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SHAKSPER 2006: Against All-Male Productions
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@shaksper.net) Date: 07/10/06
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 17.0631 Monday, 10 July 2006 From: Charles Weinstein <proteus6847@msn.com> Date: Saturday, 08 Jul 2006 16:33:10 -0400 Subject: Against All-Male Productions 1. For the Elizabethans, it was a convention; for us it's drag. Doing Shakespeare in drag in the year 2006 does not recreate 16th-century practice: it generates 21st-century camp. 2. A director mounts an originalist production of Othello. He casts men as Emilia, Desdemona and Bianca, and he casts a white actor as Othello who performs the role in blackface. Some spectators are highly offended by the latter casting. When the director pleads fidelity to Jacobean practice, they respond by questioning the value of such fidelity. "Why resurrect the racist conventions of four centuries past and inflict them upon our 21st-century sensibilities"? A question to be asked about the sexist conventions that kept women off the stage in the same remote era. 3. I think Shakespeare wanted to see his female characters played by real women. I think he chafed under the stupid and repressive laws that prevented him from witnesing Juliet, Marina, Perdita, Isabella, Hermione, Constance and, yes, Rosalind, Viola, Imogen and Julia brought to such vivid and truthful life. 4. When Shakespeare's greatest female character spurns the thought of viewing "some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness," she is mocking the idea that she could be adequately incarnated by a male. 5. Women are much better at playing women than men are (to state the obvious). Compared to a genuine actress, the most skillful female impersonator is a cheap imitation. Perhaps audiences 400 years ago did not know this, but we do. Those who go to Shakespeare today in the hope of seeing the characters convincingly embodied and successfully realized will not be gratified by all-male productions. Swapping truth and authenticity for drag and camp is no bargain at all. --Charles Weinstein _______________________________________________________________ S H A K S P E R: The Global Shakespeare Discussion List Hardy M. Cook, editor@shaksper.net The S H A K S P E R Web Site <http://www.shaksper.net> DISCLAIMER: Although SHAKSPER is a moderated discussion list, the opinions expressed on it are the sole property of the poster, and the editor assumes no responsibility for them.
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