Just to make the distinction clear Travellers are a historically nomadic group with Irish ancestry and have no ties with Romani people. The racism here in Ireland against Travelers is terrible. Like Travelers are banned from a lot of pubs and places and people who see themselves as anti racist will casually say vile shit about Travelers (if they're against Travelers they're probably also horrible about Romani though). Also Mincéirs is pronounced like mincarey. I think the word Pavee is used by travellers more than mincéirí. Travelers are one of the worst represented groups. Like I think the most mainstream representation of them was in Peaky Blinders. Which had them speaking speaking Romanian which is a wild conflation of Romani, Romanians and Irish Travelers. And especially frustrating cause Travellers have their own language Cant and it's is a really cool secret language that's a mix of English and Irish. Great vid!
@Eruvadhril10 ай бұрын
I'm glad you brought that up. "Romani" is not a catch-all term for nomadic or traveller peoples; despite them all being referred to by the same names (and often slurs) by other peoples, they are distinct culturally and ethnically. The umbrella term used in the UK is "GRT". en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gypsy,_Roma_and_Traveller_people_(UK)
@emisformaker10 ай бұрын
They were also the big bad for a season of Vampire Diaries, apparently. The groups were also conflated there, but in addition to that were literal villains. I only know this because of Jenny Nicholson's video about the show.
@beckstheimpatient413510 ай бұрын
@@Eruvadhril Ah lovely, the first term in that acronym is a racial slur. Fits with what the UK's approach has been, but it's 'nice' to see they're so blatant about it.
@charleston178910 ай бұрын
My goodness yes, I still can’t believe how appalling society is to these communities and how nobody seems to give a crap!
@TheHopperUK10 ай бұрын
@@beckstheimpatient4135 Just for clarity the group chose that name itself and it wasn't imposed. It's a bit more complicated than that, when the group itself uses terms that are slurs if used by outsiders. Makes it tricky to talk about but outsiders can just deal with that haha
@Advent354610 ай бұрын
I will never be normal about that cover image with Anne Hathaway caught between the two.
@OtherBlueFae10 ай бұрын
Dude, *same*
@TheGuwrovsky10 ай бұрын
It is unlocking something in my brain too 😂
@campbellmaggs438410 ай бұрын
Bisexual panic in an image.
@theaizere10 ай бұрын
never not on my mind
@ez374810 ай бұрын
i would sell my soul for a recording of that performance
@teejaykaye5 ай бұрын
“Seems to be extremely devoted to him” overlaying a full contact kiss was an AMAZING cut
@reminded9 ай бұрын
I saw that Anne Hathaway production. God it was so good, I wish I could see it again. I also very much prefer when they just play Malvolio’s imprisonment as really not that serious, it just makes the scene fit the tone of the rest of the play so much better in my opinion.
@katherinealvarez921610 ай бұрын
Viola said: Drink your Respect Women juice! And Malvolio said "I was abused and I will have my revenge!" And then proceeded to lawyer up because he went through workplace harassment and unlawful containment. Sebastian said: I have no idea what is going on but it seems to be ending well!
@sebastianevangelista492110 ай бұрын
“ Sebastian: A pretty girl likes me and I found my sister, so you guys can do whatever the fuck you want over there!” - my sister
@gozerthegozarian95009 ай бұрын
One theatre in my city staged an adaptation of "Twelfth Night" titled "Queer Night" that turned the gender-bending up to 11. It was glorious!
@ginger_L310 ай бұрын
in the words of my classmates in our shakespeare class "oh so cesario's a twink"
@charleston178910 ай бұрын
💀
@thirdcoinedge10 ай бұрын
"'Some are born with greatness, some achieve it, and others have it thrust upon them.' This will be a dick joke later." Was not expecting that, but honestly after the "Cs, Us, n Ts" joke, I wouldn't expect anything less from my favorite English bard.
