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Archive for January, 2012

Blazing Dickens

 by

Stewart Trotter

Simon Callow’s tornado of a book……

Charles Dickens and the Great Theatre of the World…..

Harper Press, £8.99. Jacket Design by Jo Walker

…..blasts for ever the heresy once taught at our Universities…..

…. that a writer’s life has nothing to do with his work.

For Dickens, his life had everything to do with his work….

His life WAS his work…

As Simon guides us expertly through Dickens’s childhood, youth and maturity…..

…..he’s played the man and knows the man….

Simon Callow as Dickens

…..the themes of the novels form before our very eyes…..

We see….

……the young Charles visiting his father in Debtors’ Prison……

……falling in love with a heartless young vixen…..

……mourning the death of an angelic young girl……

…….fighting to get a foothold on the world…..

……. and making glorious, eccentric friends…

But Simon shows it was BLIND CHANCE that Dickens transmuted these experiences into novels….

He originally wanted to be an actor….

His sympathetic observation of people – his ability to feel what they feel – could best be used, he thought, on the stage.

He even fixed an audition with the Manager of Covent Garden Theatre – only to fall ill on the day….

……an early indication of the massive power his emotions were to have over his entire being…

Dickens hated the solitary life of a writer: he wanted to be surrounded by friends.

That’s why he set up journals and newspapers and amateur theatrical companies…..

….he even knocked down the walls of his home to create his own theatre…..

…. where he staged shows of unrivalled beauty and excitement…..

…. in which, of course, he himself starred……

….. to dazzling and  sometimes chilling, effect.

Dickens expended this energy in the belief that life would give him energy in return….

Like William Wordsworth……

…….he walked for inspiration; but unlike the Lakeland poet, he sought dangerous terrains……

He even walked to the top of Vesuvius when it was erupting, delighting in the fact that his shoes and clothes were burnt…

He wanted to grasp life with both hands….

He exorcised demons with ‘mesmerism’….

He visited morgues, insane asylums, brothels and jails….

He lurked in the stinking slums of London at the dead of night….

He was a ‘doer’, not just an observer…

He despised politicians…..

…..and believed he could achieve more by working outside the system. 

With the great millionaire philanthropist, Angela Bourdett-Coutts……

……he formed a rehabilitation ‘home’ (he was the first to use the word in this context) for prostitutes.

He loathed the English class system and spent as much energy trying to stay out of the company of the great and the good as others did trying to get into it.

He longed for the democracy of America….

….that is, till he visited it….

He found there was NO freedom of speech in ‘the land of the free’…..

…..that black people were whipped…

…..that convicts were kept in solitary confinement with bags over their heads….

…..that even the President spat and……

……most unforgivable of all…..

……the people were boring.

He was to revise his opinion of America twenty-five years later……

…..but for now returned home  with the realisation that he was…..

 ….an Englishman after all….

….and  completely in favour of a….

 …..liberal monarchy.

As a father, he was a brilliant entertainer. He would dress up (and black up) as…..

.….the Unparalleled Necromancer, Rhia Rama Roos…..

 ….when….

cards burst into flames, watches found themselves in the middle of loaves of bread, dolls appeared, disapperaed and re-appeared all over the room [and] blazing plum-puddings emerged from perfectly ordinary hats…

 

Dickens celebrated Christmas and Twelfth Night (when his first son was born) with all the exuberant joy of Fezziwig in A Christmas Carol……

……laying on dancing, games, charades, punch and long country walks.

It was as  a husband he was deficient….

Simon quotes G.K. Chesterton……

….who believed that Charles had married the…..  

…..wrong [Hogarth] sister….

Catherine…

The ‘right’ sister, Mary, suffered an early, Nell-like death…..

Charles was left with a wife he called…..

 …..the donkey…

This was unkind. ….

But she did have an inordinate number of accidents……

…..(743 falls, Dickens counted, on the American tour)….

…..and even contrived to fall down the trapdoor of their home theatre.

Everything came to a head when Dickens fell in love with a seventeen year old ‘wannabe’ actress, Ellen Ternan…

Catherine was pensioned off with the not inconsiderable sum of £600 a year.

But Dickens had to keep his ‘affair’ – if it ever got to that stage – a secret from his rapturous, adoring but predominantly middle class public.

(Intellectuals despised Dickens’s work.)

Dickens’s liaison was nearly exposed when a train he was travelling in with Ellen and her mother crashed….

…..with their carriage dangling over a river….

Dickens, typically, took charge of the whole rescue operation, serving people with water from his top hat…..

…. and the bottle and a half of brandy he just happened to have with him…

But the break with his wife brought with it guilt…..

……an emotion he’d felt as a boy when he was forced to work at a blacking factory….

…..a time he never once referred to in public….

He was also beginning to suffer from ill-health: his left leg had started to swell when he walked any distance….

Life had finally let him down….

His response was to venture on a series of wildly popular, but exhausting, Reading tours….

He would bring the whole theatre of his imagination to life before an audience……

……which howled with tears and laughter….

However, Dickens made the fatal decision of including the brutal killing of Nancy in Oliver Twist….

…..which so excited him that his pulse rate rose from 72 to 174…

Soon afterwards Dickens was dead….

Simon argues that ……

Dickens was pushing himself towards extinction….

There was a massive darkness within his soul that he wrestled to control….

Spirits of the dead would come to him, as they came to Scrooge….

 

….and, like Scrooge, he battled to live a Christian life.

But his nature was to dominate others…

And not always the strong…

But, as Simon shows in this brilliant book , Dickens was acutely aware of his failings.

His character was flawed, but he knew it was flawed…..

And it could well have been this very flaw that brought him close to the public….

They embraced him as their friend and their brother.

Simon writes:

Playing Dickens, and performing his work has been like standing in front of a blazing fire. If I can convey any sense of that, I will have succeeded in my aim….

Simon, you ARE that fire…

ORDER YOUR COPY OF THIS GREAT BOOK BY CLICKING BELOW:

www.harpercollins.co.uk

To read Simon Callow’s own endorsement of Shakespeare: The Movie please click: HERE.

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Shakespeare: The Movie III

(It’s best to to view Shakespeare: The Movie Parts I  and II  first.)

1601-1616

Queen Elizabeth died….

 ……and everything turned round….

James, without lifting a finger, was now King of both Scotland and England….

 

Harry celebrated by throwing his hat over the walls of the Tower….

Shakespeare wrote a Sonnet…..

Then galloped back from Scotland to be re-united with his lover….

He sat with Harry in the Tower while he had his portrait painted for James…

 

…..a ‘wooing portrait’ in which, hair cascading bride-like down his shoulders, he offers the King his ‘ring’ hand…

Everyone expected he would be James’s new favourite…

After all, he had risked his life to ensure James’s succession…

James, when he arived in London, appointed Shakespeare joint-head of a theatrical company that  was to become ‘The King’s Men’…

He also appointed him a Groom of the Chamber….

……and gave him scarlet livery to wear….

At the Coronation of the King in Westminster Abbey,  Shakespeare held the ritual canopy over James…

Canopy held over Queen Elizabeth II at her Coronation.

But, compared to his love for Harry, this honour meant nothing to him…..

It was an external glory…..

……like the temporary decorations which lined the Coronation route……

……destined for the scrap heap…..

Some of these paste-board arches incorporated obelisks…..

 

……and these reminded Shakespeare of the real obelisk Harry and himself had seen in Rome in 1593….

 

For Shakespeare it now symbolised his love for Harry…..

 Strong, sacred and eternal…..

England now had a King who positively encouraged homosexuality…..

During the Coronation Service….

……to the shock of the Venetian Ambassador……

……one of the Countess of Pembroke’s sons, William….

 …..kissed King James full on the cheek….

The only worry for Shakespeare and Harry was the survival into the new reign of The Ape……

 James, like the Roman Emperor Tiberius……

 

…..would quit the city to pursue his love of hunting and sex…….

But whereas Tiberius went to Capri for his orgies…..

James went to Newmarket.

In Measure for Measure, Shakespeare warns James, in the figure of the Duke…..

………to keep an eye on The Ape while he’s away….

 Like Angelo in the play…….

 

………The Ape might revive some of Queen Elizabeth’s old statutes….

………especially the one outlawing  ‘buggery’….

Next Shakespeare re-wrote Kyd’s old revenge play, Hamlet….

….making the characterisations……

Anthony May, greatest Hamlet the world has known.

…..and the plot…..

…..far more complex…

…..not to say, at points, incomprehensible….

…..and endorsing one of the main tenets of  Roman Catholicism…..

Hamlet and his student friends from Wittenberg are the new, scientific men who cannot stomach Papist superstition….

However, a Ghost, straight from Purgatory…….

……clunking round the battlements in full armour…..

……appears before them….

The students are forced to admit that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in the new, Calvinist philosophy….

Prince Hamlet also declares that God is minutely involved in the workings of the  universe…..

…..down to the fall of a sparrow….

There’s a divinity that shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we will….

But things were about to happen that made Shakespeare lose his belief in God….

Indeed,  his belief in everything….

A year after King James’s Coronation, Harry’s wife, Countess Elizabeth……

 …….gave birth to another baby

But this time it was a boy….

The Southampton line was safe….

But Harry……

…….though he had given up his Catholicism to please the King…..

…….had not become the King’s new favourite….

Time and disease  had taken their toll…..

James preferred younger, prettier, men….

Left out in the political cold, Harry turned homophobic.

He wanted his son to know only his manly, soldierly qualities.

So Shakespeare, the actor, had to go….

Shakespeare turned poisonous….

He had delighted in telling Harry that his verse would make the young Lord immortal…

Now he delights in telling him that he will die.

Shakespeare had lost his son, Hamlet, a decade earlier….

Now he had lost his surrogate son as well….

He turned to another old Kyd play, King Leir…..

….a shameless piece of Protestant propaganda Kyd had knocked up for the sycophantic Queen’s Men….

‘Out’ goes the play’s happy ending and its caring God….

…..(so caring he sends claps of thunder to warn the sleeping King he’s about to be murdered)…

‘In’ comes a hostile universe with no God (or Gods) at all….

….who, if they do by chance exist…..

Kill us for their sport…

The King dies howling in agony,  grief and delusion….

 

….with his child, Cordelia, dead in his arms….

Shakespeare’s grief hardened into revenge…..

Many of the Sonnets had been Shakespeare’s love letters to Harry, known only to

……private friends…..

And of those Sonnets, only the ‘sugared’ ones….

Now Shakespeare published them all….

….including the obscene and bitchy ones…

…..exposing to the world the most intimate, shame-faced details of his affair with Harry…..

When Emilia attacked Harry in Willobie his Avisa she called him ‘Mr. H. W.’…..

Shakespeare now calls him ‘Mr. W. H.’…..

And makes a coded reference to Harry’s ship that was trading that year with Virginia….

The Sea-Adventure….

Harry might have been leaping into the closet, but Shakespeare was bursting out of his….

To accompany the Sonnets he wrote…..

 

Assuming the persona of a young maid, Shakespeare attacks the ruthless, psychotic behaviour of Harry, who with his

browny locks….

….and….

wat’ry eyes

…..caught….

 all passions in his craft of will….

….and…

sexes both enchanted….

Outwardly Harry might have looked like an angel…..

Xavier Samuel as Harry Southampton.

…..inwardly he was now the Devil himself.

In a climax of bile, the ‘maid’ names all her lover’s faults…

O, that infected moisture of his eye!

O, that false fire which in his cheek so glowed!

O, that forced thunder from his heart did fly!

O, that sad breath his spongy lungs bestowed!

O, all that borrowed motion seeming owed…

Suddenly there is a glorious, life-affirming reversal….

‘The maid’ finally asserts that these very faults….

Would yet again betray the fore-betrayed,

And new pervert a reconcilèd maid.

Shakespeare finally acknowledges the magnificence, the power and the ecstasy of his fifteen year affair with Harry…..

Despite what has happened, he would willingly go through the whole business again.

He calls himself  a…..reconcilèd maid……….

…..because he is ‘reconciled’ to what has happened….

…..and ‘reconciled’ to Rome…

The Jesuits were always trying to recruit Shakespeare…..

One of them had even begged him to give over his….

‘Paynim [Pagan] toys’

…….i. e. his poems and plays…..

 …..to write religious verse instead….

This time the call back to Rome came from nearer home….

…..from his first daughter, Susanna, now in her twenties…..

She was still a committed Catholic….

So committed she had appeared in Court and paid a huge fine for refusing to attend Protestant services…

King Lear – bleak as it is – holds within itself a stupendous, positive, relationship….

…..that of Cordelia with her father….. 

 

She has been as stubborn as her father is, and as quick to take offence…….

…….but both have the capacity to love….

Susanna filled up the void left by Harry’s rejection….

And had taught him how to love again….

(He had long grown distant from his wife)

What’s more, Susanna was pregnant…..

Shakespeare began to make long term investments in Stratford-upon-Avon to benefit his daughter, her doctor husband and their family-to-be…

Investments of another kind were coming to fruition in Oxford…..

 ●

John Davenant, a vintner and broker who imported wine from Bordeaux, spoke fluent French and was…..……

……an admirer and lover of plays and play-makers…..

…..especially Shakespeare….

…..had a beautiful and witty wife, Jennet……

But the couple couldn’t have children.

In the year of the Essex rebellion they had moved to Oxford to run a wine-tavern attached to New College…

New College Gardens. The Elizabethan steps.

When Elizabeth exiled Shakespeare from London, he had made productive use of his time…

By making an alliance with King James in Scotland…

And by sleeping with Jennet at Oxford….

……with the full approval of John….

The result for Shakespeare was a whole surrogate family of boys and girls…..

One of the boys, Robert (later to become a parson) describes how Shakespeare would….

….cover [his] face with a hundred kisses….

Another, William, would rush across Oxford in excitement when he heard his ‘godfather’ was in town….

He was to become Poet Laureate……

…..but lose his nose to syphilis….

Shakespeare started to write ‘romantic tragedies’……..

…….tragedies in which, the protagonists, though they die, completely fulfil themselves in their deaths…..

The Countess of Pembroke…..

…….in an act of towering hypocrisy……

……had used the story of Antony and Cleopatra to attack Queen Elizabeth for the immorality of her private life….

Now Shakespeare uses it to praise both the Roman General, Antony…..

…..and the Egyptian Queen, Cleopatra…..

…..for committting themselves to a love relationship that flies in the face of conventional morality….

…..and which defeats death itself….

Shakespeare may have been a Catholic, but he was a very idiosyncratic one…

God for him in the Last Plays was a remote and grumpy figure……

……who would much prefer human beings to work out their destinies for themselves….

When Leontes, in The Winter’s Tale, wrongly accuses his wife, Hermione, of adultery, it is his tough, old servant Paulina….

…..who acts as his confessor, tormentor and redeemer….

Shakespeare was a also a very Pagan Catholic…..

Born a country boy, he worshipped the countryside………

In The Winter’s Tale he introduces a rustic sheep-shearing festival….

Perdita, the old Shepherd’s adopted daughter, dressed as the Goddess of the Feast…..

 ……becomes a Goddess as she hands wild flowers to the guests…..

The English countryside itself also transfigures Posthumus in Cymbeline….

He has been banished to Rome by the British King, but then returns as part of an invading Italian army. 

He finds himself unable to wound his native land.

He swaps his fancy Italianate clothes………..

 

…… for the garb of an English peasant…….

……prepared, if need be, to die for Britain….

Like Posthumus, Shakespeare had come to realise he  was an Englishman first and a Roman Catholic second…

What mattered to him now was to be a MAN first….

…..and a WRITER second….

In The Winter’s Tale, the great artist Julio Romano……

….whose work Shakespeare had admired in Italy…..

 ……sculpts a statue of  the  ‘dead’ Hermione so life-like that her husband, Leontes, longs to kiss it…..

Paulina, insisting that the King….

 …..awake [his] faith…..

 …..brings the statue to life like a miraculous Madonna….. 

 

But it’s not a Madonna….

It’s not even a work of art….

It is Hermione herself……

The most precious thing we have is not art.

It is not even religion. 

It is life itself….

Shakespeare decided to quit the stage……

It brought out the worst in him…..

….his need to dominate, manipulate and control….

He was like Prospero upon his magic island…..

…..with total dominion over his spirits…..

….. who do his every bidding…..

…..and who are brutally punished if they don’t….

Like Prospero, Shakespeare knew that his ‘potent art’ was greater than he was….

….that he needed to forgive in his life…..

….and, more difficult, be forgiven….

In the Epilogue to The Tempest, Shakespeare bids a moving farewell to his courtly, London audience…..

And retires to Stratford-upon-Avon…..

….where every ‘third thought’ will be his ‘grave’….

Two years later he was back….

…….living in the Blackfriars Gatehouse…..

…….a property which he acquired….

…….(but never finished paying for)…

…….notorious for its priest holes, Catholic masses and secret passageways down to the Thames….

…….and where he started to write plays again…

Stratford-upon-Avon had been unwilling to play the role of ‘early retirement home’…

(Shakespeare, after all, was only in his late 40’s….)

Indeed, Shakespeare’s huge, draughty, rambling tavern of a house, ‘New Place’….

……bought over a decade ago at a knock-down price….

……to go along with his newly-acquired family crest…

…..was now full of quasi-relatives and their friends…..

…..in-laws, outlaws, wide-boys…

…..and ‘guests’ of the local council….

…..who all demanded beds, food and alcohol….

Susanna had just been accused of adultery by a local drunk….

And a local crook was pursuing Judith, his younger daughter’s hand in marriage…

On top of this,  ‘fellow townsmen’ kept trying to tap him for money…

Shakespeare fled back to London….

…..where he wrote more plays…….

….. (in collaboration with other playwrights)….

…. including The Famous History of  the Life of King Henry the Eighth…..

In this play Shakespeare ‘forgives’, Prospero-like, ALL the historical enemies of Catholicism…..

…..King Henry……

…..Cardinal Wolsey…….

……Anne Boleyn…..

…… and even….

QUEEN ELIZABETH HERSELF!

….who makes a guest-appearance at the end of the play as a new-born baby…

For Shakespeare, it was now the dead Queen, not Harry, who was the…..

 Bird of Wonder, the Maiden Phoenix…

Elizabeth wearing a Phoenix pendant.

There would have been more plays….

….but during a performance of Henry VIII…..

…..The Globe Theatre burnt down…..

 

The Puritans thought it was a judgement of God…..

Even Shakespeare believed that Someone was trying to tell him Something…..

So he laid down his pen…….

……. and returned to Stratford…..

…..where things had got even worse….

The Combe family, rich money-dealers, were intending to enclose the common land for sheep…

Every councillor opposed the measure which would bring misery to the poor…

…..(who gathered fuel there)….

…..and the yeomen classes…..

…..(who grazed their livestock there)….

Two of the aldermen tried to stop the Combe heavies from digging enclosure ditches……

…….but they got beaten up….

So nearly every woman and child in Stratford came at night to fill the ditches in…..

Including Shakespeare’s daughter, Judith…..

Shakespeare, however was a close friend of the Combes….

He’d bought land from them a decade before….

And when one of them died, leaving Shakespeare £5 ……

…..he had composed an affectionate, bantering  epitaph for him  in a tavern….

…..celebrating how the Devil would now claim John Combe as his own…

Shakespeare’s own land was affected by the enclosures….

….but he negotiated with the Combes to make sure he, and his descendants, would be compensated….

Then he escaped to Blackfriars with his son in law.

One of his many Stratford relations…..

……who bitterly opposed the enclosures…..

…..tracked him down at the Gatehouse…..

…..demanding a statement from him…

Backed up by his son-in-law, Shakespeare claimed that the enclosures wouldn’t begin till the Spring…..

And would probably never begin at all….

He was proved wrong on both counts…..

But did nothing….

Why should he help the people of Stratford?

He’d been forced to leave the town TWICE in his youth….

And now the Stratford Council had banned all performances of plays….

It was the RICH who had created Shakespeare….

Even his Stratford house had been bought with money from the Southampton family…

To condemn the Combes would be an act of utter hypocrisy….

At the beginning of the following year, Shakespeare began writing his will….

in perfect health and memory, God be praised….

This was unusual….

People, then, put off writing their wills till they felt they were going to die…

But Shakespeare had a pressing reason….

His daughter Judith had decided to marry the local crook….

And Shakespeare wanted to protect her….

He wrote a will that he could read to her while he was alive….

And more important, to his future son-in-law….

….whom he couldn’t bring to even mention in his will….

(‘Son-in-law’ is written and then crossed out).

His old inner Prospero, though, was surfacing……

As he drafted more of his will, he attempted to control the whole of his family…..

….. from beyond the grave…..

Notoriously, he left his estranged wife, Anne, his…..

 ….second-best bed……

…..to make sure she got nothing else….

And, like King Lear,  gave by far the best inheritance to his favourite daughter, Susanna…

Shakespeare the man had learnt little from Shakespeare the writer….

By favouring Cordelia above her sisters, Lear destroys Britain…

But in a glorious act of defiant honesty…..

 …..Shakespeare left the most precious thing he had….

……the most precious thing any gentleman at the time had….

His sword….

To one Thomas Combe…

A few months later, poet friends Ben Jonson……

… and Michael Drayton….

…..called on Shakespeare at Stratford…..

….. to celebrate his fifty-second birthday….

….with a…..

merry meeting….. 

They all drank…..

….too hard….

……as poets are apt to do….

Shakespeare contracted a ‘fever’ and died….

But not before he had been granted the full Last Rites as a Roman Catholic…….

…….. in a town, Puritan and theatreless…….

………which had done all it could to destroy the Old Faith….

 ……and had done all it could to destroy him….

THE END

© Stewart Trotter and Trixie the Cat. January, 2012.

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(It’s best to view Shakespeare: The Movie I first)

1594-1601

A Midsummer Night’s Dream…..

…..proved a nightmare.

Emilia was back on the scene, making a play for young Harry…

Nashe was still doing all he could to rubbish Shakespeare….

And Kyd was pushing for Nashe’s job as Shakespeare’s collaborator….

On top of all this, Heneage, Countess Mary’s bridegroom, was a Protestant…..

So staunch a Protestant, in fact, that he had overseen the execution of Mary Queen of Scots…

There was also the problem of the Countess of Southampton’s first marriage…..

Her husband, the second Earl of Southampton, had died with their quarrel over little Harry unresolved….

He had gone to his grave hating his wife.

As a Catholic, Shakespeare believed that the first marriage needed closure before the second could properly begin…

The soul of the second Earl was probably locked in Purgatory….

And profoundly influenced by actions on Earth….

Shakespeare, the magus…….

….solved everything in a flash…..

He managed to work into the play compliments to BOTH Queen Elizabeth AND Mary Queen of Scots…

He cast – and exposed – Emilia as the scheming little dark-skinned ‘Ethiope’, Hermia…

And cast the diminutive Nashe – who famously could not grow a beard – as Francis Flute the bellows-mender, forced to play Thisbe through his lack of facial hair…

Shakespeare devalued Kyd by parodying a famous line from his big hit The Spanish Tragedy….

Hieronimo, hearing a woman pleading  for help, asks….

What outcries pluck me from my naked bed?

In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the Queen of the Fairies, Titania……

……hearing Bottom singing in his ass’s head….

….asks…..

What angel wakes me from my flowery bed?

Shakespeare  cast Heneage as the warrior Theseus…….

…..who admits he has ‘wooed’ Hyppolita (Countess Mary)…

 with his sword….

…and has…

Won her love by doing [her] injuries….

i.e. chopping off the head of Mary Queen of Scots…

The Countess’s quarrel with her first husband over little Harry is re-enacted in the figures of Titania and Oberon, fighting over the changeling boy….

And resolved when Oberon and Titania forgive each other and dance together…..

Shakespeare even throws in a Catholic blessing on the bridal bed and Copped Hall itself at the end of the play….

But it is spoken by fairies…….

…… in case Queen Elizabeth was in the audience…

Emilia and Nashe took their revenge….

Emilia – posing as the virtuous woman ‘Avisa’ –  penned an anonymous,  scurrilous satire……

 She claimed that  a ‘blubbing’ young Harry  – Mr. H. W. [Henry Wriothesley] and a vindictive ‘Old Player’, W. S. [William Shakespeare] had both tried to seduce her…

In vain!

Nashe, as Shakespeare’s collaborator on the play, had a big hand in the comic scenes….

 He sends ups the early touring days of Shakespeare’s company in the figure of the ‘rude mechanicals’……

……and the theatrical meglomania of Shakespeare himself in the character of Bottom the Weaver…

But Kyd was unable to exact a revenge…..

He was dead by the end of 1594….

Shakespeare bought up the rights to all his plays – including an early Hamlet, Lear and Taming of a Shrew…..

 …..rewrote them in the light of the insights he had gained on his European tour…..

….and blasted ‘famous Kyd’ from theatrical history…..

….. for ever….

The following year Harry, now of age, made his first appearance at Court.

He was handsome tall and gallant……

…..so everyone assumed he would be Queen Elizabeth’s new favourite…

Leicester, The Bear’s,  death had created a power vacuum – a situation the Queen was happy to exploit……

She loved to surround herself with ambitious young men of high family but low means, all fighting each other for her attention.

She could control them with money….

Apart from Essex, the two main contenders for the Queen’s favour were the tall, swart, driven, Devonshire man, Sir Walter Raleigh  a.k.a. The Fox…..

……and the short, unprepossessing, round-shouldered, but politically acute Sir Robert Cecil, a.k.a. The Ape….

No-one had ever replaced The Bear in the Queen’s affections….

But Essex had a good try……

Night after night, for seven long years, he had played cards ….

or one game or other

with the Queen….

till the birds sang in the morning…..

He much preferred to be away from the court, gaining glory at sea or on the field of battle…

The Queen, terrified that he might be killed or, worse, become more popular than she was…..

……made him the Master of the Horse.

Her horse….

So Essex was relieved when his close friend, Harry, arrived at the court……

The two men could share the exhausting demands of the Queen….

One day, however, Elizabeth publicly refused Harry’s offer of help to mount her horse….

Harry fled the court, mortified.

His crime?

Courting one of the Queen’s young ladies-in-waiting…

The lovely Elizabeth Vernon…..

…..an impoverished cousin of the Earl of Essex.

Essex encouraged the match as he desperately needed a spy close to the Queen when he was away…

So, to encourage Harry’s heterosexuality, Essex commissioned Shakespeare to write Romeo and Juliet for a private performance at Titchfield….

As part of the therapy, Harry played Romeo…..

…..who is recovering from a disastrous non-affair with the dark eyed beauty, Rosaline…..

…..a.k.a. Emilia….

Elizabeth Vernon, who, like Harry was subject to bouts of hysterical weeping, played Juliet…..

 Shakespeare, naturally, was ambivalent about Harry’s love affair with Elizabeth Vernon.

He knew Harry needed a son to carry on the Southampton line, but he didn’t want to lose the love of his life.

He dramatised this dilemma in the charged, febrile, disturbed passions of Mercutio…

 

 ……a character so close to his heart, he said, that he had to kill him off at the start of the third act.

Or Mercutio would have killed him….

In the event, Harry’s affair with Elizabeth Vernon in no way precluded an affair with Shakespeare….

Or  affairs with a lot of other people, mostly lower class young men….

Much to Shakespeare’s distress….

He worried that Harry’s penchant for rough trade would be used against him…

Shakespeare himself, though, was no angel….

He spends prodigious amounts of energy in his Sonnets trying to justify his own infidelities….

With Southampton gone from the Court, Essex was back in the spotlight.

He had grown to loathe his sado-masochistic affair with the ageing Queen….

 

He wanted to follow military glory abroad……

 

Elizabeth would have none of it…..

Nor would she name her successor, as Essex begged her to do….

Essex and Southampton were terrified that when she died, the Wars of the Roses would return to England….

 A plot began to form in their minds….. 

They would raise an army, eliminate the Fox and the Ape and force Queen Elizabeth to name her successor as James VI of Scotland…. 

James, the son of Mary Queen of Scots, was officially Protestant, but Catholic-friendly… 

He was bisexual, cultured, peace-loving and tolerant….

He also wanted to unite England and Scotland….

A plan first advocated by his mother who believed her son was born to bring it about…

The plotters, to steel themselves, needed a play….

What better story was there than the overthrow of Richard II?

And who better to write it than cousin Will?

Shakespeare created a Richard II who constantly changes his mind…..

Heaps gold on his favourites…..

….robs sons of their inheritances….

….surrounds himself with flatterers…..

….murders his relatives…..

….detests success in others…..

 … and loathes war with its ‘untun’d drums’ and ‘harsh-resounding trumpets’…..

Not unlike the Queen of England……

Cate Blanchett as Richard II.

It features a debonair rebel, Bollingbroke…..

….who doffs his cap to oyster wenches…

….bends his knee to draymen….

….plays the crowd….

 ….and plots to lead a movement to depose the King….

Not unlike the Earl of Essex…..

 

Shakespeare carries on the Bollingbroke story in Henry IV Parts One and Two..

Essex wanted to attack one of his biggest enemies at the court, Henry Brooke, 11th Lord Cobham….

…..a. k. a. The Sycophant…..

One of The Sycophant’s ancestors was Sir John Hardcastle, a Protestant martyr…

Friend and moral guide to Prince Hal…..

To please Essex, Shakespeare and Nashe wanted to discredit this hero…

But how?

Step forward, Mr. Apis Lapis….

Nashe’s fat, old Titchfield landlord….

Crook, raconteur and wit…

He was the model for for Oldcastle…..

Who, on the Queen’s orders, had to be rapidly renamed…..

…….Falstaff….

…….a man who was ‘all the world’…..

……but whose great heart would crack when the young man he loved rejected him….

During the Henry IV plays Shakespeare’s son, Hamnet, died…..

……a boy of only eleven whom Shakespeare hardly knew….

He only returned to Stratford-upon-Avon in the summer months….  

Shakespeare stifled his grief and went off the rails….

He bedded down with crooks in the notorious Paris Gardens….

He lent money….

He cheated at dice…..

He slept with prostitutes…..

He was hauled up before the magistrates to keep the  peace…..

Just like Falstaff….

Just like Apis Lapis…

And just a bit like his father….

This public disgrace meant a temporary break with Harry: but no weakening of love on either side.

Harry had become his surrogate son as well as his lover….

Even when Elizabeth Vernon became pregnant and produced a little girl, Shakespeare remained ‘engrafted’ to Harry.

And Harry remained  ‘engrafted’ to him….

But the pregnancy meant marriage and marriage meant the fury of the Queen.

Essex, because he’d set the whole thing up, was banished from the court as well….

The time was ripe for the plot and the chance came in an extraordinary way…..

Essex was forgiven and  sent to Ireland to quell the rebellion.

This was not the Queen’s idea: she thought Essex far too volatile for the job.

But The Fox and The Ape had persuaded her, against her instincts.

They wanted to give Essex enough rope to hang himself…..

Essex, the plan went, would quell the Irish with the English army….

…. then return with soldiers, join with the citizens of London and overthrow Elizabeth…

Cousin Will was in on the plot…..

He wrote Henry V, a patriotic tub-thumper that Queen Elizabeth would have loathed……

 

…..in which the Chorus describes how all the citizens fled out of London to welcome King Henry at Blackheath….. 

The Chorus predicts that the same welcome will be afforded to Essex when he returns from Ireland….

Bringing rebellion broach’d on his sword….

In the meantime Shakespeare was dispatched to Scotland….

His brief was to persuade King James to ride at the head of the army with Essex….

And to claim the throne of England as his own…..

Shakespeare staged the premiere of Macbeth in Edinburgh….

……a play which prophesies that fate will lead James to rule over a United Kingdom…..

…..and which demonstrates how right it is to remove bloody usurpers from the throne….

Usurpers like the Macbeths….

And usurpers like Queen Elizabeth……

But James was far too canny to rise to the bait…

Queen Elizabeth was old…..

 

James simply had to wait for a year or two and the English crown would be his…. 

The campaign in Ireland proved a disaster….. 

The Irish ran circles round poor Essex…..

And the charismatic rebel, the Earl of Tyrone….

 

…….all but persuaded Essex to join forces with the Irish instead…

And back at the Court, The Fox and The Ape were bad-mouthing Essex to the Queen…..

To defend himself, Essex rushed back, unbidden, from Ireland…..

He burst into the Queen’s morning chamber before Elizabeth had time to put on her wig or make-up……

His enemies said he was like Acteon who had gazed on the naked moon-Goddess, Diana…

 …..and like Acteon, was destined to be torn apart….

Essex was put under house-arrest and Shakespeare realised the plot was doomed.

Half the Essex entourage wanted to go ahead with rebellion, the other half wanted appeasement with the Queen. 

Shakespeare favoured appeasement. …..

He wrote Julius Caesar to show how all rebellions fail…..

…..and how even the most honourable men can be corrupted by events…

Shakespeare appealed to the Queen for clemency: he painted her as Olivia in Twelfth Night….

 

…..a beautiful, thoughtful, woman, with a heart full of love, unexpectedly running a great household after the death of her father and brother……

She is surrounded by adoring, love-sick suitors like Orsino…..

…..a.k.a. Essex….

And Sir Andrew Aguecheek….

……a.k.a. Southampton….

…….but threatened by a false-hearted Malvolio….

……a.k.a. The Fox….

This was Shakespeare’s last collaboration with Nashe…..

……who played and wrote Feste, the jester…. 

Nashe died later in the year, leaving, it was said, the treasure of his wit in…

other men’s chests…..

Ill and half mad, Essex gathered a group of hot-heads about him, as the Queen starved him of money…

The rebels burst onto the streets of the City, hoping to inspire the citizens of London to join them….

To Shakespeare’s horror, they had first paid for a special performance of Richard II at the Globe….

The citizens of London, well off under Elizabeth, didn’t want to know.

Essex was beheaded and Southampton, sentenced to death, was clapped in the Tower.

Shakespeare fled back to Scotland, loathed by the Queen and by many of her subjects…

Shakespeare could now get nothing from Harry….

…..stripped of his titles and his money….

…..disgraced and near death in the Tower….

But Shakespeare’s love for Harry grew in the profoundest way…..

In the Sonnets Shakespeare had often spoken of sharing one heart with Harry…..

…..now, with a physical distance between the two men, he speaks of sharing one soul….

In The Phoenix and the Turtle – Shakespeare’s great mystical poem – Harry is symbolised by the noble, fabulous Phoenix……

 ……and Shakespeare by the humble, work-a-day turtle dove….

 

The two birds have fused in a mutual flame of love…….

….and have moved on, together, to a place of peace……

INTERMISSION

© Stewart Trotter and Trixie the Cat. January, 2012.

Now view Shakespeare: The Movie. Part III

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Yes, Brothers and Sisters of the Code, The Agents are delighted to report that on….

11th January, 2012…

The Shakespeare Code received its….

17,000th View!!!

To add to our joy, Fellow of The Shakespeare Code, Eddie Linden…..

National Portrait Gallery.

 …….has been garnering rave reviews for his dazzling new collection of poems….

 

 

……FROM THE EMERALD ISLE!!!

The celebrated Irish biographer (and Co. Clare book-seller) Gerry Harrison, wrote,  in the highly prestigious  Irish Times, on Christmas Eve….

The thrust of personal experience propels this collection. Linden’s public readings or recitals can be theatre….

 

……but his integrity shines through….

After a bravura on-stage peformance, the poems can be appreciated further by a later, quieter look at the text, such as in The Miner, in tender memory of his father:

Your face has never

moved, it still contains

the marks of toil, deep

In blue. These slag heaps

now in green have

flowers instead of dust

and many men are buried here

whose shadows linger on.

Linden insists that….

…. ‘there is nothing intellectual in my poems; I never write unless I have something to say’.

When he says it, he says it directly – but he chooses his words with care, never suffocating his emotional conviction for his subject.

This impressive collection is timely, and brings together a body of work that helps to define this idiosyncratic but sensitive man…..

Even better is the piece by the distinguished Belfast novelist, Glenn Patterson….

In the New Year edition of the Belfast Telegraph he nominated A Thorn in the Flesh as….

THE BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR!!

But don’t forget, Brothers and Sisters, that the FIRST review of this brilliant book was penned by our own…..

TRIXIE THE CAT….

WAY BACK IN SEPTEMBER 2011!!!

THREE MONTHS AGO!!!

 You can read her INTERNATIONALLY INFLUENTIAL review by clicking: HERE.

And her CLASSIC, NO PAWS BARRED interview with Eddie Linden, F. S. C., by clicking: HERE.

You can purchase Eddie’s beautiful book (£7.50) from his charming publishers, Hearing Eye, by clicking : books@hearingeye.org

(Tell them Trixie sent you…..)

The Shakespeare Code abhors all forms of boastfulness and self-aggrandisment….

But must, in fairness, observe that….

WHERE TRIXIE THE CAT LEADS…..

 

….. THE WHOLE WORLD FOLLOWS….

 

The Agents of The Shakespeare Code would also like to welcome…..

URUGUAY

NORTH MARIANAS ISLANDS

AMERICAN SAMOA

TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO

KENYA

GEORGIA

RWANDA

…..to its ranks, bringing the total number of participating countries to a magnificent…..

EIGHTY-FOUR!!! 

See: The Shakespeare Code Salutes the Nations!

Data rushed to The Code’s Head Office reveal that in 2011 most Brothers and Sisters of The Code lived in…..

 THE UNITED KINGDOM

But….

AMERICA

and CANADA

ARE FOLLOWING CLOSE BEHIND…..

If you haven’t yet visited the acclaimed….

SHAKESPEARE: THE MOVIE I

Then click: HERE.

To read SIMON CALLOW’S stunning review….

See DIRECTLY BELOW….

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THE TRIXIE NEWSLETTER

Yes, Brothers and Sisters of The Code….

…..on the morning of….

1st January, 2012….

…..The Shakespeare Code received its..

16,000th VIEW!!!

And The Code enjoyed its BEST DAY EVER on….

19th December, 2011

….when The Code was happy to receive……

167 HITS!!!

The Four New Countries which have joined The Shakespeare Code are….

MAURITIUS

ECUADOR

TAIWAN

 COSTA RICA

…..which brings the number of participating countries to a heady…..

SEVENTY-SEVEN….

Please see: The Shakespeare Code Salutes the Nations.

The Agents of The Code are also proud to start 2012 with…..

 Shakespeare: The Movie I

…directly below…

 

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