could take - and insist upon - unprecedented risks. The result is onstage drama of astonishing immediacy.
Starting with a comprehensive history of the part in early modern theatre, Simon Palfrey and Tiffany Stern's mould-altering work of historical and imaginative recovery provides a unique keyhole onto hitherto forgotten practices and techniques. It not only discovers a newly active, choice-ridden actor, but a new Shakespeare.
Features
- A totally new subject and focus: the first book to explore the original form in which Shakespeare's drama circulated
- An exciting cross-fertilization of methods, techniques, and sensibilities: archival history, close attention to language and technique, performance, the metaphysics of drama
- Plotted through set-piece chapters on carefully chosen individual plays (Merchant, Lear, Tempest), and by set-piece analyses of particular 'parts' (including Richard II and III, Shylock, six romantic heroines, Macbeth).
- Written in very clear language in a fluently readable style
Reviews
"Stunningly fresh and rewarding...A pathbreaking study, and it is bound to rejuvenate the debate about whether, or rather to what extent, Shakespeare wrote with readers of print in mind." --Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900