@d.w.stratton407810 ай бұрын
I was the shipwrecked captain from act 1 scene 1 in hight school so I was on stage for roughly 2 minutes and then back stage. As such I was an unofficial techy. I can confirm that we would stand back stage waiting, with bated breath, for Malvolio to deliver this line, and we would do sort of a Macarena thing with our hands and then pelvic thrust à la Rocky Horror in an attempt to get the actors to crack up. So fun so fun.
@curtisturpin938910 ай бұрын
Olivia being so excited about hot clones is so good
@Aranock10 ай бұрын
Im so glad you directly credit me for the bigender baddie line lol. Genuinely one of the funniest Ive ever said, also Im glad more people are cursed with knowing about the exceedingly wet orientalist vampire twelfth night.
@sebastianevangelista492110 ай бұрын
And now I'm morbidly curious enough to want to see Paul Rudd as Dracula.
@Aranock10 ай бұрын
@@sebastianevangelista4921 I was too, but trust me sometimes you should be careful with curiosity
@sebastianevangelista492110 ай бұрын
@@Aranock Hahaha fair enough! That particular version of the play did look more than strange. Although there have been so many jokes about that man not aging that casting him as a vampire wouldn't be too far off.
@HN-kr1nf9 ай бұрын
i'm sorry but my brain first read bigender as big-ender 😭
@scouttyra9 ай бұрын
@@HN-kr1nf that feels like a very Shakespearean mixup, tbf
@bananapuding86610 ай бұрын
the way that THE promotion picture of the twelfth night central park production started my whole queer self discovery is unreal
@timbates1210 ай бұрын
After this and the last Shakespeare video, the inescapable conclusion is that we as a civilization need more 'comedy hiding scenes'
@thirdcoinedge9 ай бұрын
Like that one BoJack Horseman Season 6 episode, where everyone tries to hide from PB & Pickles during their argument. THAT was hilarious.
@lydiah129 ай бұрын
"Quick, hide!" "Why?" "Because it's Shakespeare!" - Touchstone and Corin in an As You Like It production I saw
@NessawiththeRose9 ай бұрын
My little brother and I performed together in Shakespeare plays our entire upbringing. He died two years ago of an overdose and I'm still mourning. I needed this video. Everyone thought him and I were twins.
@TawdryOfare9 ай бұрын
Lovely and well done, as always. A tip of my hat for the Dropout ‘Make Some Noise’ clip.
@CassReidIsSomeone10 ай бұрын
Sebastian is no thoughts just vibes
@LateStudiosandmore9 ай бұрын
he’s just ken (seb)
@8114梦见10 ай бұрын
29:13 The original“step on me, mommy” joke 😂😂😂
@BeansKneez9 ай бұрын
beautifully done as always. the joke about twelfth night 2: malvolio's revenge really got me because it's a play. the classical theater of harlem put on malvolio by betty shemieh last summer. he became a foreign military power and all his troops wore the yellow stockings with cross garters.
@Ladyknightthebrave9 ай бұрын
That's AMAZING I saw something about the classical theater of harlem's Malvolio play when I looked up their 12th night production but I didn't know that much in the way of details. Love that 😂
@Cherithe10 ай бұрын
It's like never a ladyknight video until it makes you cry, which I definitely did at the section about siblings.
@kalahne10 ай бұрын
SAME, with each of her videos 😭😭😭
@jinxedangel210 ай бұрын
I have found my people 😭😂😭😂 love her videos but I can't be wearing make up or be in public lol
@ginger_L310 ай бұрын
its true i think ive cried at every single one
@-eight-10 ай бұрын
EVERY TIME. I always forget and get sucked up in the awesome media analysis and then suddenly I’m crying and oh no she got me again.
