hamlet’s “i did love you once” and ophelia’s “indeed, my lord, you did make me believe so” is such an underrated gut punch. it’s betrayal it’s heartbreak it’s vulnerability it’s so over. truly no one is doing it like shakespeare
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hamlet’s “i did love you once” and ophelia’s “indeed, my lord, you did make me believe so” is such an underrated gut punch. it’s betrayal it’s heartbreak it’s vulnerability it’s so over. truly no one is doing it like shakespeare
giving myself a merit badge that says SURVIVED MARCH
oh fuck. I’m so sorry. listening and learning
If you’re queer, what Shakespeare play did you latch on to in school?
Macbeth
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Hamlet
Romeo & Juliet
Much Ado About Nothing
The Tempest
Other
I don’t like Shakespeare/I’m not queer
I know it's a little early, but it's good to let people prepare!
I know it's a little early, but it's good to let people prepare!
on nights when the veil is thin u can read rpf on jstor
baby you can read rpf on jstor anytime if you're brave enough
ugly cried at the theatre at Hamnet
So I just saw the most incredible production of Macbeth that wove parental grief into the whole regicide plot in such a fascinating way.
So at the very beginning of the play there was a scene where Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are at a funeral as the primary mourners. A stretcher is carried on with a covered body. The body was notably very small. They laid flowers on it and Macbeth immediately left for battle.
Now *I* studied Shakespeare in college so I immediately knew there is one single line that implies that the Macbeths lost a child at some point. Most of the time this isn't utilized in productions; it's just a throwaway line, intended to paint just how determined Lady M is for this regicide thing to work and how furious she is that her husband has cold feet. In this production she delivers "I have given suck, and know how tender tis to love the babe that milks me" nearly in tears. She takes a moment to steel herself before saying, "I would while it was smiling in my face, have plucked my nipple from his boneless gums and dashed the brains pit, had I so sworn" and she very nearly SCREAMED this in Macbeth's face.
Also noted was how the Macbeths looked at Macduff's children. Lady M was clutching her heart, nearly breaking watching them embrace their parents. Macbeth could not even look at them.
At the end of Lady Macbeth's plot, when she is sleepwalking and sleeptalking, she is typically portrayed as speaking to no one or to her husband. However, at a certain point of her monologue she got on her knees, raised her voice to a comforting octave, and began miming tear wiping, hand holding, hair and face stroking, around a child-sized figure. "Wash your hands, put on your nightgown, look not so pale. I tell you yet again, Banquo’s buried; he cannot come out on’s grave." Then she stands and appears to take the child's hand. "Go to bed, go to bed. I can hear knocking at the gate-" then she looks down and realizes that no one is there, followed be the most heartbreaking shriek I've ever heard followed by a full minute of her just weeping while curled up on the floor before she stood up, finished her monologue and left the stage.
Most of the time when the loss of a child is utilized in a performance or adaptation, it is assumed that the child was an infant and lost some time ago. To imply that the child died IMMEDIATELY prior to the events of the play and had been cared for and loved by their parents for a few years adds such a fascinating layer to the desperation to ascend to the throne, Lady M's madness, and Macbeth's initial hesitation into "in for a penny, in for a pound" attitude, Macbeth's fury that Banquo's, not his, children will take the throne, and even Macbeth's eventual demise following a frenzied final battle.
How far will grief push you to fill a hole? How far will grief push you to desperation? And what happens when none of your new pursuits are filling the void left by the one you lost? And what happens when you realize you have nothing left to lose?
It was a PHENOMENAL production.
sometimes shakespeare asks huge, life-altering questions in his texts, like "can you be forgiven for the worst thing you have ever done to someone?" and sometimes the answer is "no. die about it"
the funniest part of much ado is after claudio and hero get engaged and beatrice is like “meanwhile I’m over here!!! forever alone!!! I wish someone like don pedro would ask me to marry him haha!!” and don pedro is like “would you like me to marry you?” and beatrice says no.
