... see the corkscrew on the side of the lunch menu ... ...fork at bottom / knife at side ... |
I went to the British Museum to see the exhibit "Shakespeare Staging the World".
I know when I first knew I loved Shakespeare. I still remembeer James Mason in Julius Caesar at the Plaza – black and white. I will never forget Brutus’s speech, “This was the noblest Roman of them all ...”. I had learned those lines in Grade X as part of an English assignment to learn 10 lines of Shakespeare. I liked Shakespeare when I had to sit by Kelve and help him know what the gossamer wings were in Romeo and Juliet. I was doubly enamored of Much Ado about Nothing, since at the lake it was Charise’s TV and that is all she watched one summer – and so it was for every other cousin who wanted to see something on T.V. I loved the colour palette on screen of the scenery when Burton and Taylor did Romeo and Juliette. Remember how many of us saw MacBeth in the outside theatre – really outside – on a farm just outside of Enderby. At the university I heard Grant Patterson do an hour set of Shakepeare’s sonnets. And that is just off the top of my head, the moments I can remember.
Theatre Royal Promenade Greg has asked 3 times if we can go to Shrek while we are here |
I was topped up with the tears – could feel them at the tops of my bottom eyelids when I stepped into the exhibit at noon– the water there was those fullness-of-life tears, where a person reflects on their life and then thinks – all of those moments I spent in the texts of plays or helping some resistant child with an essay on Shakespeare – and now here everything is before me – all the background knowledge I could have used tin the past and now, here it is, about to unfold.
I didn’t leave until the exhibit guards were coming through, telling everyone the museum was closing.
... a baby buggy filled with flowers at Drury Lane ... |
So I slipped away to walk up and down Drury Lane until War Horse started.
Arta
Arta
thanks for telling about this... it hadn't started before we had to leave. will it still be on in March? I hope so!
ReplyDeleteDid you see the muffin man?
ReplyDeleteOn a more serious note, my sincere gratitude to you for all the homework help you gave me on Shakespeare.
ReplyDeleteThe other day I asked if so-and-so had two sisters, Goneril and Cordelia. Julie said, "How on earth can you remember those names from King Lear?" How could I explain?
Shakespearean immersion as a child.