Acting in Shakespeare
Smith
and Kraus, 2005
This
newly revised and expanded second edition of Cohen’s distinguished
work on Shakespearean acting (2005) is available in an inexpensive
paperback with Smith and Kraus.
Review
Excerpts
"Cohen's
analyses… are perceptive and well articulated… [showing]
actors that [Shakespearean] language is not merely decorative,
but something that grows out of a psychological urgency….
By book's end students can reasonably be expected to be comfortable
and confident with Shakespeare's demands.
“And
while there is a wealth of critical insight into the plays and
their characters, Cohen is as generous with hints about purely
technical matters too often foreign to naturalistic actors….
While the bulk of the book focuses on voice in the theatre,
Cohen is acutely aware that Shakespeare's plays are also intensely
physical works…. [and his] chapter on physicalizing Shakespeare
contains a number of stimulating exercises (Cohen's strength
as an acting teacher).
“I
can't imagine a group of students not being enthralled by Cohen's
ingenious concept. ...Acting in Shakespeare is so readily accessible
and full of such "do-able" exercises that it should
be a staple of period style classes for years to come.”
--Theatre Journal
"…practical
instructions for dramatizing Shakespeare's scripts for a contemporary
audience... how to decipher unfamiliar Shakespearean words and
expressions, how to analyze and illuminate character, and, ultimately,
how to convey the characters' emotions to the audience so that
a bonding occurs, one which enables the actor and audience to
experience mutual illumination and identification.
“...Cohen's
clear and thoughtful exegesis is much more than a practical
step-by-step handbook. His plan works to build the reader's
awareness of the method behind Shakespeare's 'madness' and the
purpose for his rhetoric and poetic devices. The reader's comprehension
and appreciation is enriched... and Cohen's text becomes an
excellent basic guide for anyone who likes to get behind the
scenes, be it the actor who performs or the student who studies
Shakespeare's script as a literary text." --The Shakespeare
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