Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Antony and Cleopatra (Shakespeare, Signet Classic) (original 1606; edition 1964)by William Shakespeare
Work InformationAntony and Cleopatra by William Shakespeare (1606)
» 21 more Books Read in 2023 (287) Love and Marriage (30) Authors from England (51) Overdue Podcast (288) Books Set in Rome (13) Plays I Like (36) Fake Top 100 Fiction (44) Must read (8) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. جدای از زیبایی نمایشنامه و داستان، دو نکتهی برجسته نظر من رو به خودش جلب کرد: اول نوع پردهبندی در این نمایشنامه که انگار در پرده پیشین داستان تمام میشد و داستان دیگهای آغاز میشد... مثلاً در پردهی دوم آنتونی و قیصر درگیر توطئهی پومپی هستند، اما در پایان پردهی دوم این قسمت از قصه به پایان میرسه و داستان بخش دیگری آغاز میشه. دوم نوع شخصیتپردازی شخصیتها... تا آخر نمایشنامه با اینکه با شخصیتهای اصلی همدردی میکنید، اما نمیتونید با طیب خاطر حق رو بهشون بدید یا بگید که دنبال باطل رفتند... شخصیتها تا حدود زیادی (اونقدر که در قرن 17 اجازه میداده و مخاطب رو میتونسته درگیر کنه) خاکستریاند... این نکته وقتی جالبتر میشه که این نمایشنامه از روی زندگی شخصیتهایی نوشته شده که واقعاً وجود داشتند و خاکستری بودنشون به نمایش بعد انسانیشون بسیار کمک کرده. This tragedy features triumvir Mark Antony and Queen of Egypt Cleopatra. She loves him although he is married. Octavius Caesar, the third political figure in the book, keeps the play's action interesting. Based on texts from Plutarch's Lives, we learn a little history of the Roman Republic prior to the time of Christ. It's not my favorite Shakespeare, but I liked it better after reading it this second time. I probably would not have re-read it, if Would LOVE to see this played as a screwball comedy all the way through, yes, including all the deaths at the end. Cleopatra is one of the funniest and broadest characters in Shakespeare, and what's more comedic than triumvers drunkenly discoursing on the crocodile, or, you know, a man botching his own disembowelment? For heaven's sake, the most dramatic scene in the play is interrupted for several minutes when a clown stumbles into it and refuses to take his cue to leave. Inspired by having read Shakespearean earlier in the year, I determined to listen to those Shakespeare plays I could find in the library. This is the first alphabetically (you got to start somewhere). It is also one I know next to nothing about and next time I would read the synopsis and character list first - that would have helped somewhat. Anyway on to the play. I think that Cleopatra deserves an epitaph along the lines of nothing in life became her so much as leaving. Through the play she doesn't always display in the best light, her behaviour towards the bearer of bad tidings is unkind and her jealousy towards Mark Antony's wives is beneath her. However she certainly comes into her own in the final scene and makes an exit that is nothing if not memorable. Mark Antony doesn't quite finish on the same high. He takes an inordinate time to finish the deal. He comes over as torn between his desire and duty and never manages to make a decision which side he is actually on until the last - and even then he needs to be pushed. It is highly likely that I've missed any amount of nuance and subtlety in this, but it was an enjoyable listen, I just know I need to do a smidge more home work next time. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher SeriesCentopaginemillelire (279) — 16 more Edition Holzinger (Shakespeare) New Penguin Shakespeare (NS31) Penguin Shakespeare (B17) University Paperbacks (UP286 / 206) William Shakespeare, Theatralische Werke in 21 Einzelbänden, übersetzt von Christoph Martin Wieland (10) The Yale Shakespeare (33) Is contained inThe complete works of William Shakespeare : reprinted from the First Folio (volume 12 of 13) by William Shakespeare The Annotated Shakespeare: The Comedies, Histories, Sonnets and Other Poems, Tragedies and Romances Complete by William Shakespeare (indirect) The Norton Shakespeare: Four-Volume Set by Stephen Greenblatt (indirect) The Norton Shakespeare: Two Volume Set by William Shakespeare (indirect) Is retold inHas the (non-series) prequelHas the adaptationWas inspired byHas as a studyHas as a commentary on the textHas as a student's study guide
Drama.
Fiction.
HTML: Antony and Cleopatra is a tragic play by Shakespeare, which tells the ill-fated love story between Antony and Cleopatra and the antagonistic role played by Julius Caesar, future Emperor of Rome. "I will tell you. No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)822.33Literature English & Old English literatures English drama Elizabethan 1558-1625 Shakespeare, William 1564–1616LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
Two elements stand out in the reading of this play, beyond the glorious leads. The figure of Enobarbus, Antony's sardonic aide-de-camp, offers a great insight into the romance and the political backdrop with his cagy asides and singular wit. "That truth should be silent I had almost forgot," he tells his boss, but it never really is with Enobarbus on the job.
The other element is "Antony And Cleopatra's" cinematic quality, with no less than 42 scenes set in Rome, Greece, and Egypt. Lovemaking, drinking, battles, and jump-cuts abound. There are longish scenes, like the final one, but even there the action moves fast. It might be considered a failing that so much of what happens on stage up until the last two acts is basically reaction action to storylines that occur off-frame, but Shakespeare makes the drama come so alive, and draws his focus so remarkably on his imperfect central lovers, that you only marvel at what he is able to accomplish without, say, a staged first meeting between Antony and Cleopatra, or a more direct falling out between Antony and Octavian Caesar.
One of the great attractions for me of reading this play is it works as a kind of antidote to Shakespeare's other celebrated romance. Romeo And Juliet are lovers in the full bloom of youth, toyed with by others' ambitions. Antony and Cleopatra are older and more in charge of their lives, yet make an even bigger hash of things. A street fight in Verona pales in comparison to Actium, yet I find Antony and Cleopatra as I get older far more rewarding company, with their refusal to live their lives in accordance with other's wants. ( )