Michael York On Shakespeare | Big Think

Michael York On Shakespeare
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Michael York on the user-friendly bard.
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Michael York:
Michael York, OBE is an English actor. An early career with the National Youth Theater, Oxford University Dramatic Society, and University College Players led him to the National Theater in London. After acclaimed roles in Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet (1968), Cabaret (1972) and Jesus of Nazareth (1977), he is more recently known among mainstream audiences for his role as Basil Exposition in the Austin Powers series of comedy films. Classically trained, Michael York wrote a handbook "A Shakespearean Actor Prepares."
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TRANSCRIPT:
York: You have to acknowledge that Shakespeare was one of the primary inventors of the language that we use today. He was a fountainhead of phrases and words and so on that we now take for granted. Of course the other great shaper of our language is the King James version of the bible. But it has a paltry vocabulary compared with Shakespeare's fountain of, explosive fountain of words. So he did you know, in terms of you know, just giving us the means to communicate, he's our godfather. I think he's acknowledged as one of the greatest dramatists ever. The fact that the Russians claim him you know, the French, the Germans, the whatever that he's not English or American. He is this universal playwright, speaking and voicing extraordinary truths, because he seems to have the finger on the pulse of what makes people tick. He's fascinated by the human condition and yet you know, you have to put it back, he was also you know, writing plays for actors to perform. And so the formula is very-- he's extraordinary because he is, in the same play that he can you know, for people who are you know, maybe a little more educated, have the essays of Bacon in their pockets going to watch a Shakespeare play, they will get this wonderful existential examination of you know, what is man. What's the point? Where are we going? You know, what is death? All these wonderful issues in the same play that an ignorant, uneducated citizen can pay his penny, stand in the rain and watch a play about armies and witches and poisonings and revenge and so on. He absolutely gets his money's worth. So he has this wonderful ability to encompass all these interests. I think for the actor also, he is one of the most generous of authors because he doesn’t want you to-- you don't have to do you know, what the author intended because you're never quite sure with Shakespeare what he intends. He sort of supplies great situations, extraordinary words, but he wants your collaboration. He wants your input and it's always a teamwork. You know, there's not a definitive thing that you have to do that makes it a Shakespearean performance or a Shakespearean Hamlet. That's not what he wants. And that's I think, the reason why he's endured for so long and why every country sees you know, sees him as their you know, playwright and why he'll go on being performed. Because he's yes, you know, languages change over the years and the fact that all his you know, the phrases that he used they are not pretentious and highfaluting and poetic. The imagery is all from you know, chairs and tables and glasses and whatever, the things that can people relate to. You know, he doesn’t talk in self-conscious poetic terms.
Question: Why does Shakespeare intimidate some people?
York: Because he's being made an academic subject which he would have hated. But once you get, if the class was made to perform a play, to you know, to actually inhabit the roles and make them live, once you get behind it, it's amazing. And kids get Shakespeare and he's very, very user-friendly.
Question: What have been your favorite roles?
York: I think if you're a young person growing up, adolescent and you play Hamlet and there are all sorts of things that you relate to, it's all about relationship with parents and loyalties and friends, school friends. What's it all about? You know, love and you know, relationships with women. It's lots of things you know, you related to and the other thing about Shakespeare is that the language, it's very-- as I said, it's very easy to learn in a way, because again Shakespeare is a genius and he constructs language in such a way that you know, inhabits an actor's mind very comfortably.
Read the full transcript at bigthink.com/videos/michael-y...

Пікірлер: 9

  • @steveoshow4832
    @steveoshow48326 жыл бұрын

    Michael Yorks portrayal of Tybalt in Franco Zefferelli's Romeo and Juliet remains his definitive and blazing role , what a legacy to have left on screen, brilliant acting at its best.

  • @jamesdougherty2271
    @jamesdougherty22718 жыл бұрын

    Michael York is undoubtedly one of Great Britain's best actors.

  • @edboswell9026
    @edboswell90266 жыл бұрын

    ONE of The most renowned proponents of Edward DeVere, 17th Earl of Oxford, as the true author

  • @CamFrancisco88
    @CamFrancisco882 ай бұрын

    One of the greatest!❤️

  • @josephhewes3923
    @josephhewes39235 жыл бұрын

    You mean Edward de Vere?

  • @tsundoku5733
    @tsundoku57335 жыл бұрын

    The video was OK until the actor started peddling that ridiculous Oxfordian theory, for which there is no evidence.

  • @keithparr547

    @keithparr547

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this comment. I clicked on this and then quickly scrolled to the comments and then decided not to watch. I'm tired of the Ofordian stuff on KZread. Having looked at the case for De Vere, I found it totally unconvincing and won't engage with it any more.

  • @joebombero1

    @joebombero1

    Жыл бұрын

    It makes sense when you think about British psychology. Only the upper class can produce lasting works of genius. The working classes are little more than pigs. This is why they keep insisting Shakespeare was of the noble class. There is a revealing reaction if you find an old interview of Clapton. He saw Jimmy Hendrix live and still is fascinated by the fact that such genius arose from the streets, not formal lessons and studio work and connections - British psychology.