@Cherithe10 ай бұрын
@@-eight- it does sneak right up on you
@lydiafrenchstarr67710 ай бұрын
It's actually so fascinating to me that the historical Illyria became notorious for piracy, because when my class re-wrote the play in year 6, we made Duke a pirate captain and the whole thing takes place on his ship. Our version was called The 13th Day. Among Shakespeare's works this one has always had a soft spot in my heart since haha. I played Viola, and specifically re-wrote the part where she accidentally passionately romances Olivia. Irl foreshadowing, clueless baby gay was just thrilled to be the main character. Your analysis as always is incredible thankyou for making and sharing such excellent work ❤
@ajmalaika12879 ай бұрын
Now I’m imagining the Anna Hathaway pic but they’re all dressed like characters in our flag means death I…what is sexuality I don’t know any more?! 😭
@Cheesegoddess10 ай бұрын
I do agree, I think opening the play with Viola, makes it much more interesting to me honestly. One of the best opening versions I saw was they had a boat break in half on stage with one half floating away and the other sinking into the "water". Right before that, in the middle Viola and Sebastian are holding on to the other while braving the storm and when the ship breaks apart it forces the twins to be pulled from the other. Each screaming for the other as Viola is being pulled down by the ship (the actress jumped last second into the orchestra pit and I STILL don't fully know how they pulled that off because it as small and FULL of people but it was so damn cool looking!) with Sebastian screaming for her as he is pulled into the storm and mist. It just made the opening so much more entertaining, and it made Viola's pain for her brother much more heartbreaking. Oh a side note, this play did NOT go with the musical vibe and even cut the songs down a bit (which wasn't something I was that fond of but it did match the mood that the went with a bit more) and they made it a bit more of a drama than comedy or dramady. I liked it but they did make it a little TO serious than other versions I had seen of the play.
@aliciabergman12529 ай бұрын
There is this great scene in the Swedish movie "Prinsessa" where a teenage girl who feels like an outsider and has been basically ridiculed throughout the movie turns all that into an amazing performance of Malvolio's last scene. It's such a great moment because it really is her most vulnerable and lowest moment but she turnes it into a triumph.
@OnlyShadowkin9 ай бұрын
I love Twelfth night, but my first real Shakespeare play was "As you like it", I did not even know about Twelfth night until Shakespeare in love. While my favorite still is Hamlet, as that was my high school play and I related strangely to Queen Gertrude lol. This is still one of my favorites. I always took it as Viola trying to keep her brother Alive even though he was probably dead. So when she says "I am all the sons of my father's house, and all the daughters too." I felt like she really was trying to keep her brother alive. Serving as her brother's ghost and embodiment. I think It's why she unwittingly appeals to Olivia. Because Olivia lost her brother, and she wishes she could keep him alive, but she goes about it by grieving for him. I think she kind of sees her own love for her brother in Viola, and that's why she falls in love with her as Cesario. By the end they all kind of get what they want and were aiming for. The Duke tells Olivia that he is her brother, and thus she gets a brother and the Duke has her made a part of his family. Viola gets the love of her Duke and successfully woos Olivia, for another man, namely her brother. It could be said that the type of love felt is as transmutable as Gender and in this play as Fluid. Oaths too, as we see here, oaths of fealty and of friendship. Oaths of marriage and Oaths of familial duty. How they all come with their own forms of love to strengthen the bonds, and we see too when those oaths are broken and how much it can hurt the people we care about. Thanks for the vid!
@nathanyou189910 ай бұрын
I once went to Shakespeare in the Park production of Twelfth night for a high school theatre field trip and bumped into a friend of mine who'd moved school's a few years earlier who was on her own English field trip. Even in the real world I can't escape the bards fondness for contrived coincidence.
@eldorados_lost_searcher9 ай бұрын
By jove, 'tis but a humble contrivance To mend the tear of separation, And brought together in chosen kinship A hand, invisible, holds the pen. Why the hell did I write that? Sorry.
@sionalarsen10 ай бұрын
My first Shakespeare play was Twelfth Night. I will forever remember the Malvolio scene in the yellow stockings. My classmates in the front row were in absolute screeching giggles as the actor thrust about. At one point he stopped to point at this girl and share a knowing chuckle with the audience about how embarrassed she was with his pelvic thrusts
@emmadroste849310 ай бұрын
I actually was a swing for a Twelfth night production that had a "play that goes wrong" tone and I had to step in to play Olivia/sea captain/officer 1 for the last weekend. I had a script in my hands and it became a little bit of a character when I'd have to interrupt a moment to turn a page or hand it to an audience member to do a quick change😂
@emmadroste849310 ай бұрын
I could barely look at thewoman who was playing Malvolio/Sebastian during the stockings scene because I would absolutely break
@coral_pine10 ай бұрын
“Make some noise” inclusion was a delight!
