The Borneo Post

A new show imagines a punk rock Shakespear­e - the latest of our many fantasies about the bard

- By Maia Silber

WE hear the sound of a crowd clapping in unison, chanting an indecipher­able name, faster and faster, and then exploding in applause. When the applause fades, we see a lone hand holding a quill to parchment. The quill forms a few letters, then pauses and scratches them out. The camera moves to show us a handsome face, eyebrows furrowed in thought.

“Who will want a play by William Shakespear­e?” a female voice calls out, breaking the mood. We see a woman standing, arms crossed, in the corner of a candlelit room.

It’s the first of many wink-wink moments in Will, a new TNT show about the writer’s life. The show, created by Craig Pearce, who helped adapt the screenplay for Baz Luhrmann’s 1996 film Romeo + Juliet, imagines an Elizabetha­n world of sex, drugs and theatre crowds resembling mosh pits. With its gory torture scenes and elaboratel­y costumed but oft-nude cast, the show resembles such popular pseudohist­orical dramas as The Tudors, Rome and The Borgias. This is the English Renaissanc­e, Game of Thrones-style.

“It was a world divided by religion and religious fundamenta­lism,” Pearce says. And if you’re on the wrong side of the divide? “Your stomach is split open.”

Which raises the question: Why William? It might seem that a poet would offer poor fodder for such a premise — at least compared with warring monarchs or conniving popes. Yet for centuries, writers have mined the Bard’s biography for drama - despite the fact that very little is known, and very much is debated, about the events of his life. ( Did he love his wife? Did he sleep with other women — or men? Was he a secret Catholic? Did he even write his own plays?)

Perhaps it’s because there’s something titillatin­g about unmasking the man whose name has become synonymous with genius, and whose plays embody universal ideas. Everyone knows Shakespear­e — at least a line or two — but this is Will. Winkwink.

One October morning in 1823, the American writer Washington Irving had an idea for a play. “Shakespear­e as young man,” he jotted down in his notebook. “Seen with Ann Hathaway.”

Irving might have been inspired to write about Shakespear­e by his visit to Stratford-upon-Avon, a popular tourist attraction. There, local residents hawked armchairs and writing desks and bar stools graced, supposedly, with the Bard’s ghostly presence. Irving mocked the tourists who believed they could possess the Bard’s essence through cheap trinkets, but Irving understood their desire to get inside Shakespear­e’s head. If furniture didn’t do it, perhaps fiction could.

As far as scholars know, Irving never wrote a play about Shakespear­e. But as Samuel Schoenbaum documents in his book “Shakespear­e’s Lives”, the Bard’s rise to cultural hero in the 19th century coincided with his emergence as a fictional character. The French playwright Alexandre Duval called a one- act comedy “Shakespear­e amoureux”: Shakespear­e in love (with an actress named Clarence). English playwright C. A. Somerset quickly followed with “Shakespear­e’s Early Days”, which dramatized a popular story — never verified — about Shakespear­e poaching a deer.

But these works pale in comparison with Robert Folkestone Williams’s expansive trilogy “Shakespear­e and his friends.” The second instalment, published in 1839 and clocking in at 415 pages, concludes with the triumphant first production of Romeo and Juliet. Amid roaring applause, Folkestone writes, “one of famous strong lungs made himself heard above the rest by putting of the question ‘ Who wrote this play?’ “Shakespear­e steps forward and declaims himself. It’s another wink-wink moment: to think of theatregoe­rs not knowing who wrote “Romeo and Juliet”!

Fast-forward to 2017, and Shakespear­e has his own character page on IMDb. He crowdsurfs during a solo in the rock musical “Something Rotten!” and inspires a “Da Vinci Code”- esque mystery in “The Shakespear­e Secret” ( published in the United States as “Interred With Their Bones”).

He makes cameos on “Saturday Night Live”, The Simpsons, The Twilight Zone and Doctor Who. He even faces off against Satan in the video game “Saints Row: Gat Out of Hell”.

 ??  ?? Laurie Davidson stars as William Shakespear­e in TNT’s Will. — Alex Bailey, TNT photo
Laurie Davidson stars as William Shakespear­e in TNT’s Will. — Alex Bailey, TNT photo

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