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Re: [TR] Shakespeare and Triumphs DO mix

To: John Macartney <John.Macartney@Ukpips.org.uk>, triumphs@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: [TR] Shakespeare and Triumphs DO mix
From: TERRY SMITH <terryrs@comcast.net>
Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 16:49:33 -0400 (EDT)
Delivered-to: mharc@autox.team.net
Delivered-to: triumphs@autox.team.net
Importance: Medium
References: <EB2B93AD-8798-4F0E-A7E8-F5382C760575@Ukpips.org.uk>
Not particularly TR related, I guess.  I was an English Major in northern 
California in 1975 when our History of English Lit class took a field trip to 
ACT Theatre in San Francisco for my first Shakespeare play.  I seem to remember 
it was Richard II.  Behind me in the upper--upper--upper--did I say 
free?--nosebleed gallery, was a young man with a large bottle of whisky, which 
he drank directly from and offered some to me, which I declined.  

Then at one point in the play, a buxom...that is very buxom...actress reclined 
dramatically onto her back facing the audience and spilling her buxomness into 
the front row audience, as it were.  The inebriated man behind me yelled 
delightedly,  "What t...ts!"

The theatre turned to look upward at me as if I were the offender.  

Top tier 21 year old student that I was, I kept my eyes dutifully on the 
buxom...I mean...stage.  

I figured what the heck, we were all poets here, right????



> On April 29, 2020 at 4:29 PM John Macartney <John.Macartney@Ukpips.org.uk> 
> wrote:
> 
> 
> Sat down in front of the tv today to indulge in a bit of culture. The 
> National Theatre in London (far too expensive for me to ever think of buying 
> tickets for any production) have started running recorded productions through 
> YouTube and the one I settled down to enjoy was â??Twelfth Nightâ??.
> It is now a regular thing to put on Shakespeare in the U.K. using modern 
> clothing and very technically designed scenery but with the original language 
> of 500 odd years ago. Today was no exception. 
> In the original play, it opens with a shipwreck in the imaginary land of 
> Illyria and probably a full blown ship and tons of water arenâ??t the most 
> sensible â??propsâ?? for realism. So, instead of the ship crashing on to the 
> revolving stage, a rather nice Conifer Green TR6 is substituted with all the 
> lights on!!! Made a surprise change to what was an otherwise outstanding 
> production (if olde Englishe, puns, Elizabethan humour and now obsolete words 
> are your preferment?) I enjoy them, though many donâ??t - but â??twas a 
> giggle to see the car. It could of course have been an MGB but clearly the 
> production director has taste in choosing what he did.
> 
> Jonmac
> 
> At the Battle of Waterloo, 1815:
> Lord Uxbridge:  â??By God, Sir - Iâ??ve lost my legâ??
> Duke of Wellington: â??By God, Sir - so you have!â??
> 
> 
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