@coral_pine10 ай бұрын
And a couple seconds of “A Game most changed” Game Changer episode were an incredible wink as well!
@spookyhood9 ай бұрын
Ladyknightthebrave uploading another elaborate Shakespaere video essay? Count. Me. In. Once again I adore the way you´ve braided all the bits from different adaptations together, it all makes it even more part of a whole story and it´s legacy.
@jasonseacord10 ай бұрын
“Wettest production” what a phrase!
@Renessance18329 ай бұрын
I love Twelfth Night so much. It's good to find someone else who feels bad for Malvolio and doesn't see him as a villain. Thanks for this wonderful video essay, it made me think about this play I adore in ways I hadn't thought of before
@TheGallicWitch10 ай бұрын
I watched the video on Nebula so I'm coming here just to comment this: I'm no Shakespearian expert but I am French and to me, you pronounced "Feste" perfectly. In modern French, "fête" is a party, of any size from a birthday to the National day. That little accent above the "e" is called accent circonflexe and is used in many modern words as a stand-in for the Old French practice of spelling and pronouncing words with "st" inside of them. It also works with a couple English words we have in common. For example, the Hospital becomes Hôpital, the Forest becomes Forêt. So "Feste" is the Old French word for a party, a fête, and it is pronounced exactly how you pronounced it, top marks. It's also a word used in many regional languages and patois of my country. Anyway, I loved the video, I especially appreciated you mentioning the slurs against Romani people and the history of their displacement, discrimination and ostracisation.
@essendossev36210 ай бұрын
Ah, "feste" as in "festivities"! There's that more French hiding in plain sight in English words.
@eldorados_lost_searcher9 ай бұрын
@@essendossev362 You don't know the half of it. Normandy really did a number on the Anglo-Saxon tongue. Now I'm wondering if that qualifies as a double entendre.
@KitOfTheWeirdWoods10 ай бұрын
Next video will be about Black Sails??! Oh my god yes, the noise that just came out of my mouth at that. So very excited!!
@Warforged1179 ай бұрын
Same!!! So excited for this! I can't wait for another amazing Black Sails video essay!
@brandonhaddix893710 ай бұрын
We did this show in high school and we did it themed to the setting of a Victoria Circus, with music from the 1970s to break up the show to be palatable suburban audience. I have fond memories of this being the show that I finally understood Shakespeare, and for that I am grateful. This essay is marvelous - thank you for the analysis and nostalgia trip! :)
@darkerSolstice10 ай бұрын
Twelfth Night was the first Shakespeare play I acted in. It was fifth grade. The teacher's daughter played Olivia, and her best friend played Maria and her other best friend played Viola. And my group of friends and I--we would almost all end up queer, us--were Feste and Fabian and Sir Toby. I was Sir Toby as a fifth grade [girl?], and all I knew was to be a ham. It's funny, so very funny. We had failed to perform female enough to be cast as the girl roles. But damn, did our hedge scene eat.
@apizzathatgiantforthesimpl519110 ай бұрын
EVERYONE SHUT UP! LADYKNIGHTTHEBRAVE UPLOADED ANOTHER SHAKESPEARE VIDEO!
@kateolwill864510 ай бұрын
in Ireland at least “tinker” is not antiquated, and is a very common slur used against travellers, although not as common as the one meaning saddler, which i don’t even like to write. I’m glad you’re addressing this issue, as I think especially in Britain and Ireland, discrimination against Irish travellers is often dismissed, as people don’t understand their history. Some really great work to help with that is being done by Pavee Point, who mostly work to dismantle anti-Irish Traveller racism, but also work for Roma and other Travellers as well
@evelmichael10 ай бұрын
My first ever play was a scene from Twelfth Night in College. I played Duke Orsino and I was told that I killed it. So much so people did not believe it was my first time on stage. I'm pleased to see you talk about it now.
