Shakespeare-maan-a3
2009-07-04 - extension: rar - size: 6 MB
Shakespeare-maan-a3
William Shakespeare, "
Much Ado About Nothing" (The Arden Shakespeare), 3rd Edition
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Much.Ado.About.Nothing.part4.rar
2008-07-04 - extension: rar - parts: 4 - size: 6 MB
Much.Ado.About.Nothing.part4.rar
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Much Ado About Nothing (1984 TV) Act 5 Scene 4 Final scene. "Much Ado About Nothing" - comedy by William Shakespeare.
go here to a single playlist (More) "Much Ado About Nothing" - comedy by William Shakespeare.
go here to a single playlist of all the Shakespeare for SATS 2008:
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=CD0A18B0C22EF0A4
Robert Lindsay ... Benedick
Cherie Lunghi ... Beatrice
Lee Montague ... Leonato
Graham Crowden ... Friar Francis
Robert Reynolds ... Claudio
Katharine Levy ... Hero
Pamela Moiseiwitsch ... Margaret
Ishia Bennison ... Ursula
Director: Stuart Burge
Good morrow Benedihe, why what's the matter?
That you haue fuch a Februarie face,
So full of froft, of norme, and clowdinefie
Three comments by Lady Martin ("On Some of Shahespeare' s Female Characters", Edinburgh, 1891):
Lady Martin: (p. 324) Though well pleased that he is no longer required to call his old freind to account, Benedick take care to show, by his coldness and reserve, that he considers their behaviour to have been unjustifiable, even had the story been true which Don John had beguiled them into believing. When the Prince rallies him about his ' February face,' he makes no rejoinder. But when Claudio, with infinite bad taste, at a moment when his mind should have been full of the gravest thoughts, attacks him in the same spirit, Benedick turns upon him with caustic severity. The entrance of Hero, with her ladies, masked, arrests what might have grown into hot words.
Lady Martin: (p. 325) : Hero accepts Claudio with a ready forgiveness, which, I feel very sure, Beatrice's self-respect, under similar circumstances, would not have permitted her to grant. Such treatment as Claudio' s would have chilled all love within her. She would never have trusted as her husband the man who had allowed himself to be so easily deceived, and who had openly shamed her before the world. Hero, altogether a feebler nature, neither looks so far into the future, nor feels so intensely what has happened in the past.
Lady Martin: (p. 325) : To my thinking, Hero's prospect of lasting happiness with the credulous and vacillating Claudio is somewhat doubtful. I have no misgivings about the future happiness of Benedick and Beatrice, even although they learn how they have been misled into thinking that each was dying for the other, and up to the moment of going to the altar keep up their witty struggles to turn the tables on each other.
... In this last encounter, Beatrice, as usual, has the best of it, but Benedick is too happy to care for such defeat. He knows that he has won her heart, and that it is a heart of gold. He can therefore well afford to smile at the epigrams of ' a college of wit-crackers,' and the quotation against himself of his former smart sayings about lovers and married men. His home, I doubt not, will be a happy one, — all the happier because Beatrice and he have each a strong individuality, with fine spirits and busy brains, which will keep life from stagnating.
They will always be finding out something new and interesting in each other's character. As for Beatrice, at least, one feels sure that Benedick will have a great deal to discover and to admire in her as he grows to know her better. She will prove the fitness of her name as Beatrice (the giver of happiness), and he will be glad to confess himself blest indeed (Benedictus), in having won her.
Claudio and Hero marry and all is resolved (SATS 2008)
'Did I not tell you she was innocent?'
to
'Strike up, pipers!' (Less)
Much Ado About Nothing (1984 TV) Act 4 Scene 1 (lines 196 - "Much Ado About Nothing" - comedy by William Shakespeare. Act 4 Scene 1 (lines 196- 325) (More) "Much Ado About Nothing" - comedy by William Shakespeare. Act 4 Scene 1 (lines 196- 325)
go here to a single playlist of all the Shakespeare for SATS 2008:
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=CD0A18B0C22EF0A4
Graham Crowden ... Friar Francis
Lee Montague ... Leonato
Robert Lindsay ... Benedick
Cherie Lunghi ... Beatrice
some notes from "A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare" By William Shakespeare, Horace Howard Furness, editor:
"his Liver" That the liver was deemed of old to be the seat of love is familiar enough to every student who remembers his Anacreon and his Horace, if he forget all else. The present passage and others sufficiently prove that sentimental qualities were still attributed, in Shakespeare's days, to the liver, as well as to the heart
---Horace Howard Furness
Leonato:
Being that I flow in greefe,
The finallest twine may lead me
"may lead me" Dr. Johnson: This is one of our author's observations upon life. Men overpowered by distress, eagerly listen to the first offers of relief, close with every scheme, and believe every promise. He that has no longer any confidence in himself is glad to repose his trust in any other that will undertake to guide him
"Come Lady, die to liue, this wedding day
Perhaps is but prolong'd, haue patience & endure." Exit.
Lady Martin; (On Some of Shahespeare' s Female Characters .. Edinburgh, 1891p. 319): Beatrice is no dreamer. The Friar's plan of giving out that Hero is dead, and so awakening Claudio's remorse, will not wipe out the wrong done to her cousin, or the indignity offered to her kin. Therefore she lets her friends retire, lingering behind, to the surprise, possibly, of some who might expect that she would go with them to comfort Hero. She is bent on finding for her a better comfort than lies in words. Benedick, she feels sure, will remain if she does. And he, how could he do otherwise?
This beautiful woman, whom he has hitherto known all joyousness, and seeming indifference to the feelings of others, has revealed herself under a new aspect, and one that has drawn him towards her more than he has ever been drawn before towards woman. He has noted how all through this terrible scene she has been the only one to stand by, to defend, to try to cheer the slandered Hero. Her courage and her tenderness have roused the chivalry of his nature. So deeply is he moved, that I believe, even if he had not been previously influenced by what he had heard of Beatrice's love, he would from that time have been her devoted lover and servant.
Act 4 Scene 1 (lines 196- 325) (SATS 2008)
The aftermath of Hero's denouncement.
'Pause awhile'
to
'dead; and so farewell.' (Less)
Retold Ado srt by karah
2009-11-02 - extension: rar - size: 39 KB
Retold Ado srt by karah
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Retold Ado by karah
2009-11-02 - extension: rar - parts: 8 - size: 95 MB
Retold Ado by karah
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Much Ado About Nothing
2010-01-02 - extension: rar - parts: 4 - size: 95 MB
Much Ado About Nothing
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