King Lear |
From inside the book
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Page 13
... appear , ' his head poking , shaven like a convict's , from out of the skirts of the king's cloak'.31 The appropriation of the Fool as an intimate part of Lear himself is reflected in the role of the Gravedigger's Boy in Bond's Lear ...
... appear , ' his head poking , shaven like a convict's , from out of the skirts of the king's cloak'.31 The appropriation of the Fool as an intimate part of Lear himself is reflected in the role of the Gravedigger's Boy in Bond's Lear ...
Page 34
... appear to us the faults of SHAKESPEARE are often in reality our own deficiencies ' , and it is in fact a ' transcendant drama ' . 66 Charles Kean , in the preface to his edition ( 1858 ) , called it ' perfect and unrivalled ' but added ...
... appear to us the faults of SHAKESPEARE are often in reality our own deficiencies ' , and it is in fact a ' transcendant drama ' . 66 Charles Kean , in the preface to his edition ( 1858 ) , called it ' perfect and unrivalled ' but added ...
Page 121
... appear amidst the Tempest of his Mind , like flashes of Lightning in a stormy Night , making the Horrors more visible ' ( Pittard , pp . 14-15 ) . The speech gave Garrick great scope for ' transitions ' ; Gentleman regarded the movement ...
... appear amidst the Tempest of his Mind , like flashes of Lightning in a stormy Night , making the Horrors more visible ' ( Pittard , pp . 14-15 ) . The speech gave Garrick great scope for ' transitions ' ; Gentleman regarded the movement ...
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Common terms and phrases
actor ALBANY audience Barker notes Burgundy Byrne Charles Kean Cordelia CORNWALL critics curse Cut by Irving daughters Donald Sinden Donald Wolfit dost drama duke Edmund Kean effect Enter Edgar Enter Lear entry Exeunt Exit eyes father followed Fool Fool's France Garrick GENTLEMAN Gielgud in 1940 Gloucester Gloucester's Goneril Goodbody Granada TV Granada TV production hand hath Hazlitt heart Hughes Irving cut Irving's J.C. Trewin J.P. Kemble Kean and Irving Kean's Kent Kent's King Lear knights Komisarjevsky Laughton Lear and Cordelia Lear's London Drury Lane lord Macready's madam madness noble nuncle Oswald pathos Paul Scofield performance Peter Brook Phelps playing Lear promptbook Regan restored role Samuel Phelps scene Scofield servants Shakespeare Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Shakespeare's text Shakespearian sister speak speech spoke stage storm Stratford upon Avon sword Tate Tate's text Tate's version tears Theatre theatrical thee thou throne Trewin villain