@drymant3 ай бұрын
Great to see that all that praise didn't go to your head. 🙄They probably said you murdered it it but you heard "killed it".
@evelmichael3 ай бұрын
@@drymant Why do you feel the need to diminish other people's achievements?
@harrietamidala169110 ай бұрын
I actually worked on a high school protection of twelfth night when I was a junior and part of the tech crew. This production set the play in the 1950s and there were a few covers of 50s songs interspersed through it. The ones I remember were fever and Que sera sera. my responsibility was in the sound booth, turning the back microphones off and off whenever the curtain was drawn for scene changes and I handled the spotlight for one of the music numbers. A few of the male characters were played by girls because obviously there are more girls in theater than boys.
@jamied102510 ай бұрын
Oh my god as a dedicated follower I am so excited to see this video, especially since I just finished performing in the musical All Shook Up, which is based on Twelfth Night!
@meander11210 ай бұрын
It's already up on Nebula! Hooray!
@pineappletornado792110 ай бұрын
That’s awesome!! I can watch it on breaks at work tonight then 🥰
@cyanidebutterfliesx9 ай бұрын
me @ 13yo, openly bi but 15 years away from transitioning: idk why exactly but twelfth night is definitely my favourite shakespeare play, it really speaks to me 🤔🤔🤔
@ameliadouglas69388 ай бұрын
i am crying this video is so perfect. the blending of all of these super obscure productios is amazing.
@trollnystan9 ай бұрын
Antiquated and antiquated... my Irish grandmother (born in 1918) would use "tinkers" when I was a child in the 80-90s when talking about Travellers. There was a family of Travellers who lived a few doors down from her and she told me to stay away from them. I still remember being around 4 or 5 and sneaking over there to play; they gave me a doll once that I hid away so Granny wouldn't find it. My aunt and uncles (born between 1940-1960) would also use the word to refer to them, although they've updated their vocab by now I think. I agree with the pinned comment that the discrimination and racism against Travellers is still very bad.
@fading_cinder751310 ай бұрын
This is one of the few Shakespeares I’ve seen live, and I loved it! It was in a local “Shakespeare in a park” and I went to see it with some friends. An amazing time!
@thebeebz951110 ай бұрын
Antbody else low key hoping to see a Brows Held High collab next shakespear month?
@adami618710 ай бұрын
Ok this was BRILLIANT, even better than the Much Ado one! As a theater major thats starting their thesis on Shakespeare and Queer readings next month, this could not have come at a better moment!
@TheWildwest66610 ай бұрын
Overall a very good breakdown of Twelfth Night, but there is one area that would have been interesting to see your take on: Malvolio being a Puritan. You mention it once, but I think it would have been worthy of time to devote even a few minutes on the ways that Puritans treated the stage and the way the stage treated them back.
@mimimo60839 ай бұрын
first off: i LOVED this video, twelfth night is one of my favorite plays, and your discussion of queerness in elizabethan england is absolutely fascinating. i think about that tension of layers of queerness on stage (crossdressing, men kissing men playing women (playing men) SO often, what a beautifully complex thing. re: malvolio - i remember that when we analysed twelfth night in a shakespeare seminar, we discussed a reading of him as a parody of the puritans that were in control of london at the time. especially considering the puritans' positions on and actions against theatre and entertainment specifically - leading to theatres to only be allowed to exist outside city limits, which is how you get the density of early modern theatres near the globe - this reading to me allows for a perspective on malvolio (whose name in italian means basically "bad intentions" or "evil will") as a sort of? revenge fantasy against a repressive regime that was full of glaring hypocrisy (see malvolio's delight not only at olivia loving him, but explicitly also about the position of power he'll hold over the other people of the household). i agree that the way his plot escalates is uncomfortable, and complicates this reading, which i find very interesting. anyways, i thought this might add some alternative context.
@ThatFlamingFroggo10 ай бұрын
I saw Twelfth Night at the American Player's Theatre in Springgreen, WI. And as the last song was sung, it was raining. It was a glorious moment.
