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John Barton (2) (1928–2018)

Author of Playing Shakespeare {book to accompany video}

For other authors named John Barton, see the disambiguation page.

13+ Works 577 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

John Bernard Adie Barton was born in London, England on November 26, 1928. He was educated at Eton College and at King's College, Cambridge, where he directed numerous student productions and, after graduating, became a fellow and lay dean. When Peter Hall founded the Royal Shakespeare Company in show more 1961, he asked Barton to help him get the troupe off the ground. Barton would go on to direct more than 50 productions there. As a director and in the classes and workshops he taught, Barton was known for helping actors find the meaning in Shakespeare's lines. He was also a writer and adapter. In 1963, he condensed Shakespeare's three Henry VI plays and Richard III and staged them under the title The Wars of the Roses. He created The Hollow Crown, which premiered at the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1961 and then had a run on Broadway in 1963. He also created The Greeks, a nine-hour production spread over three evenings that adapted 10 plays by Euripides, Aeschylus, Sophocles and Homer to tell the story of the Trojan War. He died on January 18, 2018 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: John Barton in rehearsals for Love's Labour's Lost (1965).

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7 reviews
A marvelous book, although in truth primarily a transcription of a far more vital television series.

John Barton was, along with his theatrical partner Peter Hall, one of the foremost forces in defining how the mid-to-late 20th century understood and interpreted Shakespeare on the stage. Barton and Hall's development of the Royal Shakespeare Company set a new pace, a new vision, a new bar for actors to climb in their pursuit of understanding of the Bard. Alongside radical directors like show more Peter Brook and the dense political reworkings of Michael Bogdanov, Barton and Hall gave us the modern view of Shakespeare on the stage, through their landmark productions and their work with almost all of the great actors of my grandparents' generation. (Indeed, their work was so profound that many people these days take it to be "the" way of doing Shakespeare, forgetting both that previous generations' performance styles would be quite odd to our eyes, and that the current generation's desire to revitalise and decolonise Shakespeare on the page and on the stage is an equally valid approach.)

In 1979, Barton and some of his RSC actors staged two hourlong television specials examining the way actors approach Shakespeare. In 1982, ITV took this to another level by commissioning a full series. If you have any interest in this subject whatsoever, Playing Shakespeare is well worth seeking out. In a seemingly casual format, surrounded by eager students in the round, Barton sits in his tan-coloured cardigan and engages with a host of RSC actors, every one of them impressive. Household names abound (Dench, Stewart, Suchet, Kingsley, McKellen, Ashcroft) as well as luminaries of the stage, from Richard Pasco and the endlessly wondrous Jane Lapotaire to Michael Williams and the retired-too-soon Mike Gwilym.

Each episode tackles a concept, such as speaking the verse, bringing out the contradictions in the text, or character interpretation, as when David Suchet and Patrick Stewart (both of whom had played Shylock in a Barton production) spend an entire episode examining the key scenes in The Merchant of Venice. Most memorable is an episode devoted entirely to a single short scene from Twelfth Night, with the actors and Barton walking us through a rehearsal. Barton and co actually filmed a huge amount of material that didn't make it to air. The book consists of transcriptions of each episode (edited for clarity and form) as well as three chapters of "new" material from the unaired segments. (A weighty discussion between Barton and McKellen on performing contemporary Shakespeare seems an especial loss to the series.)

Although it aired before I was born, Playing Shakespeare conjures up a rich nostalgia in me. For an era when a mainstream television network felt it worthy to screen a series of Shakespearean acting insights for a non-specialist audience. When arts programming had a place in the schedule, and (some) members of the public felt it worthwhile to reach outside of their sphere for a moment of cultural enlightenment. It's also just a thoroughly charming and engaging series, and I highly recommend viewing it.

But as insights into the performance of Shakespeare, the book is also still valid forty years on.
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An astounding achievement, even sixty years later. A great shame that this book is so very rare, as this is without doubt one of the landmark Shakespearean productions of the 20th century complete with valuable and insightful essays.

At the same time, it was a product of the moment. Companies since then have found their own ways to produce these plays, and perhaps there is as little willingness now as there was prior to this production for writers and directors to create their own show more Frankenspeare, even for sometimes difficult texts such as these early plays.

For those of us who love our theatre history, however? Sheer glory.
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Truly remarkable. A very wordy read from one of my theatre idols. This is a very challenging piece, both in performance and on the page. It's best to find (his sadly-out-of-print) "The Greeks", which retells the traditional stories. These stories are like the fragments that don't get told. But what poetry, and what insight! Bliss.
(This volume was published by the company which premiered the plays, but this is very much Barton's script, going to press (as it states) before opening night. show more Barton fell out with the director, his friend and collaborator for 50 years Peter Hall, over the latter's major edits and directorial approaches. So it's safe to say that Barton's script here doesn't reflect what audiences saw on Hall's stage, and that's probably reasonable, given the length among other things.) show less
as good as any book on WS that you will ever read. barton and his company of excellent actors, incl. joan lapotaire, and richard pasco, are scintillating.
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