Skip to content
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL DOMESTIC ORDERS $35+
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL US ORDERS $35+

How to do Shakespeare / Edition 1

Availability:
in stock, ready to be shipped
Original price $46.95 - Original price $46.95
Original price $46.95
$63.99
$63.99 - $63.99
Current price $63.99

'Adrian Noble vigorously highlights the extraordinary rhythmic, linguistic patterns Shakespeare gives the speaker. Any actor will find this book invaluable. For any student of Shakespeare it should be essential.' (From the Foreword by Ralph Fiennes)

'How can I bring the text alive, make it vivid, how do I make people hear it for the first time? How can I enter into that world and not feel a stranger. How can I not feel clumsy and inept? ... How can I speak it without sounding artificial or "actory"? In other words, how can I make it real ...?'

Adrian Noble has worked on Shakespeare with everyone from oscar-nominated actors to groups of schoolchildren. Here he draws on several decades of top-level directing experience to shed new light on how to bring some of theatre's seminal texts to life.

He shows you how to approach the perennial issues of performing Shakespeare, including:

  • wordplay - using colour and playing plain, wit and comedy, making language muscular
  • building a character - different strategies, using the text, Stanislavski and Shakespeare
  • shape and structure - headlining a speech, playing soliloquys, determining a speech's purpose and letting the verse empower you
  • dialogue - building tension, sharing responsibility and 'passing the ball'.

This guided tour of Shakespeare's complex but unfailingly rewarding work stunningly combines instruction and inspiration.

ISBN-13: 9780415549271

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Publication Date: 11-27-2009

Pages: 272

Product Dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.90(d)

Adrian Noble was the artistic director and chief executive of the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1990 and 2003, having previously served as Associate Director for nine years. He has also held key positions at the Bristol Old Vic and the Manchester Royal Exchange. He regularly works in Theatre and Opera in Canada, France and the USA as well as the UK and has received over 20 Olivier Award nominations during his career.

Table of Contents

Part 1 - Principles

1. Apposition

2. Metaphor

3. Metre and pulse

4. Line endings

5. Word play

6. Vocabulary

7. Shape and structure

Part 2 - Practice

8. Early, middle and late

9. Prose

10. Soliloquy

11. Comedy

12. Dialogue

13. Building a Character

14. Conclusion