"Frame My Face to All Occasions": Shakespeare's Richard III on ScreenBraumüller, 2005 - 243 pages “Film has kept turning to most of Shakespeare's work throughout the entire history of the medium. With a renewed boom of Shakespeare on screen in the 1990s, academic awareness of, and interest in this phenomenon has increased drastically and now faces an enormous range of different filmic references to Shakespeare and his work, all classified as 'Skakespearean film'. This book concentrates on one play, Richard III, and explores the possible variants and different types of Skakespearean film by surveying in what different ways and formats Richard III has appeared on screen. While the play has always enjoyed great popularity in performance, especially for its leading part, it is also very complex and has been considered difficult for its references to history, its political entanglements and its strong suggestions of a prevailing moral order of divine retribution. It is the objective of this study to find out how cinema and television as media designed for mass appeal deal with this play.“ -- author. |
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Page 68
... scene is dramatically very effective , it is also difficult to perform convincingly . " When Anne curses Richard earlier in the scene and holds the murders of Henry VI and her husband Edward of Lancaster against him , the au- dience are ...
... scene is dramatically very effective , it is also difficult to perform convincingly . " When Anne curses Richard earlier in the scene and holds the murders of Henry VI and her husband Edward of Lancaster against him , the au- dience are ...
Page 98
... scene of the wailing Queens.31 The opening scene of Benson's Richard III also shows the killing of Edward of Lancaster , whose name we never learn in the film . Another figure re- maining unidentified is Princess Elizabeth , who has an ...
... scene of the wailing Queens.31 The opening scene of Benson's Richard III also shows the killing of Edward of Lancaster , whose name we never learn in the film . Another figure re- maining unidentified is Princess Elizabeth , who has an ...
Page 100
... scene to the film - in which Richard steps in to prevent the actual crown- ing of Prince Edward by removing the ... ( Scene 12 , numbered as " Scene 9 " ) was a concession to silent film or actually a part of Benson's stage production ...
... scene to the film - in which Richard steps in to prevent the actual crown- ing of Prince Edward by removing the ... ( Scene 12 , numbered as " Scene 9 " ) was a concession to silent film or actually a part of Benson's stage production ...
Contents
SHAKESPEARE ON SCREEN | 22 |
Early Sound Film | 31 |
The Age of Televised Shakespeare | 41 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
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