Shakespeare's Wide and Universal StageC. B. Cox, Brian Cox, David John Palmer Manchester University Press, 1984 - 233 Seiten |
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Seite 13
... seen , Richmond's concluding speech sums up one of the explicit themes of the play , but , as he announces the ' bloody dog is dead ' , the audience will know better : the ' dog ' was also an isolated and frightened man . The audience ...
... seen , Richmond's concluding speech sums up one of the explicit themes of the play , but , as he announces the ' bloody dog is dead ' , the audience will know better : the ' dog ' was also an isolated and frightened man . The audience ...
Seite 40
... seen and stresses its unlikelihood ; ' like an old tale still , which will have matter to rehearse though credit be asleep and not an ear open : He was torn to pieces with a bear ' . A likely tale ! But we have seen the bear . This ...
... seen and stresses its unlikelihood ; ' like an old tale still , which will have matter to rehearse though credit be asleep and not an ear open : He was torn to pieces with a bear ' . A likely tale ! But we have seen the bear . This ...
Seite 109
... seen is to do what Lamb condemned in Cooke's performance : to make the underlying villainy obvious all the time.4 That is what Olivier did , and the scene lost all power . But the full descriptive notes which survive on Kean's ...
... seen is to do what Lamb condemned in Cooke's performance : to make the underlying villainy obvious all the time.4 That is what Olivier did , and the scene lost all power . But the full descriptive notes which survive on Kean's ...
Inhalt
Mr Becketts Shakespeare JOHN RUSSELL BROWN | 1 |
The argument about Shakespeares characters A D NUTTALL | 18 |
Shakespeare breaks the illusion JOHN EDMUNDS | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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