The Sourcebooks Shakespeare brings the Shakespeare page to life. This remarkable edition of Othello is both the easiest way to understand the play and the best way to experience the full power and depth of the play. This dynamic book includes an integrated audio CD that showcases key scenes from great performances past and present. You'll experience the play like never before-it's the next best thing to seeing the play performed live. Each book offers: * The full play, with line notes and a concurrent glossary* Scholars and theatre producers discussing the play and popular culture* Comments from every cast member of a current production. This is also a very visual text, including: * Photographs from great performances* Costume designs and set renderings from different productions* Production notes that take you inside the stage experience Exclusive to The Sourcebooks Shakespeare and like no other edition of Othello, our audio CD and unique focus on the play as performed on the stage and on film brings the play to life. Hear: * One of the greatest Othellos of our time: Paul Robeson, from a 1944 production* An 1890 private recording of Edwin Booth reciting Othello's speech to the Senate* F. Scott Fitzgerald reciting Othello's speech to the Senate Narrated by Sir Derek Jacobi Read: * About the seminal 1987 production in South Africa, in an essay written by the director herself, Janet Suzman* And see how the 2005 cast from Actors From the London Stage approaches the play See: * Photographs from the 1987 Johannesburg Othello* Photographs from The Shakespeare Theatre's 1997-98 season starring Patrick Stewartas Othello* Set designs from Orson Welles? 1951 production in London
Show moreThe Sourcebooks Shakespeare brings the Shakespeare page to life. This remarkable edition of Othello is both the easiest way to understand the play and the best way to experience the full power and depth of the play. This dynamic book includes an integrated audio CD that showcases key scenes from great performances past and present. You'll experience the play like never before-it's the next best thing to seeing the play performed live. Each book offers: * The full play, with line notes and a concurrent glossary* Scholars and theatre producers discussing the play and popular culture* Comments from every cast member of a current production. This is also a very visual text, including: * Photographs from great performances* Costume designs and set renderings from different productions* Production notes that take you inside the stage experience Exclusive to The Sourcebooks Shakespeare and like no other edition of Othello, our audio CD and unique focus on the play as performed on the stage and on film brings the play to life. Hear: * One of the greatest Othellos of our time: Paul Robeson, from a 1944 production* An 1890 private recording of Edwin Booth reciting Othello's speech to the Senate* F. Scott Fitzgerald reciting Othello's speech to the Senate Narrated by Sir Derek Jacobi Read: * About the seminal 1987 production in South Africa, in an essay written by the director herself, Janet Suzman* And see how the 2005 cast from Actors From the London Stage approaches the play See: * Photographs from the 1987 Johannesburg Othello* Photographs from The Shakespeare Theatre's 1997-98 season starring Patrick Stewartas Othello* Set designs from Orson Welles? 1951 production in London
Show moreAdvisory Board:
David Bevington is the Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service
Professor in the Humanities at the University of Chicago. A
renowned text scholar, he has edited several Shakespeare editions
including the Bantam Shakespeare in individual paperback volumes,
The Complete Works of Shakespeare, (Longman, 2003), and Troilus and
Cressida (Arden, 1998). He teaches courses in Shakespeare,
Renaissance Drama, and Medieval Drama.
Barbara Gaines is the founder and Artistic Director of the Chicago
Shakespeare Theater. She has directed over 25 productions at
Chicago Shakespeare, and she serves on the artistic directorate
of
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London as well as on Northwestern
University's Board of Trustees.
Peter Holland is the McMeel Family Chair in Shakespeare Studies at
the University of Notre Dame. One of the central figures in
performance-oriented Shakespeare criticism, he has also edited many
Shakespeare plays, including A Midsummer Night's Dream for the
Oxford Shakespeare series.
Contributors:
Professor Douglas Lanier Douglas Lanier is an Associate Professor
of English at the University of New Hampshire. His publications
include"Shakescorp Noir" in Shakespeare Quarterly 53.2 (Summer
2002) and "Nostalgia and Theatricality" in Shakespeare the Movie II
(eds. Richard Burt and Lynda Boose, Routledge, 2003), and the book,
Shakespeare and Modern Popular Culture (Oxford University Press,
2002).
Professor Jill Levenson - Jill L. Levenson is a Professor of
English at Trinity College at the University of Toronto. She has
written and edited numerous essays and books including Romeo and
Juliet for the Manchester University Press's series Shakespeare in
Performance (1987), Shakespeare and the Twentieth Century (with
Jonathan Bate and Dieter Mehl), and the Oxford edition of Romeo and
Juliet (2000). Currently she is writing a book on Shakespeare and
modern drama for Shakespeare Topics, a series published by Oxford
University Press.
Professor Lois Potter - Lois Potter is Ned B. Allen Professor of
English at the University of Delaware. She has also taught in
England, France, and Japan, attending and reviewing as many plays
as possible. Her publications include the Arden edition of The Two
Noble Kinsmen and Othello for the Manchester University Press's
series Shakespeare in Performance.
