Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something Old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“1606 –
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE AND THE YEAR OF LEAR”
by James Shapiro (first published in 2015);
“HOW SHAKESPEARE CHANGED EVERYTHING” by Stephen Marche (first published
in 2011); “THE FINAL ACT OF MR SHAKESPEARE” by Robert Winder (first published
2010)
I cannot remember exctly how it
happened, but for some years I was the go-to person on both the Listener and the Sunday Star-Times when it came to William Shakespeare. Whenever a
book about Shakespeare passed across the books editor’s desk, he would pass it
on to me to review. In the process, I augmented my own Shakespeare collection
with quite a few books.
Sometimes the books about
Shakespeare were excellent scholarship, sometimes they were popular rip-offs,
and sometimes they were cranky nonsense. I well remember, back in 2005, having
the pleasure, in one long article in the Listener,
of taking down Brenda James’ nonsensical piece of bogus scholarship The Truth Will Out, which asserted that
the obscure Sir Henry Neville was the “real” author of Shakespeare’s plays. In
the same article I dealt with Clare Asquith’s more reasonable Shadowplay, which argued that
Shakespeare was a Catholic. This is a plausible theory, but regrettably Asquith
overstated it, to the point where we were meant to believe that nearly
everything Shakespeare wrote was a coded sectarian statement.
At the more scholarly end of the
spectrum, in 2010 I enjoyed reviewing at length, for the Sunday Star-Times, James Shapiro’s Contested Will – Who Wrote Shakespeare (a review which I reproduced
on this blog). It is an excellent refutation of all “alternative authorship”
theories about Shakespeare’s plays.
Some of my reviews of books about
Shakespeare were relatively brief and jocular, especially when the book in hand
was clearly intended to be a piece of fun.
So here,
simply for your amusement, is a selection of three such reviews. The first, by
James Shapiro, can be taken seriously, but with some reservations. The second,
by Stephen Marche, is basically designed for light amusement. And the third, a
piece of fiction by Robert Winder, is a rollicking fantasia. All three reviews
are presented here unaltered from their original appearance in newspaper or
magazine.
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[The following review appeared in the Listener, 23 January 2016]
“1606 – WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE AND THE YEAR OF LEAR” by
James Shapiro
James Shapiro, professor of English
at Columbia University, has the knack of keeping it scholarly while also making
it accessible. His Contested Will is
still the best one-volume squelch to conspiracy theorists who want to believe
that somebody other than Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare’s plays. You don’t have
to be a palaeographer, cryptanalyst or textual expert to get his drift, but he
covers all the main areas of scholarly debate. The same goes for his 1599, in which he takes one fruitful
year in Shakespeare’s writing life and relates it to the public events that
would (probably) have influenced Shakespeare.
1606
follows the pattern of 1599, but it
is in no sense a mere follow-up. As far as publishing history and surviving
theatre records can confirm, 1606 was the year when Shakespeare wrote three of
his greatest – King Lear, Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra.
Shapiro rightly asserts that
Shakespeare was as much a Jacobean dramatist as an Elizabethan one. The company
to which he was attached performed far more often before King James 1 than it
had done before Queen Elizabeth 1, and playwrights were very responsive to
public events. So, examining changing theatrical conventions, the fortunes of
acting companies, and the contemporaneous work of many writers as well as
Shakespeare, Shapiro sets out to show how much King Lear, Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra were products of
their historical moment.
In King Lear, with its story of a kingdom divided, he sees close
reference to the tensions attending James 1’s attempts to unite England and
Scotland, and resistance to such a plan. In Macbeth
he finds far more echoes of the fears aroused by the “Gunpowder Plot” of late
1605 than have hitherto been publicised. In Antony
and Cleopatra he detects a growing nostalgia for the reign of Elizabeth
(and perhaps the character of the Earl of Essex) once the original bright
promise of King James’ reign had worn off. The text is detailed, densely
end-noted, and plunges us into fascinating issues such as reasons for the
popularity of masques as royal entertainments, the effects of outbreaks of
plague on theatregoing, the decline of acting troupes of children and the
scrambling of playwrights for patronage and preferment.
