Thursday, September 19, 2019
Paratextuality in Shakespeares King Lear Essay example -- William Sha
Pitching Mad Boy: How Paratextuality Mediates the Distance Between Spectators, Adaptations, and Source Texts.      A popular anecdote used to introduce students and spectators to King Lear tells how, for 150  years, the stage was dominated by Nahum Tateââ¬â¢s adaptation, in which Lear and Cordelia are  happily reconciled, and Cordelia is married off to Edgar. Here is what N.H. Hudson had to say  about Tate:  This shameless, this execrable piece of demendation. Tate improve  Lear? Set a tailor at work, rather, to improve Niagara! Withered be the  hand, palsied be the arm, that ever dares to touch one of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s  plays again. (quoted in Massai 247)  Of course, such sophisticated and erudite commentators as are assembled here today will be  quick to point out a couple of ironies about Hudsonââ¬â¢s condemnation of Shakespeare adaptation.  First, Shakespeare himself was an adaptor. Most if not all of his plays are adapted from  extant plays, renaissance romance novels, or even, as in the case I will be discussing today, old  Norse sagas. King Lear was adapted from an earlier play, which was itself based on Holinshedââ¬â¢s  chronicles.  Second, popular adaptations by Tate and Colley Cibber, among others, by making  Shakespeare accessible and tasteful to Restoration and Enlightenment audiences, played no small  part in establishing Shakespeare at the centre of the literary canon (Massai 247). And as an  afterthought, it might be worth noting that Tateââ¬â¢s adaptation does not so much ruin the original  King Lear as restore it ââ¬â Tateââ¬â¢s happy ending is more ââ¬Å"faithfulâ⬠ than Shakespeare to  Shakespeareââ¬â¢s sources, The True Chronicle History of King Leir and Holinshedââ¬â¢s Chronicles.  I mention this by way of introducing Michael Oââ¬â¢Brienââ¬â¢s Mad Boy Chronic...              ...eares.ca/  Massai, Sonia. "Stage Over Study: Charles Marowitz, Edward Bond, and Recent Materialist  Approaches to Shakespeare." New Theatre Quarterly 15, no. 3 [59] (1999): 247-55.  Morrow, Martin. ââ¬Å"A Viking Free for All.â⬠ Rpt. in O'Brien, Michael. Mad Boy Chronicle : From  Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus, c. 1200 A.D. and Hamlet, Prince of Denmark by  William Shakespeare, c. 1600 A.D. 1st ed. Toronto: Playwrights Canada Press, 1996. Pp.  152-54.  O'Brien, Michael. Mad Boy Chronicle : From Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus, c. 1200  A.D. and Hamlet, Prince of Denmark by William Shakespeare, c. 1600 A.D. 1st ed. Toronto:  Playwrights Canada Press, 1996.  Shaner, Madeleine. Rev. of Mad Boy Chronicle, by Michael O'Brien. 2001. Backstage West 28  Sept. 2003. http://www.canadianshakespeares.ca/  Stam, Robert. Film Theory : An Introduction. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2000.                      
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