HOW MANY TOMORROWS DID MACBETH NEED?
“Then there’s Shakespeare. His antiquated language is confounding to any reader, and such passages as ‘Tomorrow
and tomorrow and tomorrow…’ well, wouldn’t one tomorrow be enough.”
James Reynolds in The Crossett (Arkansas) News Observer (1959)]
**
THOMAS JEFFERSON & JOHN ADAMS JOURNEY TO STRATFORD
While in England in 1786 on diplomatic business,
Thomas Jefferson visited the birthplace and home
of one of his idols: William Shakespeare. He was
joined by John Adams, who was then the U.S. ambassador
to Britain. The pair weren’t particularly impressed
when they got to Stratford-Upon-Avon — Adams called
it "small and mean," and Jefferson was appalled by
the costs, noting each amount paid ("for seeing
house where Shakespeare was born, 1 shilling;
seeing his tomb, 1 shilling; entertainment, 4 shillings …").
But the two Founding Fathers did partake in a custom
of the time: They cut off a bit of an old wooden chair
that was reportedly Shakespeare's own as a souvenir.
Some 220 years later, the chip was displayed at Jefferson's Monticello home, along with a wry note he'd written:
"A chip cut from an armed chair in the chimney corner in Shakespeare's house at Stratford on Avon said to be the identical chair in which he usually sat. If true like
the relics of the saints it must miraculously reproduce
itself."
From INTERESTING FACTS website for December 5, 2022
**
QUIZ #86543
What noted author and short-story writer (one of his
novels is The Sheltering Sky) composed the incidental
music for the Helen Hayes production of Twelfth Night?
(Answer below)
**
“The most important thing to remember about Shakespeare
is that he was a writer, working on commission… I like
to think that if the bard were alive today he’d be out
on the beach in Beverly Hills tapping out ‘High Concept'
]movies of the week on his Wang Word Processor, up to
his ruff in cocaine.”
Maureen Lipman
**
IS THIS THE ONLY PORTRAIT OF SHAKESPEARE PAINTING
DURING THE PLAYWRIGHT'S LIFETIME?
"Cleaning removed a heavy black beard to reveal
an original, lighter trimmed and pointed beard.
Removing the frame for closer examination uncovered
the stylised letters RP to the top right of the
painting—the cypher of Robert Peake the Elder
(c.1551-1619), who by 1576 was recorded as being
in the pay of the Office of the Revels, which oversaw
the performance of plays for Queen Elizabeth I.
...
Peake’s son William (c.1580-1639) owned a successful
print shop and knew the engraver Martin Droeshout,
who created the image of Shakespeare for the 1623
First Folio of the Collected Works. The National
Portrait Gallery holds Droeshout engravings published
by the Peake family press.
excerpted from THE ART NEWSPAPER (November 11, 2022)
https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2022/11/22/is-this-
really-the-only-portrait-of-william-shakespeare-made-
in-his-lifetime
JAMES BROUGHTON ACTING IN THE TEMPEST AT
AGE 10
“In the scene chosen I was supposed to be invisible
to Trinculo and Stephano during their drunken
buffoonery. The only words I had to say several
times were two: ‘Thou liest.’ But I was so panicked
by stage fright that I peed in the wings, leaving
a puddle to puzzle the stage manager. Years later
at Stratford, in the summer of 1951, I watched Alan Badel perform Ariel to the Prospero of Michael Redgrave.
He was naked, silver white, slender as a magic wand,
gracefully powerful enough to carry out any astonishments
a poet might require. He reminded me so much of my own glittering guardian that I knew then for certain that Will Shakespeare had had a lifelong collaborating angel.”
from Contemporary Authors series Volume 12
**
BARD & THE BARD“The Thane of Cawdor by David Bard is Macbeth as a
detective story, the narrative as it might have been
written by Lady Macbeth’s physician before the
sleep-walking had confirmed the suspicions which
he had formed in evidence as (reported in the play)
left by the Macbeths.”
The Amen Corner (Saturday Review, August 7, 1937)
**
SONNET FRAGMENT
"Nor marble, nor gilded monuments
Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme."
Perhaps being boastful is not too wise,
But even in poetry it pays to advertise.
Louis Phillips
Promises, promises — where’s the answer (Paul Bowles) to QUIZ #86543? May I also suggest you take a pass at writing some film & TV pitches as the Bard might have written?
Louis: Every bit and piece of your bits and pieces speaks of your profound wonder and astonishment of the Wittgensteinian worlds where everything is every thing that is the case…You are sui generis…
Interesting as always, Lou. Thanks.
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Very nice Lou!
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Shakespeare, et al may have smoked pot…
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/did-shakespeare-smoke-pot-180956223/
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Promises, promises — where’s the answer (Paul Bowles) to QUIZ #86543? May I also suggest you take a pass at writing some film & TV pitches as the Bard might have written?
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Louis: Every bit and piece of your bits and pieces speaks of your profound wonder and astonishment of the Wittgensteinian worlds where everything is every thing that is the case…You are sui generis…
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Infinite variety, Louis!
Keep it up.
Sent from my iPhone
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THANK YOU TO ALL PERSONS WHO TAKE THE TIME TO READ & RESPOND.
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