Women as Hamlet: Performance and Interpretation in Theatre, Film and Fiction

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Cambridge University Press, Feb 22, 2007 - Biography & Autobiography - 329 pages
The first Hamlet on film was Sarah Bernhardt. Probably the first Hamlet on radio was Eve Donne. Ever since the late eighteenth century, leading actresses have demanded the right to play the role - Western drama's greatest symbol of active consciousness and conscience. Their iconoclasm, and Hamlet's alleged 'femininity', have fascinated playwrights, painters, novelists and film-makers from Eugène Delacroix and the Victorian novelist Mary Braddon to Angela Carter and Robert Lepage. Crossing national and media boundaries, this book addresses the history and the shifting iconic status of the female Hamlet in writing and performance. Many of the performers were also involved in radical politics: from Stalinist Russia to Poland under martial law, actresses made Hamlet a symbol of transformation or crisis in the body politic. On stage and film, women reinvented Hamlet from Weimar Germany to the end of the Cold War. This book aims to put their half-forgotten achievements centre-stage.
 

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Contents

Section 1
3
Section 2
13
Section 3
35
Section 4
37
Section 5
77
Section 6
78
Section 7
83
Section 8
85
Section 13
137
Section 14
141
Section 15
150
Section 16
160
Section 17
162
Section 18
183
Section 19
184
Section 20
206

Section 9
88
Section 10
106
Section 11
107
Section 12
117
Section 21
223
Section 22
237
Section 23
265
Section 24
266

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About the author (2007)

Tony Howard is Senior Lecturer in the English Department at the University of Warwick.

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