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Michael Coveney
By Michael Coveney

Michael Coveney: Shakespeare goes round & round

Date: 19 July 2012

Like a latterday and slightly giddy Francis Drake, I circumnavigated the stunning new British Musuem exhibition, Shakespeare: staging the world, several times yesterday morning, and not just because I couldn't find the exit.

I wanted to re-visit several things on show: the amazing Elizabethan tapestry map of Warwickshire; the copy of the Bard's complete works smuggled into Robben Island and annotated by Nelson Mandela; the golden, glittering Ides of March coin struck by Brutus after the assassination of Caesar, and worn round his neck like a medal; the stern helmet, moth-eaten saddle and fearsome sword belonging to Henry V and rarely seen outside Westminster Abbey.

The principle behind the show, surely one of most concentrated and most fascinating London has ever seen, is the same as in the BM director Neil MacGregor's BBC Radio 4 series, A History of the World in 100 Objects. Shakespeare's world is conjured in artefacts, manuscripts, drawings and mementoes. There's even a witch's cursing bone stuck in a piece of bog oak.


What a fantastic place the British Museum is... And this collaboration between its top scholars and the RSC marks a red letter day in its history.

That certainly helps explain the spooky litanies of the witches in Macbeth, just as a sucket fork for sweetmeats, and the skull of a bear, both excavated from the site of the Rose Theatre, make newly vivid our idea of Shakespeare's brutal, popular playhouses.

And as you wander round (and round) the partially wooden O within the museum, you are wafted by the videoed sight and recorded sound of RSC actors reciting the great speeches: here's Paterson Joseph reprising his not unreasonable Brutus, there's Antony Sher, boiling and fit to burst as Shylock, asking "Hath not a Jew eyes?"; Harriet Walter is an expiring Cleopatra, Jonathan Slinger a desperate Macbeth on a downward slope, Jonjo O'Neill a starkly posing Richard III, curiously more persuasive than he was in the theatre.

In the last room, there's a magical film of Caliban and Trinculo forming a crab-like liaison ("Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows") and Ian McKellen bidding farewell to his art, declaring that the revels now are well and truly ended.

Here. too, are maps and globes galore, showing how Shakespeare's world was one of travel and tourism (though he himself probably went no further afield than the Mermaid tavern in London and the Dirty Duck in Stratford-upon-Avon), an intensely exciting period of charting the world elsewhere for the very first time.

Maybe this exhibition will put an end to the ridiculous PC nonsense of only black actors being entitled to play Othello. It seems clear that the portrait of the Moroccan ambassador to London round about 1600, Abd el-Ouahed ben Massaoud, is a source for Shakespeare's character who, despite his "thick lips" and "sooty bosom," is a noble Moor, not a Caribbean calypsoist. Ben Kingsley came closest to this authentic idea many years ago and so, in an otherwise disastrous performance, did Paul Scofield.

Neil MacGregor introduced the exhibition yesterday, thanking the sponsors BP, as well as the RSC, whose designer Tom Piper has realised the theatrical aspects of the show within the original design concept - he's an expert in cylindrical formats, as we knew from his work on the Michael Boyd's Histories - and then handing over to the formidable double act of Shakespearean (and RSC board member) Jonathan Bate and the BM's curator of Renaissance Europe, Dora Thornton.

They spoke with wonder and enthusiasm about their own work, which is perfectly understandable. Their superb catalogue - which I have been thumbing through avidly for several weeks - imagine my irritation at seeing Press copies flogged on the door for £10 less than the price I paid - is a beautifully illustrated treasure trove that is a "must have" on any Shakespeare shelf.

It seems marvellously apt that, in this year of overlapping festivals and the Olympics, the beating heart of Shakespeare should be at its centre, celebrating the Elizabethan miracle of adventure and curiosity that defined the age, and its drama; and that the "imagined" and real worlds of Shakespeare's theatre should be crammed within this modest setting, "turning the accomplishment of many years into an hour glass."

So, you can wander from London to the Forest of Arden, to Rome and Venice, and way beyond to a brave new world of magical possibilities and foreign travel. Puck says he will put a girdle round the earth in forty minutes, and it is a well known fact that the first Russian sputnik did the same thing in thirty-eight. Shakespeare never had to visit a place in order to know about it. And anyway, we can piece out his imperfections with our own thoughts.

What a fantastic place the British Museum is. I try not to go too often because I just end up eating cakes and buying books and never looking at the Greek and Roman statues. And this collaboration between its top scholars and the RSC marks a red letter day in its history.

Which also happened to be Nelson Mandela day, suitably enough. And as part of the affiliated lecture programme, you can hear the RSC's artistic director designate Greg Doran, responsible for the scintillating all-black RSC Julius Caesar coming to the Noel Coward Theatre next month, discussing Shakespeare in performance with his South African partner Antony Sher on 5 October.

- by Michael Coveney


Any opinions expressed above do not represent the view of Whatsonstage.com nor any of its staff or contributors beyond the bylined author.



Related Content

Other Posts By Michael Coveney
Michael Coveney: New York honours Matilda with five big awards - 20th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Tales from New York in Kinky Boots - 17th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Finsbury hails its local Park Theatre opening - 15th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Hooray for Halifax and Carrie's ENO debut - 13th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: All change at Trafalgar, Liverpool and Finsbury Park - 10th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Critics come full Circle in centenary bash - 8th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: High old time with High Tide in Halesworth - 7th May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Hytner steams on, Sondheim scintillates - 2nd May 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Theatre queens and Paris low-life - 30th Apr 2013 blog
Michael Coveney: Olivier big winners and Stratford long runners - 29th Apr 2013 blog
 More...
 
Internal Links
Michael Coveney: Timon's time & tide again - 18th Jul 2012 Blog
Photos: Staging the world - Shakespeare exhibition - 4th Jul 2012 Features
Top Five: Exhibits from Shakespeare: Staging the World at the British Museum - 18th Jul 2012 Features



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