Once again, Shapiro plays fair,
telling us when he is speculating (as any biographer of Shakespeare often
must). He reminds us that nobody can say for sure what Shakespeare’s personal
beliefs were, nor can anyone pin down the fine details of his everyday life.
Shapiro is also aware that the “Gunpowder Plot” was to some extent the Jacobean
Reichstag Fire. There really was a plot, but the received version of the story was
as much government invention as historical fact, justifying a crackdown on a
group (dissident Catholics) which the government intended to penalise anyway.
Are there any minuses to this
erudite, readable and thoroughly absorbing book? Only one – but it may be a biggie. By so
closely relating three of Shakespeare’s masterworks to specific political and
cultural events, Shapiro might mislead some readers into thinking that they now
know the “real” meaning of each play. This sort of reductionism is not Shapiro’s
intention, but it could be inferred from the text. And surely one reason for
Shakespeare’s durability is the fact that his best plays outsoar their age. King Lear might in part relate to
obscure or forgotten manoeuvres involving the first Stuart king. But it
continues to speak to us by what it says about old age, fatherhood, families,
the provenance of evil and the thin hold civilisation has over howling
wilderness.
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[The following
review appeared in the Sunday Star-Times,
10 July 2011]
“HOW SHAKESPEARE CHANGED EVERYTHING” by Stephen Marche
In 1890 Eugene Schieffelin, a New
York businessman and amateur Shakespearean, cooked up an eccentric idea. He
would introduce into the United States all those species of bird that are
mentioned in Shakespeare’s plays. With the help and approval of various
acclimatization societies, he imported live thrushes and nightingales from
England. But they did not thrive in the Yankee climate and quickly died out. Only
one type of bird imported by Schieffelin went forth and multiplied and
multiplied and multiplied - to the point where it became an ecological
disaster. This was the starling, which happens to be mentioned once in Shakespeare’s
Henry IV, Part One.
So why are starlings swarming cities
and parks, crapping, squabbling, chasing native birds away, threatening crops
and being as much of a damned nuisance in America as they are everywhere else?
It’s because somebody liked Shakespeare.
Canadian freelance critic, and Esquire columnist, Stephen Marche spends
half a chapter telling this tale in his brief canter through some of the
stranger ways Shakespeare has influenced the modern world.
How
Shakespeare Changed Everything is really a sequence of ten short essays
more-or-less on Shakespeare. They are at their most likeable when they have the
weirdness of the Schieffelin story. Creepier is the account of John Wilkes
Booth’s obsession with Shakespeare, which led him to model himself quite
consciously on the bard’s noble Brutus as he set about assassinating Abraham
Lincoln. More inclusive is the chapter on how Shakespeare has been appropriated
by every political persuasion imaginable. More stirring is the chapter on the
black American actor Ira Aldridge, who practiced an interesting reverse racism
in the nineteenth century by playing Shakespeare’s white tragic heroes (Lear,
Shylock) in whiteface. This made up for some of the blackface Othellos of white
actors.
While most of this is harmless fun
it has its downside. Marche is one of those pop savants who desperately wants
to sell Shakespeare to the kids. This means chapters in which he strains to
show how hip Shakespeare is. There’s a woeful chapter on Shakespeare and sex
(“Look, kids, here are all the dirty bits from the plays!”) and an even more
woeful chapter on how Shakespeare invented the idea of the teenager (“Look,
kids, Romeo is almost as good as Justin Bieber!”). They have the patronizing
tone of a teacher talking down to school-kids in the hope of interesting them
in something boring.
Mustn’t grumble, though. This is an
engaging little bedside book. C.J.Sisson’s classic essay The Mythical Sorrows of Shakespeare is better than Marche in
showing how foolish it is to identify the playwright with characters in his
plays. James Shapiro’s masterly Contested
Will is better than Marche in dismissing the folly of crank theories about
people other than Shakespeare writing Shakespeare’s plays. But in these matters
Marche is on the side of the angels, and he manages to be fun with it.