@TheHopperUK10 ай бұрын
I saw that National Theatre production and it was *incredible*.
@re4nimate9 ай бұрын
YOOOOOOOO, Black Sails is one of my absolute favorite stories of all time, across all media. I'm incredibly stoked for your next video!!!
@queenbooklover1351Ай бұрын
Twelfth Night is probably my second favourite Shakespeare play (Much Ado is my favourite) and it's all down to the version I went to see with my grandparents at the cinema (filmed National Theatre version) when I was 9 or 10. It opened with Orsino and, I swear, for that entire production, that man did not put a shirt on. He wandered around in blue PJ trousers and a silk dressing gown, chest OUT. It was absolutely glorious, he didn't even get dressed properly for the reveal of Sebastian and Viola at the end. He also got confused between Sebastian and Viola (they were still dressed exactly the same) and kissed Sebastian full on the mouth, only to be very awkwardly directed to Viola. It was absolutely great fun and this video just reminded me how much I love Twelfth Night and Shakespeare in general Edit: 52:38 - All bisexual disasters can only hope to bag a bigender baddie simply by existing. Orsino is living his best life, and all of our dreams
@xinyili331910 ай бұрын
My favorite Shakespeare play!!! Yes!!! I can't wait to hear what you think about it.
@user-nv9vn8fm1d10 ай бұрын
Is there anywhere I can watch this version?
@Bbeccy10 ай бұрын
It's been a while since I've had enough free time to watch your videos, and I forgot how much i love this channel. Your editing, with the music and chapters, especially where you choose to diverge and add extra context, is so engaging and interesting to watch
@HanamoriKuna10 ай бұрын
I like the cuts of different performances saying/ completing the quote. It’s fun seeing how different some performances are.
@oikawachan13427 ай бұрын
You are telling me that for two months I was unaware that this video had been uploaded?! Time to binge it!
@surprisinglyblank239210 ай бұрын
Brilliant. I learned so much. Twelfth Night (and Othello) are the Shapespeare plays I know the least about so it made this deep dive extra special to me.
@johnlavers39709 ай бұрын
finally i have a purpose in life. i shall be a lugubrious man mountain
@rennenga10 ай бұрын
I love black sails, I feel like I've never seen someone on youtube talk about it. Excited for the next video!
@Whimsly9 ай бұрын
Really looking forward to that Black Sails video! I saw Toby Stephens and my first thought was "what's flint doing in a Shakespeare play" lol One of my favorite series, but there's very little written about it.
@thefollowingisatest457910 ай бұрын
I really love the way you pace your vids, between the chaptering, use of music, and your delivery. Makes it so smooth to watch that it takes you a minute or two to realize you are crying.
@plxtokid10 ай бұрын
my sophomore year of high school my english class went to go see Shakespeare Theater Company’s Twelfth Night in DC, and the Feste in that production was an airport janitor who had a guitar strapped to his supplies cart. I think about him all the time fr
@ecvp12310 ай бұрын
I never thought I would enjoy a video about Shakespeare so much. I love your videos❤
@aeolia8010 ай бұрын
the Helen Hunt and Paul Rudd production was shown on PBS, and I think that was when I was like, "oh, ok, Paul Rudd is hot", lol, I think I was 18, lol
@bagheadstudios108410 ай бұрын
I got to direct a production of Twelfth Night a couple of years ago, so this play is always gonna hold a special place in my heart 💜
@sproetland10 ай бұрын
Such a good and well-researched, accessible video what the heck! Forever thankful. I am a huge theatre nerd but have never been able to truly understand why Shakespeare is as big as it is. This makes all the sense. Thank you! I hope you do many more videos and I will watch all of them.
@ShellsGhost110 ай бұрын
I did LOVE playing Malvolio. Half way through me walking onto the stage got a round of laughs. So many parts were so well taken. It was quite fun.
