The Threepenny Review

Celebration and Enlightenment

A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare, directed by Nicholas Hytner, The Bridge, London, 2019.

THE I saw at Shakespeare’s Globe in London last June was the latest of many recent productions that reach out for racial, gender, and sexual diversity without thinking through the commonsense implications of casting and interpretive choices. Henry was played by an African woman (Sarah Amankwah) —and that was apparently the sole concept. If Amankwah had given a good performance, of course, no one would have thought twice about the casting, but her verse training was markedly poor and she screamed most of Henry’s big speeches. Two years earlier I’d seen a Globe with a male Rosalind, a female Orlando, and a deaf woman as Celia, who communicated with Rosalind in a made-up sign language that no one else—including the audience—could understand. I sat through an otherwise impressive at the Shaw Festival in Niagara-on-the-Lake later on that summer in which some female members of the company showed up among the troops; clearly the director, Tim Carroll, thought it was more important to impose a contemporary statement about gender equity than to follow a consistent narrative line, since one of the reasons Joan is put on trial by the church is that she’s a woman dressed in men’s garments. The dual point of these misguided efforts seems to be to turn the audience into better people (which I find presumptuous and condescending) and to showcase the virtuousness of the director. Sometimes it may also produced precisely the opposite result, by barring a female actor from taking it up.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Threepenny Review

The Threepenny Review8 min read
The Self, Wherever She Is
Grand Tour by Elisa Gonzalez. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2023, $26.00 cloth. “WE MEET no Stranger but Ourself”: Emily Dickinson's haunting pronouncement on the plight of the individual consciousness may be cited less often than the bit about her head f
The Threepenny Review2 min read
D'Aulaires on My Grandmother's Deck
In D'Aulaires’ Book of Greek Myths, Zeus was always marrying different nymphs, that's what it said, married, no mention of abduct or rape or even forcible kiss. I wanted to marry Zeus. Also cow-stealing Hermes, also Theseus who refused the brigand on
The Threepenny Review12 min read
The Genius
IN THE 1940s, the only first-rate filmmakers who worked steadily and at their best in Hollywood were Orson Welles, John Huston, Billy Wilder, Alfred Hitchcock, Vincente Minnelli, and Preston Sturges. All of them began to turn out movies in Hollywood

Related Books & Audiobooks