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[The following
review appeared in the Sunday Star-Times
on 18 April 2010]
“THE FINAL ACT OF MR SHAKESPEARE” by Robert Winder
Fact
No. 1. Any sane historiian would now agree that the version of King Richard
the Third popularised by Shakespeare is largely fiction. The real Richard was
no better and nor worse than other kings. The image of the hunch-backed monster
murdering his way to power was the propaganda invention of the Tudors, the line
of monarchs who grabbed the throne off Richard. Because they had virtually no
legitimate claim to the throne themselves, in was in the Tudors’ interest to
invent the legend of Richard as villain.
Fact
No. 2. The only one of Shakespeare’s plays that appears to support
unequivocally the newfangled and Protestant Church of England is the very dull
chronicle play Henry the Eighth. It’s
generally regarded as Shakespeare’s very last play. But for a long time serious
critics suspected that this is not really Sakespeare’s work at all. It seems to
have been written mainly by the playwright John Fletcher, with Shakespeare
contributing at most a few touches.
Fact
No. 3. It was during a performance of the toadying Henry the Eighth that the Globe theatre burned down in 1613.
Out of these three circumstances,
journalist, Granta sub-editor and
sometime literary editor of the Independent
Robert Winder had woven a cheerful historical fantasia. This is the tale of how
Will Shakespeare, towards the end of his writing career, repents of the lies he
put on stage in Richard the Third.
Shakespeare in this version is a crypto-Catholic, or at least has Catholic
sympathies, a theory that has found support from some reputable literary
historians. Anyway, he comes to London determined to set the record straight.
He rounds up his old mates the
King’s Men. Together they plan to write a play showing what a greasy chap Henry
the Seventh, the first of the Tudor kings, really was. Trouble is, while this
potentially treasonous enterprise is in progress, Shakespeare is threatened and
blackmailed by the chief justice Sir Edwards Coke into producing an admiring
play about Henry the Eighth. Shakespeare sub-contracts this tiresome job to
John Fletcher while he himself gets on with writing the play he really wants to
write.
Winder is cunning in setting this
fiction towards the end of Shakespeare’s writing life. It means that
Shakespeare and his mates can quote freely from nearly the whole Shakespearean
canon whenever they want. The effect is like the famous spoof novel No Bed for Bacon or the tongue-in-cheek
film Shakespeare in Love, where we
were invited to groan at the way familiar Shakespearean quotations were mangled
and dropped into conversations.
Then there’s Winder’s additional
cunning in having Shakespeare write his play atelier-style. His mates Richard
Burbage, Edward Alleyn and others gather around him and improvise scenes of
dialogue in chatty conversations. This spares us the potentially boring image
of the writer at solitary work, toiling away silently at his desk or perhaps
talking to himself. To me the scenes of play-writing come across as the most
jolly-jolly version of theatrical life since Dickens did his Vincent Crummles
scenes is Nicholas Nickleby, or since
J.B.Priestley sent his Pierrot review troop on tour in his bestseller The Good Companions. It’s pure tosh but
great fun.
There are, of course, some moments
that are so silly and outrageous in their anachronisms that Winder seems to be
thumbing his nose at us.
Will Shakespeare contributing to the
Protestant Authorised Version of the Bible? Pull the other one. The Authorised
Version gets called the King James
Version, a term that was invented [for it] by Americans only in the last
century.
Will Shakespeare and his mates
dreaming up the plots of both Don
Giovanni and Dracula? As the Tui
ads say, “Yeah, right.” But then you forgive Winder this sort of thing because
you can see he is quite consciously messing around. As his introduction shows,
he knows how much foolery goes into this sort of enterprise and is not like
dumber historical novelists who don’t realise they are writing anachronisms.
Winder’s main joke is to eventually to
give us the whole script of Shakespeare’s non-existent play Henry the Seventh. OK, it lacks a really
strong arc of dramatic action. Its language abounds in words that didn’t exist
in the early 17th century. But it bounces along in such well-trimmed
cod blank-verse iambic pentameters that you can’t help admiring Winder’s sheer
cheek.
I thoroughly enjoyed this extremely
silly, historically inaccurate, fantastical and jolly piece of fluff, even if
it does meander past 400 pages. Does it present a convincing view of Jacobean
London? As much as some reputedly serious studies have. Does it reflect the way
Shakespeare really was? It would be nice to think it’s somewhere near the truth.
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