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Q: king lear ( Answered,   0 Comments )
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Subject: king lear
Category: Miscellaneous
Asked by: 1962-ga
List Price: $5.00
Posted: 28 Aug 2002 00:47 PDT
Expires: 27 Sep 2002 00:47 PDT
Question ID: 59338
I am clarifying my previous question. I would like some examples of
different productions of King Lear and how they allow different
readings of the play to be realised
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Subject: Re: king lear
Answered By: leli-ga on 28 Aug 2002 03:27 PDT
 
Hello again

Thanks for getting back to us with your question.  I couldn't resist
it as I've just seen a version of "Othello" set in the Falklands war -
and the director is promising "Coriolanus in Kabul" for next year.

But I'm not just going for wacky ideas about context for "Lear". I'll
start with some of the more mainstream possibilities which, trying to
get some order into this vast subject, I've put into three categories:
Elizabethan, mythic and non-specific.  Of course this is a bit
artificial - things aren't usually that clear-cut in the theater.  In
my opinion (though it's your opinion that matters here) all these
three are possible backgrounds to the big themes of "King Lear" -
themes including disintegration of a great man, enmity and passion,
family, politics, dissolution of a kingdom, etc.


ELIZABETHAN 

The play can be given a 'Shakespearean' look and feel by being
produced in Elizabethan dress and maybe even on a period stage.  This
might be seen as reinforcing Shakespeare's text, adding importance to
the actual poetry.  It seems to be rather unfashionable at present.

There's a video of a production at the Globe (Shakespeare's theatre
rebuilt) at:

http://www.tmwmedia.com/shakespeare_05.html


PAGAN BRITAIN/MYTHIC

This style picks up on the origins of the story in a more 'primitive'
time well before Shakespeare's own.  It allows directors to emphasise
qualities of violence, storm, passion in an unfamiliar and distant
period.  Beside it, the Elizabethan costumes might look a bit 'cosy'.

A production by the RSC in London in 1999 had a 'mythic' flavour:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/story/0,3604,259358,00.html

And a 2001 production in San Francisco went down this road:

"Gray and black fabric flank a stone-like stage.... Few props ....
other than the occasional table or throne.......
Befitting pagan Britain, royalty and subjects are clad in a
combination of the opulent and rough, with burlap over velvet."

http://www.sfshakes.org/news/archive/rollout_files/Index.html


NON-SPECIFIC/MINIMALISTIC

By getting rid of clues about time and place, directors can underline
the universality of the themes in the play.  Empty stark sets can help
with creating a 'wasteland' feel.

An example might be a 2001 production at the Cincinnati Playhouse in
the Park:

"Because Shakespeare's message is appropriate for any point in
history, we have chosen to set this production without specific period
or culture.......[in]a raw, elemental world where violence becomes
commonplace"

Read more at:
http://www.inch.com/~kteneyck/lear2.html

Or a minimalist film version:

http://us.imdb.com/Title?0148376

........................................................................................................................................

MORE UNUSUAL PRODUCTIONS


Many of the more unconventional productions have used management
metaphors.

"The Executive Lear" at the Edinburgh Fringe 2001 saw Lear as a
chairman devolving power:

http://www.britishtheatreguide.info/otherresources/fringe/fringe01-04.htm#lear

The tycoon idea was also explored in a film:
".. a TV movie called King of Texas was released in the United States.
It told the story of a self-made Texan ranch tycoon, John Lear, who
divided his holdings among his daughters only to find that once they
had his property, they, like, totally rejected him. Lear was played by
RSC veteran (and Enterprise captain Jean-Luc Picard) Patrick Stewart,
complete with Kenny Rodgers beard and a Texan drawl. "Get off ma
land," he yelled at one point."

(The complete article could be relevant to your topic in a general
way.)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/features/story/0,11710,780824,00.html

And another film, directed by Godard in the late eighties, is a
bizarre variation on the theme (post-Chernobyl wealthy executive
arrives in Switzerland....):

http://video.barnesandnoble.com/search/product.asp?userid=1A8GFFLGBV&EAN=26359024634


Or is he Edward VIII in a 1930s palace?

"The initial impression is that ....Lear..... is being likened to
another king that gave up his kingdom, Edward VIII. This impression is
enhanced by the use of television screens around the auditorium which
show the speech where he gives up his country. He is surrounded by men
in three-piece suits and ladies in sumptuous, sexy evening dress. "

http://www.britishtheatreguide.info/reviews/kinglear-rev.htm


Some people have seen Lear as a misogynist and you'll find a feminist
version at:

http://www.english.uiuc.edu/newrevels/learsdaughters.html

Also, in the British National Video Archive of Stage Performance
there's a record of a stage production with Lear as a woman.
" modern dress and a vague suggestion of East European context"  is
context for "a place where enmity between clans and within families
rumbles ominously".

http://theatremuseum.vam.ac.uk/video45.htm

And check out Kurosawa's Japanese version:

http://us.imdb.com/Title?0089881

One more helpful link leads to photos of various Royal Shakespeare
Company productions showing a wide range of dress from many periods:

http://www.pads.ahds.ac.uk:81/padsKingLearPhotographs


Good luck in your researches.  I had an interesting time doing this
and I hope you enjoy working on it too.  If anything needs
clarification, please let me know.

Regards - Leli

search notes:

"King Lear" with RSC, "Edinburgh Fringe", "Shakespeare Festival",
experimental, "modern dress", review
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