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Tired.

More Shakespeare in Love insights: I watched the director's commentary track last night and he talked about the theme of sleeping and dreaming in the movie. I hadn't noticed that and I love that theme (in general, I mean). "I would sleep forever if I could dream myself into a company of players..." I've always been interested in people who are said to be dreaming their lives away--it's always been presented as a bad thing, as behavior to be avoided--but what if that's their reality (i.e., it feels more real)? What is real? One of Madeleine L'Engle's Wrinkle in Time books (the first sequel, I believe, A Wind in the Door) asks that question. I feel more real on stage sometimes than in some "real" situations.

None of the commentary tracks mentions a couple of inside takes I noticed. Will's fascination with the actor Thomas Kent (before he knows who s/he really is) and then when he does know--that could be a reference to Shakespeare's suggested homosexuality. Also, when Will first enters Viola's room she asks him "Are you the author of the plays of William Shakespeare?" I believe that's a nod to the tempest regarding whether or not S-peare actually wrote his plays.

One of my new favorite moments in that movie is when the guy playing the Chorus goes out at the top of the show and can't get the lines out (because he has a terrible stutter). Will is dying backstage, the audience is sweating, all seems lost--and then he finds his stride, intoning those well-known words. "Two households, both alike in dignity..." It's just...wonderful. It brings tears to my eyes, it sends chills down my spine because yes, theater is about transformation; I felt the frisson of "oh God, yes. It happened."

I'd never noticed how Shakespeareanly deux ex machina (what a wildly awkward phrase!) Queen Elizabeth's appearance at the end is, but yeah, there it is. "How does this end?" Her appearances are also so symmetrical--her scenes are in the beginning, the middle and the end of the movie.

Date: 2003-12-15 02:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ginmar.livejournal.com
What struck me most about this movie and made me love it so is the way one important message slips by you, the transformative power of art and, well, I hate to say it---but love, as well. Shakespeare's play is transformed by his life, and his life is transformed by his play. There's a wonderful scene where the moneylender is becoming more and more enthralled at what's going on before him, and there's some interuption. Enraged at the interupption---it's not about his investment any longer---he shouts, "Silence!" Earlier, having dismissed Will, now he deferentially bows to him to continue.

Dammit, Cee, now I've got to go watch the bloody thing again. It's all your fault.

When Does A Dream Begin?

Date: 2003-12-15 04:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] planga.livejournal.com
There's a folk tale from Japan about a man who dreams he is a butterfly, but then the butterfly dreams that he is a man. The question arises as to which is the reality and which is a dream.

It's also a lot prettier when I don't paraphrase so quickly.

-Chris "When reality is dismissed?" Combs

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