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Rebecca Hall discusses playing Rosalind, 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, Rebecca Hall discusses playing Rosalind in her father Sir Peter Hall's 2003 production of As You Like It. This interview, together with the others in the series (with actors such as Judi Dench, 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
Rebecca Hall
on
Rosalind
Taken from
Thirteen Leading Actors on Thirteen Key Roles
by Julian Curry
Production Information
Rebecca Hall on Rosalind
Other Interviews Available
About the Author
Copyright Information
Rebecca Hall
on
Rosalind
As You Like It (1599–1600)
The Peter Hall Company
Opened at the Theatre Royal, Bath
on 13 August 2003
Directed by Peter Hall
Designed by John Gunter
With
As You Like It divides critics. ‘A work of great literary value,’ say some. ‘Lacking artistry, a mere crowd-pleaser,’ say others. Nonetheless, it remains very popular. On the surface the play is a simple pastoral romantic comedy with little of the darkness of Shakespeare’s other mature comedies, and a happy ending is never in doubt. But at a deeper level it touches on a host of subjects such as love, nature, ageing and death. The comedy’s genius lies not in its paper-thin plot but in its characters. Jaques prides himself on his abilty to ‘suck melancholy out of a song as a weasel sucks eggs’ [2.5]. His sardonic commentary and Touchstone’s restless bawdy innuendo are balanced against Rosalind, whose generosity of spirit, complexity of emotion and subtlety of thought make her one of Shakespeare’s most fully realised and beguiling characters. Rosalind blends front-foot energy with vulnerability; she dominates all around her, then proceeds to faint at the sight of Orlando’s blood.
Gender reversal is central to the play. Rosalind disguises herself as the boy ‘Ganymede’, whose name, taken from one of Jove’s lovers, carries homoerotic overtones. Orlando enjoys acting out his romance with Ganymede, almost as if the beautiful boy who looks strangely like the woman he loves is even more appealing than the woman herself. As You Like It lampoons the conventions of courtly love. Characters lament their sufferings in love, but their anguish is skin deep. ‘I to live and die her slave,’ writes Orlando, but his verses are mocked by Rosalind as a ‘tedious homily of love’ [3.2]. She asserts that ‘men have died from time to time, and worms have eaten them, but not for love’. But whereas Touchstone and Jaques merely focus on romantic folly, Rosalind champions love so long as it is grounded in the real world. She knows that ‘Men are April when they woo, December when they wed’ [4.1].
My own experience of acting in As You Like It is limited to a cough-and-a-spit at Stratford in 1968, when a weird thing happened. (Old Actor’s Anecdote coming up…) One midweek matinee I’m one of a bunch of lads making up the numbers onstage, listening to the First Forest Lord describe the death of a stag. It’s late in the season and advanced boredom has set in; we’ve heard this stuff many times before. ‘Must be about 2.45,’ I think to myself. ‘If I was to nip across the road to The Duck I could get in a quick pint before closing time… Hmmm, tempting… Yes, to hell with it, that’s what I’ll do right now!’ I’m about to sneak off the stage and over to the pub, when I realise that I am the actor I’m listening to. I am playing the First Forest Lord. I’ve become disembodied, and am listening to myself delivering the stag’s death speech on autopilot.
Rebecca Hall was twenty-seven when we met, by some years the youngest contributor to this book. She was already well on the way to a highly successful career, having started six years earlier with an award-winning debut in Shaw’s Mrs Warren’s Profession. She had arrived with a bang. Her Rosalind followed immediately afterwards, and created waves on both sides of the Atlantic. It was easy to understand why she had dropped out of Cambridge in mid-degree, from sheer impatience to get cracking as an actress. I interviewed her in the summer of 2009 at the matchbox flat in central London where she was staying, during her run at the Old Vic Theatre playing Hermione in The Winter’s Tale and Varya in The Cherry Orchard for Sam Mendes’ Bridge Project.
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!