dragonzfaerie: (Default)
The American Shakespeare Center is currently performing Othello.  As always, one of the things I love about the ASC is their ability to pick up on obscure tidbits of Dialog and bring them to the forefront of a production.  In particular, Iago's justification for his hatred of Othello.  Iago mentions that he feels he was passed over for promotion.  But he also mentions that there is a rumor that Othello has had an affair with his wife.  Later, Iago says the same thing of Cassio. 

Now, of course, I have a fundamental distrust of all dialogue.  However, this speech is often regarded as a fabrication by Iago to justify his actions.  Because of the standard distrust of  Iago, I am more likely to want to trust him.  The performance of Iago that I saw last week convinced me that my reading of this play is possible.  The ASC's Iago put on his show for Rodrigo spouting how much he hated his commander, but when he talked about his wife's potential infidelity, it was not a show for anyone.  Iago's disgust at the sight of Emilia seemed a subtler mirror of Othello's outrage at the sight of Desdemona once he suspects her promiscuity.  Iago says he does not care whether his wife did the things she is accused of or not.  For him, the fact that it has made its way into rumor is enough to condemn them all. 

To me this feels that under this reading, the play Othello follows the structure of a revenge tragedy only focusing on someone other than the revenger.  By purposing this I don't mean to undermine Othello's position of prominence in the play, but rather to purpose a new level of fatalism to the play.  If Iago is feeding Othello with the same poison he himself is suffering from there is no evil mastermind, just fate toying with them all. 
dragonzfaerie: (Default)

I was rewatching Much Ado this evening and I got to thinking that I've never seen a single version that I really really liked. I have enjoyed different adaptations over the years and seen a good stage performance, but something always falls short. And, largely, I believe it is Claudio.

 

M once told me that Claudio is a two-dimensional character. He's not supposed to have depth. But I've never thought of him that way. For me there is one line that marks Claudio's depth. That is in the scene where he and the Prince find out that they have been duped. At hearing the confession of Don John's man, the prince says, “Runs not this speech like iron through your blood?” Claudio responds with “I have drunk poison whiles he utter'd it.” (V.i)

 

I have always thought this line was the most profound of all his lines. It shows the love he truly bared for Hero and it allies him with a lot of Shakespeare's other characters. He, who is already like Othello in his jealousy, could in this line join in his same self imposed fate. He could be Romeo in a moment, fleeing to the death bed of his beloved to join her fake death with a real one, except that Leonato sentences him to another marriage. He could be Horatio staring at the poisoned cup as though the last person alive trying to wrestle with his own since of justice. The mere mention of poison invokes all these comparisons.

 

None of that works, however, if the character doesn't get across the grief which has just flooded over this character. Branagh didn't even include the line in his adaptation of the play to film. That just doesn't make sense to me, because I feel that this line makes or break that character. If you don't feel that he truly is ready to take any punishment from Leonato, wishing with all his heart to undo what is done. You can't feel that he deserves to win Hero back in the end. That is a flat character.

 

Next time someone reveals that you've been lied to, in all earnestness quote Claudio's line. See if they don't do a double take. If the scene were ever to be done with the force of emotion that that one line warrants, I guarantee Benedick and Beatrice wouldn't be able to steal the show (as much).

Profile

dragonzfaerie: (Default)
dragonzfaerie

August 2010

S M T W T F S
1234567
8 91011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Most Popular Tags

Page generated Jul. 13th, 2025 11:09 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios