Shakespeare's 400th: celebrating the Bard 4 centuries after his death - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:50 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
EntertainmentVideo

Shakespeare's 400th: celebrating the Bard 4 centuries after his death

April 23 is Shakespeare's birthday as well as the 400th anniversary of his death. With audiences worldwide marking the occasion with readings, films, exhibitions and plays, some of Canada's top artists reflect on the Bard's enduring appeal.

Artists reflect on Shakespeare's enduring popularity on the anniversary of his demise

Drakespeare: Drake lyrics translated into Shakespearean

8 years ago
Duration 1:19
How do the rapper's lyrics sound when translated into Shakespearean English?

All's the world's a stage and all the world is celebrating the man who coined that very phrasethis weekend,as April 23 marks William Shakespeare's birthday as well as the 400th anniversary of his death.

Why speaking English means 'speaking Shakespeare'

8 years ago
Duration 0:50
Author Stephen Marche shares just a few of the words and phrases we use today that date back to the Bard.

Not surprisingly, in theBard's birthplace of England, there are numerous events tied to the occasion,from walking tours organized by the Museum of Londonto various performances of his playsto an exhibition of rare manuscripts and costumes at the British Library.

The world is celebrating William Shakespeare this weekend, with April 23 marking the Bard's birthday as well as the 400th anniversary of his death. Events range from walking tours to performances of his plays, concerts to movie screenings, including of the Stratford Festival's Hamlet, starring Jonathan Goad. (David Hou/Stratford Festival)

A Shakespeare-themedgala concert featuring actor Simon Callowis alsobeing held at the Royal Festival Hall, whilea display of 37 specially made short films one for each of his plays will beprojected on outdoor screens around central London.

Meanwhile, herein Canada, Shakespeare is also being fted,perhaps nowhere as much as in Stratford, Ont.There, the Stratford Festival is currently rehearsing its upcoming season of plays for opening week, May 30-June 4.

"Macbeth is arguably [Shakespeare's] greatest love story and it's an odd love story because it centres around a murder," says Stratford Festival artistic director Antoni Cimolino. The festival's new production stars Ian Lake as Macbeth. (Don Dixon/Stratford Festival)

Among the offerings is the bloody tragedy Macbeth, directed by the festival's artistic director Antoni Cimolino.

"Macbeth is arguably his greatest love story and it's an odd love story because it centres around a murder," Cimolinotold CBC News.

"In our world today, we pick up the newspaper, we hear what's on the radio or television and we hear some pretty horrible things. Most writers don't write about that. Shakespeare went right to the centre of it and explores it."

The festival is also presenting the North American premiere of Shakespeare in Love, a stage adaptation of the Oscar-winning film.In the show, Luke Humphrey portraysthe young Will Shakespeare, who is struggling with writer's block and trying to find his path to greatness.

Playing the Bard 'adream come true'

Beingcast as the Bard in Stratford on this special anniversary is "a dream come true," said the actor, who has previously performed in Shakespeare plays such asMuch Ado about Nothing, The Tempest andTwo Gentlemen of Verona.

Being cast as the Bard at Stratford is "a dream come true," says actor Luke Humphrey, who appears opposite Shannon Taylor in the new adaptation Shakespeare in Love. (Don Dixon/Stratford Festival)

"For me, stepping into Shakespearean text is stepping into the potentials of human experience," Humphrey said.

"I can go as deep as I possibly can into this work. It's a nice reminder not to give in to the limitations and narrow views you can get stuck in, to embrace the depth of what can be."

For the 400th anniversary, Stratford is hostingthe world premiere of its latest HD film adaptation of Shakespeare's plays: Hamlet, starring Jonathan Goad. There will be special screenings Saturday at select cinemas across Canada, with encore screenings on April28 and subsequent showings across the U.S.

Hamlet will also be broadcast on CBC-TVonAug.28, with adigital and on-demand release to follow.

Sonnets reimagined

Take All My Loves: 9 Shakespeare Sonnets features Canadian singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright's musical adaptations of the Bard's poems. (Universal Music Canada)

Also arriving just in time for the 400th isRufus Wainwright'snew album Take All My Loves: 9 Shakespeare Sonnets.

Wainwright can thank his mother, the late Kate McGarrigle, for suggesting he read Shakespeare's sonnets when he was a teen. (Matthew Welch/Deutsche Grammophon)

The album consists of theCanadian singer-songwriter'smusical adaptations of the Bard's poems, featuring classical and pop vocalists such as Florence Welch of Florence and the Machine,as well as readings from actors Helena Bonham Carter, Carrie Fisher and William Shatner.

Wainwright remembers first encountering the sonnets when he was a teenager. His mother, the late musician Kate McGarrigle, suggested he read them for insight into youthful angst and romantic frustration.

"Now of course, I focus more on the passage of time, the encroachment of deathand the kind of melancholy nature of human existence, which he so beautifully portrays but with always a little ray of hope," noted the 42-year-old crooner.

"With each sonnet, he goes really to the limit in terms of despair, but that last couplet will pull you back from the precipice and that's important to have in this world."

'Something for everyone'

Another renowned Canadian artistwith Shakespeare on her mind is author Margaret Atwood.

Her new novel, out Oct.11, is called Hag-Seed. Acontemporary retelling of The Tempest, it'spart of a series of novels by popular writers reimaginingShakespeare's plays.

Hag-Seed, Margaret Atwood's new novel, is a contemporary retelling of The Tempest and part of a series reimagining Shakespeare's plays. (Penguin Random House Canada)

Atwood credits the Bard's endurance tothe fact that he had to write for a diverse audience that included aristocrats, the middle class and the lower class groundlings, who paid a penny to stand in the pit to watch the plays.

"He put characters in for everyone and that is why there are tasteless bad jokes in Shakespeare because the groundlings loved them," Atwood said,with a giggle.

"It's why there's fight scenes: they loved that. So he was pitching to everybody and I think it's why nowadays there is still something for everybody in those plays."

'The mirror up to nature'

Novelist and magazine writer Stephen Marche penned How Shakespeare Changed Everything to trace the Bard's lasting influence on language and popular culture. (HarperCollins Canada)

Novelist and magazine writer Stephen Marche penned the recent nonfiction book How Shakespeare Changed Everything to trace the Bard's lasting influence on language and popular culture.He also points to diversity to explain why we still are passionate about Shakespeare four centurieslater.

"For anyone to survive that long and to be read is quasi-miraculous," Marche said.

"I think, to me, the thing that Shakespeare offers the world and no one else does is just the mirror up to nature: the reflection of the immense diversity of humanity."

He also believes Shakespeare's appeal can be traced to an earthiness that intrigues adolescents and adults alike.

"What Shakespeare represented was a classic that was also very frank about the nature of human sexuality, very frank about the nature of humanity. And I think that is his real gift to the world."

Celebrating Shakespeare

8 years ago
Duration 4:54
Stratford Festival marks 400th anniversary of bard's death

With files from Deana Sumanac-Johnson