您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Reviews
Twelfth Night At Oxford
Oscar Wilde
下载:Reviews.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ (Dramatic Review, February 20, 1886.)
       On Saturday last the new theatre at Oxford was opened by the University Dramatic Society. The play selected was Shakespeare's delightful comedy of Twelfth Night, a play eminently suitable for performance by a club, as it contains so many good acting parts. Shakespeare's tragedies may be made for a single star, but his comedies are made for a galaxy of constellations. In the first he deals with the pathos of the individual, in the second he gives us a picture of life. The Oxford undergraduates, then, are to be congratulated on the selection of the play, and the result fully justified their choice. Mr. Bourchier as Festa the clown was easy, graceful and joyous, as fanciful as his dress and as funny as his bauble. The beautiful songs which Shakespeare has assigned to this character were rendered by him as charmingly as they were dramatically. To act singing is quite as great an art as to sing. Mr. Letchmere Stuart was a delightful Sir Andrew, and gave much pleasure to the audience. One may hate the villains of Shakespeare, but one cannot help loving his fools. Mr. Macpherson was, perhaps, hardly equal to such an immortal part as that of Sir Toby Belch, though there was much that was clever in his performance. Mr. Lindsay threw new and unexpected light on the character of Fabian, and Mr. Clark's Malvolio was a most remarkable piece of acting. What a difficult part Malvolio is! Shakespeare undoubtedly meant us to laugh all through at the pompous steward, and to join in the practical joke upon him, and yet how impossible not to feel a good deal of sympathy with him! Perhaps in this century we are too altruistic to be really artistic. Hazlitt says somewhere that poetical justice is done him in the uneasiness which Olivia suffers on account of her mistaken attachment to Orsino, as her insensibility to the violence of the Duke's passion is atoned for by the discovery of Viola's concealed love for him; but it is difficult not to feel Malvolio's treatment is unnecessarily harsh. Mr. Clark, however, gave a very clever rendering, full of subtle touches. If I ventured on a bit of advice, which I feel most reluctant to do, it would be to the effect that while one should always study the method of a great artist, one should never imitate his manner. The manner of an artist is essentially individual, the method of an artist is absolutely universal. The first is personality, which no one should copy; the second is perfection, which all should aim at. Miss Arnold was a most sprightly Maria, and Miss Farmer a dignified Olivia; but as Viola Mrs. Bewicke was hardly successful. Her manner was too boisterous and her method too modern. Where there is violence there is no Viola, where there is no illusion there is no Illyria, and where there is no style there is no Shakespeare. Mr. Higgins looked the part of Sebastian to perfection, and some of the minor characters were excellently played by Mr. Adderley, Mr. King-Harman, Mr. Coningsby Disraeli and Lord Albert Osborne. On the whole, the performance reflected much credit on the Dramatic Society; indeed, its excellence was such that I am led to hope that the University will some day have a theatre of its own, and that proficiency in scene-painting will be regarded as a necessary qualification for the Slade Professorship. On the stage, literature returns to life and archaeology becomes art. A fine theatre is a temple where all the muses may meet, a second Parnassus, and the dramatic spirit, though she has long tarried at Cambridge, seems now to be migrating to Oxford.
       Thebes did her green unknowing youth engage;
       She chooses Athens in her riper age. _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Introduction
Dinners And Dishes
A Modern Epic
Shakespeare On Scenery
A Bevy Of Poets
Parnassus Versus Philology
Hamlet At The Lyceum
Two New Novels I
Henry The Fourth At Oxford
Modern Greek Poetry
Olivia At The Lyceum
As You Like It At Coombe House
A Handbook To Marriage
Half-Hours With The Worst Authors
One Of Mr. Conway's Remainders
To Read Or Not To Read
Twelfth Night At Oxford
The Letters Of A Great Woman
News From Parnassus
Some Novels I
A Literary Pilgrim
Beranger In England
The Poetry Of The People
The Cenci
Helena In Troas
Pleasing And Prattling
Balzac In English
Two New Novels II
Ben Jonson
The Poets' Corner I
A Ride Through Morocco
The Children Of The Poets
New Novels I
A Politician's Poetry
Mr. Symonds' History Of The Renaissance
A 'jolly' Art Critic
A Sentimental Journey Through Literature
Common-Sense In Art
Miner And Minor Poets
A New Calendar
The Poets' Corner II
Great Writers By Little Men
A New Book On Dickens
Our Book-Shelf
A Cheap Edition Of A Great Man
Mr. Morris's Odyssey
A Batch Of Novels
Some Novels II
The Poets' Corner III
Mr. Pater's Imaginary Portraits
A Good Historical Novel
New Novels II
Two Biographies Of Keats
A Scotchman On Scottish Poetry
Literary And Other Notes I
Mr. Mahaffy's New Book
Mr. Morris's Completion Of The Odyssey
Sir Charles Bowen's Virgil
Literary And Other Notes II
Aristotle At Afternoon Tea
Early Christian Art In Ireland
Literary And Other Notes III
The Poets' Corner IV
Literary And Other Notes IV
The Poets' Corner V
Venus Or Victory
Literary And Other Notes V
The Poets' Corner VI
M. Caro On George Sand
The Poets' Corner VII
A Fascinating Book
The Poets' Corner VIII
A Note On Some Modern Poets
Sir Edwin Arnold's Last Volume
Australian Poets
Some Literary Notes I
Poetry And Prison
The Gospel According To Walt Whitman
The New President
Some Literary Notes II
One Of The Bibles Of The World
Poetical Socialists
Mr. Brander Matthews' Essays
Some Literary Notes III
Mr. William Morris's Last Book
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Poets' Corner IX
Some Literary Notes IV
Mr. Froude's Blue-Book
Some Literary Notes V
Ouida's New Novel
Some Literary Notes VI
A Thought-Reader's Novel
The Poets' Corner X
Mr. Swinburne's Last Volume
Three New Poets
A Chinese Sage
Mr. Pater's Last Volume
Primavera