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Take a peek behind the scenes of Bard-Based Bedlam



My 3 favourite Shakespeare plays.

28/2/2020

2 Comments

 
By James Alston
​
ShakeItUp was born out of a love of Shakespeare’s work, and all of our company members are committed Bard-fans! Today, our James Alston takes us through the three Shakespeare plays that mean the most to him.
 
 
To narrow down my favourite Shakespeare plays to just one I think would be an impossible task, so for this blog I had decided to cheat a little and narrow it down to just three.
 
  1. Macbeth:
 
“Blood will have blood…”
 
Like most people who went to school in Britain, my first experience of Shakespeare was in the classroom, and although I enjoyed these lessons, I wouldn’t say I was hooked instantly. That was until my first experience of seeing Shakespeare performed. I must have been about thirteen at the time and my Mum (I imagine sensing my timid curiosity for Shakespeare) took me to see a production of Macbeth. I remember it was in a tiny black-box studio in the Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham, and it was produced by a company involved in outreach work in the local area, with a cast made up of professional actors and members of the local community. It completely gripped me from the start. It was fast paced, it was brutal, it was…thrilling! One of the most exciting things about it was that they had worked with local MCs who would – at certain key points of the play – break into rap, reflecting on Macbeth’s spiral into tragedy. It was an unexpectedly effective means of telling the story and it introduced me to the idea that Shakespeare doesn’t have to be a museum piece: it can, and should, be relevant to now and it should evolve and change. That performance has had more of an enduring impact on me than many shows since; it showed me how exciting Shakespeare can be, and it was the beginning of my fascination.
 
      2. The Tempest: 

“We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep.”
 
Quite possibly the last play that Shakespeare wrote by himself, The Tempest is a beguiling enigma. Technically one of his “Comedies”, it’s a play that constantly tries to elude strict classification and indeed seems to occupy a genre all of its own. Several interlinking stories are played out on Prospero’s Island: there’s Ferdinand and Miranda’s love tale, Prospero’s story of revenge and eventual forgiveness, the plotting of Dukes Antonio and Sebastian, and of course the comedy plotline of the bestial Caliban and his worship of the drunken Stephano and Trinculo. It has moments of exquisite beauty (“Be not afeared, the isle is full of noises”) and moments of extreme brutality and violence. It has sparked centuries of debate as to its wider themes such as the echoes of colonialism in Prospero and Caliban’s relationship. Whenever you think you’ve nailed down The Tempest, it twists itself into something completely different.
 
Also, Prospero’s final speech is magnificently poignant. I think it will forever be one of my favourites.
 
       3. A Midsummer Night’s Dream 

“The course of true love never did run smooth.”
 
Ok, so this one may actually be my favourite. A mainstay of summer outdoor Shakespeare performances for a very good reason, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is about as enchanting as a play can get. The play follows several groups of characters as they each spend a – to put it mildly – rather confusing night in the woods. Joyfully entertaining scenes abound as the audience are drawn into an intoxicating fairy world where all the typical conventions are assurances are turned on their heads. Shakespeare gives us one of his best loved comic fools in the hapless actor Bottom and the fight between the four lovers is so brilliantly crafted it is almost guaranteed to raise the roof in any production. The play’s darker edges, especially in relation to gender politics and sexual violence, are often unfortunately overlooked, but when they are paid attention to they add further layers of richness to this strange and silly tale. It is a play that fills me with the joys of a summer’s day each time I read or watch it.
 
And that’s it! A very brief tour through three of my favourite Shakespeare plays. We come back to the Bard’s work as a reference point in our ShakeItUp rehearsals. Our shows are not just about sticking some thee’s and thy’s into our dialogue, we try to incorporate the structures, themes and characters that he used into our own improvised plays. In some ways, they are a parody of his work, but it’s not as simple as that. It all comes back to my experience with Macbeth in that studio in Cheltenham, it’s about reinvention, a new way of engaging with that work. Shakespeare never stays still, it is constantly in motion.

2 Comments
Office Movers Newark link
20/7/2022 19:25:00

Great reead thankyou

Reply
Jewish Singles Terrebonne link
26/5/2025 01:30:37

I love how Shakespeare's works can still feel relevant and exciting today.

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    With contributions from members of the ShakeItUp company, this regular blog will cover behind the scenes peaks into the rehearsal room, news about our latest projects, and insights into what goes into creating our Bard-based Bedlam!

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