Judi Dench on Juliet - Judi Dench - E-Book

Judi Dench on Juliet E-Book

Judi Dench

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Beschreibung

Judi Dench discusses playing Juliet, in this ebook taken from Shakespeare On Stage: Thirteen Leading Actors on Thirteen Key Roles. In each volume of the Shakespeare On Stage series, a leading actor takes us behind the scenes, recreating in detail a memorable performance in one of Shakespeare's major roles. They discuss their character, working through the play scene by scene, with refreshing candour and in forensic detail. The result is a masterclass on playing the role, invaluable for other actors and directors, as well as students of Shakespeare – and fascinating for audiences of the play. In this volume, Judi Dench discusses playing Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli's Old Vic production of Romeo and Juliet when she was just twenty-three. This interview, together with the others in the series (with actors such as Jude Law, Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart), is also available in the collection Shakespeare On Stage: Thirteen Leading Actors on Thirteen Key Roles by Julian Curry, with a foreword by Trevor Nunn.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2013

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Judi Dench

on

Juliet

Taken from

SHAKESPEARE ON STAGE

Thirteen Leading Actors on Thirteen Key Roles

by Julian Curry

Contents

Production Information

Judi Dench on Juliet

Other Interviews Available

About the Author

Copyright Information

Judi Dench

on

Juliet

Romeo and Juliet (1595–6)

Opened at the Old Vic Theatre, London on 4 October 1960

Directed and Designed by Franco Zeffirelli

With Thomas Kempinski as Tybalt,

Alec McCowen as Mercutio,

Peggy Mount as the Nurse,

Romeo and Juliet is Shakespeare’s early tragedy of ‘star-cross’d lovers’, whose youthful deaths ultimately reconcile their feuding families. Since its first performance in the mid-1590s it has remained one of his most popular plays. The lovers are united by their passion yet doomed to separation, and the fact that they have so little time together lends intensity to their relationship. They fall instantly in love, are married almost immediately, and enjoy just one single night together before their enforced separation. Romeo and Juliet brilliantly evokes the ardour of youth. A testament to the immortal power of what is frequently billed as ‘The Greatest Love Story Ever Told’, is the fact that each year thousands of letters are sent to ‘Juliet in Verona’ from young lovers, seeking her blessing or advice. The volume of mail is such that a local organisation, Il Club di Giulietta, devotes itself to replying on her behalf.

Romeo and Juliet has been revived, revised and adapted countless times on stage and film, and in musical, opera and ballet. The play draws much of its power from discord, and powerful versions have been made in areas of genuine conflict. It was famously transposed to 1950s New York for the musical West Side Story, depicting the rivalry between teenage street gangs, the Puerto Rican immigrant Sharks, and the ‘True American’ Jets. In 1994 it was set in Bosnia with a Christian Romeo and a Muslim Juliet. Romeo and Juliet has been filmed some sixty times, starting in 1900. Franco Zeffirelli’s 1968 movie recreated much of the atmosphere of his stage production.

I was delighted when Judi Dench agreed to talk about playing Juliet, not least because my first job was as a limping, hunchbacked citizen of Verona in the same production, when it was recast for a long tour. By then the newspapers with their mixed notices were turning yellow, Judi was quite sensational, the show was eight months into its run and well on the way to becoming legendary. It was thrilling to be involved. I was a walk-on without a word to say but felt part of a rich onstage community. I knew what my character’s job was, who I was married to, where we lived. I can still remember the fabric of noises, the whistling and shouting, grunting and groaning, dogs barking, birdsong, the tolling of bells and general din, street cries, distant offstage snatches of song and vendors bawling their wares.

I went to meet Judi for this interview in 2006 at her beautiful Elizabethan home in Surrey. Having played Juliet forty-six years earlier, some details had necessarily become hazy. But others were still razor-sharp, and the longer we talked, the more memories came flooding back. It made perfect sense that, for all her later triumphs in Shakespeare, this was the part she chose to discuss.

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!