I love Shakespeare
pat mandziy | if much ado about nothing was gen z
@lovesjustachemical
it actually makes me feel sick how much of titus andronicus is about families and more specifically siblinghood. saturninus and bassianus. titus and marcus. the andronici siblings, particularly lavinia and lucius. chiron and demetrius, and later, aaron's son as well. it's all the inherent horror of being a sibling, being so tied to someone that they can never not be a part of you, even more so than a parent or a child. a mother or a husband can be replaced but who can grow me a new brother.
Lupita Nyong'o with brother Junior Nyong'o as Viola & Sebastian in Shakespeare in the Park - Twelfth Night
PBS will broadcast the play November 14, beginning at 9 PM ET 🌝
some of my oddly specific shakespeare staging opinions:
modern stagings of hamlet should keep them as royalty unless the fact that they aren't is hugely relevant to that production.
benedick and beatrice should be in their early 30s at least and claudio and hero should be noticeably younger. beatrice being adamant against marriage and both her and benedick's reaction to each other makes more sense if they're older.
this one's controversial but i think paris should be in his late teens, not way older. i might make another post elaborating on this but paris' death frames him as another victim of the families' violence, with romeo mourning + identifying him as being in the same situation as himself. it's not that old man paris isn't a good interpretation; it's often the easiest way to show romeo and juliet's positions as children helpless under their parents, and makes very clear what demands are being made of juliet. but i feel that adding paris to the list of young people killed in the play as a byproduct of the adults' violence gives romeo's identification with him more weight. given that he clearly has much more control than romeo and juliet but is still identified as a victim of the violence, i think it makes the most sense if he's a bit older than r&j but still very much young.
modern stagings of julius caesar should keep all the knives as knives, but if there has to be a gun, make cassius shoot himself in the head while caesar and brutus still die by stabbing. i've posted about this but the short version is that's it's the best way to show cassius' death as cowardly in contrast to brutus and caesar, whose deaths still mirror each other.
give the fool in king lear an onstage reason for disappearing. i like the 2018 national theatre version that has edmund kill him, and the 2023 south korean production that had cordelia be the fool in disguise the whole time. there was one from 2014 where lear beat him to death in madness which i think would be very shocking, but to good effect. the subsequent lack of comedy in the play after his disappearance would feel more jarring if we actually see his death.
benvolio should appear again in the last scene of romeo and juliet, mourning the two along with everyone else.
HAMLET SHOULD BE A TEEN. im tired of 30-40 year old celebrities taking the spot, the central conflicts of the play just don't work with a fully adult hamlet rather than a teenager caught miserably between the powerlessness of a child and the duty of a man, and stuck dealing with the irrevocable loss of a child's safety but no support to step into the power and responsibility of a man's duty towards his subordinates.
if the actor is a grown man, his feelings for his mother are repugnant-- the overbearing entitled misogyny of a hateful man, not the grief and confusion of a son abandoned. if the actor is a grown man, his vacillating feelings for ophelia are sadistic or pathetic, not the self-absorbed failing of a teenager catastrophically fumbling his first (and final) love in the midst of overwhelming emotional chaos. and if hamlet is a grown man, his long reluctance to actually get violent with claudius, and the way he just passive-aggressively snips at the guy, show him as an ineffectual coward, which just gets even weirder and more pathetic when he charges catastrophically into combat with laertes. a teenage hamlet repeatedly failing to nerving himself up to attack a king twenty years older than him makes more sense-- as does that teenager's ensuing suicidal tantrum during ophelia's burial.
tl;dr: the entire tragedy of hamlet is blunted and incoherent with a grown man at the center. that guy should be like sixteen.
honestly it really is sick and twisted that the anne hathaway twelfth night photoshoot is one of tumblr's favorite images but that actual production is like. lost media
I know some of you will love this
that looks awesome. tybalt is a mitsubishi forklift. the real understand
wake up babe new blorbos just dropped