Ms. Janet Suzman Janet Suzman was trained at LAMDA and is an
honorary associate artist of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Her
work there has included The Wars of the Roses, As You Like It, The
Taming of the Shrew, Much Ado About Nothing, Love's Labour's Lost,
and The Merchant of Venice. She has been awarded numerous honorary
degrees and was nominated for an Academy Award in 1971 for her
performance in Nicholas and Alexandra. Her acclaimed1990 direction
of Othello in Johannesburg, South Africa is considered to be one of
the most powerful productions of the play.
Mr. Andrew Wade - Andrew Wade was Head of Voice for the Royal
Shakespeare Company, 1990 - 2003 and Voice Assistant Director from
1987-1990. During this time he worked on 170 productions and with
more than 80 directors. Along with Cicely Berry, Andrew recorded
Working Shakespeare, the DVD series on Voice and Shakespeare, and
he was the verse consultant for the movie Shakespeare In Love. In
2000, he won a Bronze Award from the New York International Radio
Festival for the series Lifespan, which he co-directed and devised.
He works widely teaching, lecturing and coaching throughout the
world.
Marie Macaisa is a lifelong fan of Shakespeare who has seen at
least one theatrical production of nearly all his plays (she's
waiting for Henry VIII). Her first career, lasting 20 years, was in
high tech; she has a B.S. in Computer Science from MIT and a M.S.
in Artificial Intelligence from the University of Pennsylvania. For
the last two years, she has devoted herself to the Sourcebooks
Shakespeare Experience.
Dominique Raccah is founder, president and publisher of
Sourcebooks. Born in Paris, France, she has a bachelor's degree in
psychology and a master's in quantitative psychology from the
University of Illinois. She also serves as series editor of Poetry
Speaks and Poetry Speaks to Children.
Gr 10 Up-Naxos AudioBooks' top-drawer Classic Drama Series blissfully continues with this exquisite rendition of Othello starring Hugh Quarshie, Anton Lesser, Emma Fielding, and a full cast of professional English actors with extensive credits in the Royal National Theatre, BBC Radio Drama Company, and the Royal Shakespeare Company. Shakespeare's most domestic tragedy is an exceedingly complex journey through jealousy, self-doubt, inadequacies, and societal acceptance. Passed over for military promotion, Iago, perhaps Shakespeare's most nefarious character, manipulates Othello's downfall, culminating in the murder of his beloved wife, Desdemona, and Othello's subsequent suicide. Under David Timson's stewardship as director, the story is beautifully and simply told, embellished only with intermittent brassy flourishes of classical music and a dramatic echo effect and throbbing heart beat to underscore Othello's chaotic descent and rage. While the entire cast is excellent, the trio of Quarshie (Othello), Lesser (Iago), and Fielding (Desdemona) are outstanding. An outline of each individual cassette, complete synopsis, full notes regarding the text, and cast biographies are included in a compact 24-page supplemental booklet. For all collections.-Barry X. Miller, Austin Public Library, TX Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
More than a retelling, this aptly termed "reconceptualization" provocatively modernizes Shakespeare's play. As in the original, the middle-aged general Othello the ``moor'' and young European noblewoman Desdemona fall in love and marry secretly. But Lester (To Be a Slave; John Henry) transplants the action from Venice and Cyprus to Elizabethan England and turns Iago and Emily into Africans like Othello, so that the three of them share a distinctly non-European point of view. Iago's envy of Othello and ability to whip him into a jealous rage at Desdemona are thus cast in a new light, though the tragic outcome remains the same. While the ending feels abrupt, Lester's novel succeeds in holding up a mirror to contemporary society. Phrases and passages directly based on Shakespeare's language are printed in a different typeface, a device that may distract the reader but eases comparisons with the original work. Ages 8-12. (Apr.)
The new "Sourcebooks Shakespeare" series is designed to attract a wide audience by emphasizing performance as well as text. A glossary and photos from contemporary stage and film productions accompany the text of each play, and related essays offer further insights. Each title contains an integrated audio CD that is narrated by British Shakespearean actor Sir Derek Jacobi and features excerpts from memorable performances of key scenes. The series boasts stellar credits: its advisory board includes Shakespeare scholars David Bevington and Peter Holland and Chicago Shakespeare Theater director Barbara Gaines. Among the contributors are several more Shakespeare scholars as well as actress Janet Suzman and Andrew Wade, formerly head of voice for the Royal Shakespeare Company. Both volumes begin with Thomas Garvey's "In Shakespeare's `Time,' " an essay that sets the playwright in historical context, and end with "The Cast Speaks," in which casts of 2005 productions discuss their approach to the characters they portrayed. The CD accompanying the Othello volume features a variety of noteworthy performers in the title role, including Paul Robeson, Paul Scofield, and Edwin Booth; and the CD accompanying the Romeo and Juliet volume presents recordings of Kate Beckinsale, Dame Peggy Ashcroft, and Ellen Terry as Juliet; Kenneth Branagh and Michael Sheen as Romeo; Sir Derek Jacobi as Mercutio; and Sir John Gielgud as Friar Laurence. With the number of film adaptations of Shakespeare's works in recent years, public libraries should seriously consider acquiring this series.-Carolyn M. Mulac, Chicago P.L. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |