King LearBristol Classical Press, 1987 - 247 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 43
... Barker , in his Preface ( 1927 ) , described the first scene as having a certain megalithic grandeur ' . It was in fact Hazlitt who had first used the metaphor , referring to Lear in terms of ' a proud monument in the gap of nature ...
... Barker , in his Preface ( 1927 ) , described the first scene as having a certain megalithic grandeur ' . It was in fact Hazlitt who had first used the metaphor , referring to Lear in terms of ' a proud monument in the gap of nature ...
Page 44
... Barker's Preface , published in 1927 , which made confident and influential claims for the play's supreme actability and importance in modern terms . As it began to be perceived in terms of the falling monolith , embodying all the ...
... Barker's Preface , published in 1927 , which made confident and influential claims for the play's supreme actability and importance in modern terms . As it began to be perceived in terms of the falling monolith , embodying all the ...
Page 153
... ( Barker notes ) . By contrast Olivier in the Granada TV production in 1983 was manically active , and had captured a hen ( presumably the proper inhabitant of their refuge ) to serve as Regan ; he made this line a complaint at his ...
... ( Barker notes ) . By contrast Olivier in the Granada TV production in 1983 was manically active , and had captured a hen ( presumably the proper inhabitant of their refuge ) to serve as Regan ; he made this line a complaint at his ...
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Common terms and phrases
action actor ALBANY appear arms audience Barker began Byrne carried century Charles Kean comes Cordelia CORNWALL court critics daughters death direction Edgar Edmund Kean effect Enter entry Exeunt Exit expression eyes face father feel final followed Fool France Garrick gave Gielgud give Gloucester Goneril hand hath head heart hold interpretation Irving J.P. Kemble John Kean and Irving keep Kent kind King Lear knights Lear's leave letter London look lord Macready madness means mind moved nature never notes opening Oswald performance Phelps play poor present production promptbook Regan rest restored role scene seemed servants Shakespeare sister speak speech spoke stage stand storm stressed suggested Tate Tate's tears tell Theatre thee thing thou throne took turn