The Shakespeare Mindset: Improve your life the Bard way not the hard way
"My love is thine to teach; teach it but how" Top podcaster Tim McIntosh, host of The Play's The Thing, talks about how we can all learn to love Shakespeare, especially after bad experiences at school. We both admit we initially found Shakespeare dull and inaccessible when taught as literature in classrooms. Our lightbulb moments came through performance. Tim says watching film versions such as Hamlet and Othello first showed him Shakespeare’s energy, but acting scenes himself truly transformed his understanding. Memorising and physically performing the lines made the text come alive in a way silent reading never had. Tim believes that Shakespeare is often taught incorrectly. He argues teachers approach the plays as if they were novels rather than scripts meant for actors and audiences. Instead of students sitting silently analysing text, Tim believes they should be on their feet, speaking the lines, reacting to each other, and treating Shakespeare as active theatre. Try it yourself! Do it with a friend! Tim describes several practical techniques he uses in teaching. One of his most effective exercises removes students’ fear of embarrassment: he asks everyone to perform lines “as badly as possible.” Students mumble, overact, shout, and exaggerate deliberately. By the fourth repetition they have already absorbed the text and become less self-conscious, making real performance much easier. This creates a classroom “culture of performance” where everyone participates together rather than worrying about looking foolish. Another important aspect of his teaching is blocking — the physical positioning and movement of actors on stage. Tim explains that the distance between characters fundamentally changes the emotional meaning of a scene. Two people shouting from opposite sides of a room create a completely different atmosphere from two people speaking quietly shoulder to shoulder. He wants students to experience Shakespeare physically, not just intellectually. I always try and keep out of the 21st century but here we are discussing a scene that's like the start of so many rom coms, here's another scene that could have been lifted directly to be the plot for Indecent Proposal. Tim argues Shakespeare originally belonged to lively, unruly popular entertainment rather than the “gilded” reverence surrounding it today. Audiences at the Shakespeare's Globe were active participants, much like modern comedy crowds. This chat reminded me of the effect real proper acting had on me when I had to'do' anger. Tim shows how so many scenes highlight Shakespeare’s fascination with conflicting value systems, power, honour, ambition, and human weakness. By the end, Tim’s core message is clear: Shakespeare becomes meaningful when treated as living drama rather than sacred literature. If people simply try performing the plays aloud with others, he believes “they’ll fall in love — there’s nothing they can do about it.” ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
17 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Shakespeare Mindset: Improve your life the Bard way not the hard way!