THE CLOCK IS UP.

THE CLOCK IS UP. I noticed driving past today a large clock prominently displayed on the set that Shakespeare on the Sound has erected two blocks down the hill from our house for THE COMEDY OF ERRORS. I noticed the clock because I have been happily reading in Marjorie Garber’s SHAKESPEARE AFTER ALL, which has wonderful essays on each of Shakespeare’s plays. (I say “reading in” because I am starting with the essays on plays I have seen). Garber points out the importance of time in COMEDY OF ERRORS. The play opens with a man being threatened with execution unless he can come up with a required ransom by five that afternoon. Events in the play constantly refer to the approaching deadline. It is nice to think of the play as a forerunner of HIGH NOON and RUN, LOLA, RUN. Garber makes a major point: “The threat of death frames all Shakespearean comedy…..Comedy exists in a privileged space, poised between darkness and darkness.” She also discusses a famous 1938 production which featured a large clock with moving hands. This is opening night and the performance begins in less than an hour. The clock is ticking.

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3 Responses to THE CLOCK IS UP.

  1. Mary Jane says:

    We are such stuff as dreams are made on. . . God, could that man write!

  2. Mary Jane says:

    Phil can hardly wait to see “Comedy of Errors” because it’s all about twinship and identity. Finally, the mystery revealed!

  3. Annalisa says:

    Forgive me if I’m incorrect, but wasn’t there a time limit on Claudio’s life in Measure for Measure, too? He was going to be executed at such-and-such a time or else. It’s a great way to force urgency on your characters. I remember one of my professors (not Peggy) making a big deal about some huge clock that Elizabeth I had commissioned or gifted to her.

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