@lydiah129 ай бұрын
I was so excited to recognize the clips from the Chicago Shakespeare production - I got to see it last fall! One thing I thought was a nice touch was Malvolio's involvement in the final song, giving him a moment of peace after his mistreatment. I'm really curious about the version with Alec Guiness in the role, now. I'm glad you highlighted Ben Kingsley as Feste. His addressing the audience was such a sweet way to end the film. Good point about Rosalind versus Viola. As You Like it is my favorite Shakespeare, but I admit it can be hard to defend or understand the way Rosalind acts while in disguise. And yeah, I love how Sebastian is just like "Uh okay??? : ) " in response to Olivia's interest in him XD Wonderful work - thank you for posting!
@ralphjackson251810 ай бұрын
10:38 this sounds suspiciously like one of the set designers had been playing a lot of Fallout New Vegas recently
@iannar-j37409 ай бұрын
Orsino accidentally bags a Bi-Gender Baddie by just being a Bisexual disaster and throwing himself at another woman! Incredible! 10/10 No Notes! Love that for him! 😂😂🥰
@Nyutamoony10 ай бұрын
i just hope this shakespearean mini-series never ends
@everausten9 ай бұрын
I was riveted ✨
@vagabond19203 ай бұрын
HOW THE HECK DID I MISS THIS BY SIX MONTHSSSSSSSSS
@pandez17595 ай бұрын
i shipped olivia x viola so bad oh god THANK YOU MAKING ME READ AND INTO SHAKESPEARE
@bedsidearts10 ай бұрын
As a genderqueer person thank you for helping me understand my liking for Shakespeare in love. 😂❤
@dcaouki10 ай бұрын
Genuinely love your work! More Shakespeare video essays pls!!
@aarushicrystalis799810 ай бұрын
i watched that recent globe production in person! it was magnificent and michelle terry is a BEAST of an actress. Also the globe put on a play called "I, malvolio", where a man playing malvolio does a long, fourth-wall-breaking monologue about the unfairness of the world, culminating in him calling audience members on stage, giving them a rope and almost having them hang him. it was good..
@MeredithHagan10 ай бұрын
Okay that tumblr poem at the end made me cry and immediately want to call my sisters. 😭
@loonamerry156710 ай бұрын
This video was so good! Like many other of your videos, it made me want to engage more with Shakespeare and theatre in general. There is something so amazing about different theatre productions of the same source material!
@ritchieclaire10 ай бұрын
Can't tell you how much every video you make just hits every single time for me. It's like you have pick my favourite shows, movies and plays and just make video of them......omg black sails. Also head empty no thoughts is the perfect description, but if a beautiful rich lady threw herself at you after a horrible 3 months not sure many would turn them down.
@adso57289 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video! This and Much Ado are two of my absolute favorite Shakespeare plays in such different ways-Much Ado I can always discover more in but feel as though I have a decent handle on (partly through semi-obsessive re-watching of assorted productions), while Twelfth Night I read more recently and am enraptured by while feeling like I'm wrestling with it at every step. I loved hearing your thoughts on it!
@kthxbi9 ай бұрын
OH MY GOD, I am not exaggerating at all when I say I gasped OUT LOUD when i heard the topic of your next video. One of my favorite video essayists?! Doing a video about my favorite (criminally underrated) tv show of all time?!?! I LEGIT DROPPED MY KNITTING TO START DOING HAPPY HAND STIMMING, I am so excited!!! (yes I was knitting socks while watching this video, I am spiritually a little old lady)
@prphawke10 ай бұрын
I was ready to say that once again you made me cry with your incredible video essay but then I heard that your next video is going to be about BLACK SAILS??? my fav tv show EVER????? I'M SO EXCITED AAAAAAA
@ellenspear503 ай бұрын
In the Trevor Nunn film, which I recently watched, I marked how piteously Malvolio cried while in his dark room. It was much more moving than I remember ever hearing in that scene.
@theLastHaruspex10 ай бұрын
Oh great, a new piece of media for me to become obsessed with. I just finished Six of Crows for the fifth fucking time, so why ever not ??
