King Learis arguably the most complex and demanding play in the whole of Shakespeare. Once thought impossible to stage, today it is performed with increasing frequency, both in Britain and America. It has been staged more often in the last fifty years than in the previous 350 years of its performance history, its bleak message clearly chiming in with the growing harshness, cruelty and violence of the modern world.
Performing King Learoffers a very different and practical perspective from most studies of the play, being centred firmly on the reality of creation and performance. The book is based on Jonathan Croall's unique interviews with twenty of the most distinguished actors to have undertaken this daunting role during the last forty years, including Donald Sinden, Tim Pigott-Smith, Timothy West, Julian Glover, Oliver Ford Davies, Derek Jacobi, Christopher Plummer, Michael Pennington, Brian Cox and Simon Russell Beale.
He has also talked to two dozen leading directors who have staged the play in London, Stratford and elsewhere. Among them are Nicholas Hytner, David Hare, Kenneth Branagh, Adrian Noble, Deborah Warner, Jonathan Miller and Dominic Dromgoole. Each reveals in precise and absorbing detail how they have dealt with the formidable challenge of interpreting and staging Shakespeare's great tragedy.
Introduction
1 A Stage History
2 The First of the Moderns: John Gielgud, Randle Ayrton, Donald Wolfit, Laurence Olivier
3 At the Old Vic: William Devlin, John Gielgud
4 A Stratford Decade: John Gielgud, Michael Redgrave, Charles Laughton, Paul Scofield
5 For the Royal Shakespeare Company: Eric Porter, Donald Sinden, Michael Gambon
6 Around the Regions: Michael Hordern, Kathryn Hunter, Warren Mitchell, Pete Postlethwaite, Tim Pigott-Smith
7 At the Old Vic 2: Anthony Quayle, Eric Porter, Alan Howard
8 In the Round: Paul Shelley, Clive Swift, John Shrapnel
9 For the Royal Shakespeare Companl�x