Ildiko Solti: Crossing the line: full light 3D space provoking the audience into action

Ildiko Solti: Crossing the line: full light 3D space provoking the audience into action

The symmetry and balance suggested by the title, Measure for Measure, sits oddly with a play that crosses the line in so many ways – generically (as a problem play), structurally (by muddling up the purpose of the main action as set in motion by the Duke), and emotionally/ethically (none of its characters are above the occasional unsavoury demeanour). Any of these features would frustrate audience expectations and behaviour, but their dominance appears to suggest that such frustration of ‘normal’ beahviour may actually be the purpose of the play. But why antagonise your audience in such a blatant way, or indeed why produce a play in which there is no feature that does not require some, or a lot of, ironing out? I suggest that the original conditions of production in the full light arena, casting the audience as the streetwise filth of Vienna, makes ‘crossing the line’ their basic function morally, formally (through their leading light, Lucio) and even existentially (as bystanders, they are implicated in a series of ethically compromising situations that are aesthetic as well as (in complete light) fundamentally social. Looking at Act 2 Scene 2 in detail, I will contrast key points in the action as they are realised in a full light amphitheatre and on a proscenium stage, showing how the spatial structure of the visible arena is used to engineer this intensely bizarre engagement which cajoles the audience to tackle, and even relish wrestling with, some quite uncomfortable and impossible-to-solve existential/philosophical problems. Ildiko is an actor-director, researcher and teacher. She trained in Dramatic Arts at Macalester College, St Paul, MN, USA. Having returned to Hungary, she obtained her MA at Eotvos Lorand University, and was Artistic Director of an English language theatre company, The Phoenix, in Budapest. In 1999 she moved to London where she has been teaching and conducting research and experiment in performance, focusing on Elizabethan/Jacobean working theatre reconstructions through the method of research through practice in performance (PaR). She holds a PhD from Middlesex University.

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Episoder(28)

Introduction to symposium and David Hawkes

Introduction to symposium and David Hawkes

Richard Wilson introduces the symposium and the first speaker David Hawkes. These are the recordings from the Shakespeare and Marx symposium organised by Kingston Shakespeare and held at Garrick's Te...

25 Nov 201814min

David Hawkes: Marx and Shakespeare Today: Towards an Ethics of Representation

David Hawkes: Marx and Shakespeare Today: Towards an Ethics of Representation

David Hawkes is Professor of English at Arizona State University. His publications span a huge variety of fields, from Milton and Shakespeare to Diego Maradona, sodomy, Darwinism, zombies, torture, Ch...

25 Nov 201836min

David Hawkes Q&A

David Hawkes Q&A

Questions to David Hawkes. These are the recordings from the Shakespeare and Marx symposium organised by Kingston Shakespeare and held at Garrick's Temple to Shakespeare (Hampton, UK) on June 24, 201...

25 Nov 201833min

Conference Welcome by Robert O'Dowd + Frank Whately: Edward Alleyn and the Rose

Conference Welcome by Robert O'Dowd + Frank Whately: Edward Alleyn and the Rose

Robert O’Dowd opens the Marlowe and Shakespeare -conference held at the Rose Theatre, Kingston. He is followed by Richard Wilson introducing Frank Whately (Kingston) who is giving the opening plenary ...

24 Jan 20181h 5min

Jean Howard: Playing History at the Rose

Jean Howard: Playing History at the Rose

Jean Howard (Columbia University) gives the third plenary lecture at the Marlowe and Shakespeare conference that is titled Playing History at the Rose. The session is introduced and chaired by Alison ...

24 Jan 20181h 2min

Jennifer Ann Bates: Hegel and Shakespeare on the Measure for Measure: The Hangman’s Mystery

Jennifer Ann Bates: Hegel and Shakespeare on the Measure for Measure: The Hangman’s Mystery

In her illumination of Shakespeare through Hegel, Jennifer Ann Bates reads the logic of measure from Hegel alongside Measure for Measure. Bates argues that each text is an initiation into the executio...

22 Jun 201752min

Paul Kottman: Herder, Hegel and Shakespeare

Paul Kottman: Herder, Hegel and Shakespeare

This talk is part of the Shakespeare and the Enlightenment symposium, held at Garrick's Temple to Shakespeare(Hampton, London) in September 2016. The session is chaired by Richard Wilson. Paul A. Kot...

17 Jun 201752min

Introduction to Shakespeare and the Enlightenment

Introduction to Shakespeare and the Enlightenment

Professor Richard Wilson introduces the symposium on Shakespeare and the Enlightenment at Garrick's Temple to Shakespeare in Hampton, London. The symposium was held on September 3, 2016. Recorded an...

16 Jun 20178min

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