@vitaani5 ай бұрын
Great video, as always! Side note that the Feast of Fools is indeed twelfth night. The lyrics in the Disney song even state “scurvy knaves are extra scurvy on the sixth of Januervy”
@theghostintheattic9 ай бұрын
I love your videos so much. I've been lurking around the channel for years and I often do a marathon rewatch slowly over weeks whenever I don't feel so good and need some company. The way you approach your subjects always comes from a place of such love and curiosity that I can't get enough of hearing you talk about it. You've made videos on so many of my favourite things (I nearly shed real tears when I saw you made a Much Ado one, for example) but even when it's something I know fuck all about, it's such a joy to discover it through the loving eyes and words of someone else. I actually squealed when you said the next one is going to be Black Sails. Especially seeing Toby Stephens' beautiful face pop up here and there in this video, it's like you reminded me of this great love of mine only to say you're tackling it next. Anyway, please keep doing what you're doing. I can't wait for the next one, and I'll be going back to old favourites as I wait !
@lauramcastro489710 ай бұрын
LadyKnight!! It is you!! I'mso glad to see you!! :DDD Fun fact: in the middle of me watching this video my Nebula subscription got charged to my card
@wagtail18610 ай бұрын
The enby happiness this video gives me is immaculate. Thank you.
@greeplurch10 ай бұрын
Finally got the chance to watch. I really appreciate you covering Shakespeare because I was never able to study it outside of a three week unit in high school. I knew very little about this play but since I also have an absolute weakness for strong sibling bonds in stories I will absolutely watch the fuck out of a few adaptations as soon as I can. I also appreciate your looks into the bigotry/racism/antisemitism that comes up in Shakespeare plays (and other media you cover) because it helps me be more conscious and critical of the context surrounding the older stories I engage with (and new stuff sadly). I really appreciate all the hard work you put into your videos. :)
@chaiky655610 ай бұрын
Another certified banger from LadyKnightTheBrave
@cyansilver38949 ай бұрын
This is absolutely fantastic. The scripting and the editing is impeccable, the literary and historical insight into this play was absolutely facinating, and now i definitely need to give it a read!!! (however Achilles and Patroclus from Troilus and Cressida definitely deserved a spot on the queer shakespeare moments list/hj)
@Ladyknightthebrave9 ай бұрын
You know Troilus and Cressida is one I still haven't watched? Man wrote a lot of plays I haven't seen them all🤷♀️. But Achilles and Patroclus are gay in like mythology too I think so that tracks
@cyansilver38949 ай бұрын
@@Ladyknightthebrave Absolutely. Troilus and Cressida feels like it's Shakespeare's crossover fanfic between Homer's Iliad and the poet Chaucer's 'Troilus and Cressida" and it's a fairly dissatisfying play, but the multi-layered puns are great and it makes good use of lot of different trojan war myth versions and its many, many characters. I haven't seen it, but I've heard good things about the RSC 2018 production, if you're interested !
@alanaltimont90072 ай бұрын
The Paul Rudd/Helen Hunt production gives Orsino some sexiness that then gives Viola's early expression of desire for him some motivation. Water and wetness is a major thread of imagery and the pools keep us mindful of this.
@skylerleonard89669 ай бұрын
Truly, every conclusion of your videos is so strong and makes me feel the feels. Thank you!
@samuelgiraudo874810 ай бұрын
These video essays have single-handedly gotten me into Shakespeare, and for that I will forever be grateful :)
@stephaniegane66249 ай бұрын
Your videos always make me happy and encourage people to think in deeper and more thoughtful ways. Thank you
@Taniseth10 ай бұрын
Very much looking forward to your Black Sails video. Loved that show, and I feel like almost nobody watched it, and nobody talks about it.
@abrekdurgutАй бұрын
ABSOLUTELY AWESOME VIDEO. Please keep up the good work
@annamonson2129 ай бұрын
I saved this video for a couple days, your much ado video being one of my comfort videos. Thank you for making such beautiful and clear and loving analyses
@hapmon811410 ай бұрын
I've never seen nor read a Shakespeare play and we aren't taught about him in Sweden (at least I wasn't) so it's great to learn more about his works! Thank you:D