Fantastic Audio Books: The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays

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The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays - Audio CD

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The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays

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The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays

List Price: $600.00    Our Price: $378.00

You Save: 37%

Audio CD - March, 2003
Audio Partners
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

ISBN: 1932219005

Number of Media: 98
Features:

  • Unabridged

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Customer Reviews

Essential

While everyone knows Shakespeare was a genius, and his plays are full of depth and humor, it seems that most productions of his plays are aweful. Actors tend to over-act or are too monotonous. In fact, I can think of no production except Hamlet with Mel Gibson and BBCs audio Shakepeare that gives Shakepeare a real life quality.
And as if Shakespeare's play's weren't self sufficient, they remake the plays: Hitler of Gloucster, Romeo and Juliet in the Ghetto- what's next, Macbeth in space?
This is why this collection was a most welcomed surprise. The plays flow naturally, the acting is not over or underdone. In fact, I never once laughed at the Porters entrance in Macbeth so hard (or at all even) until I listened to this production. The witches didn't come off as Wizard of Oz spin offs.
So far I've only listened to about 1/3rd of the series but so far it's excellent. It's not without it's flaws. For example, in King Lear Edmund is played extremely well, except for his the monologues which sound stale which is unfortunately because those are some of the best lines ever written.
But consisering the fact that Shakespare is often butchered beyond recognition, this series is a true gift to anyone who wants to see world through the eyes of a brilliant man.


A monumental project with flaws but immense overall value

To Buy or Not to Buy!

Educators, lovers of theatre and great literature--take note! Late in the 1990s, Harper Row began to release on cassettes the Arkangel Complete Shakespeare, all of which I reviewed in one paper or another. Using some of the best of the young theatrical talent in Great Britain and some of the older established stars of stage and screen, the producers gave us readings of every single word of every single play by Shakespeare, including the seldom-performed "Two Noble Kinsmen" which is partially by Shakespeare.

Well, hold on! Audio Partners has been contracted to release the entire set on CDs. The trick is that you cannot purchase the individual sets but are required to purchase the entire package of 38 plays for $600. That is 98 CDs in all with a playing time of just over 101 hours! Libraries and school departments take note.

Hearing them as they were released on tape in batches of four or five, I was impressed mostly with the enormity of the project but found some things to quibble about. Casting Oberon and Titania with a pair whose voices were South African or Jamaican (no Henry Higgins, I) made some sense in that it emphasized their other-worldly-ness. So did assigning Malvolio in "Twelfth Night" to an actor with a distinct Scottish accent, but giving Mercutio in "Romeo and Juliet" to the same actor was absurd. Then too there is that sudden sound effect of a train pulling out of a station in the middle of "All's Well That Ends Well"! Granted there was a production current then that did place the play in more modern times, but when one is hearing a recording with no clue as to setting, the result was jarring and should have been omitted.

In the grander roles such as Hamlet, Othello and the like, the younger actors give modern readings which might strike some as slighting demands of the high poetry. And those who long for the grander readings can turn to the re-releases of the old Shakespeare Recording Society sets.

One great disadvantage to the cassettes is that you could locate a specific scene only with much fast forwarding. With CDs, of course, you can jump to any scene by pressing the Skip button on your player. When a scene continues onto another disc, the tracking list tells you at which line the scene picks up.

The price might be prohibitive to all but an institution--but I feel that every library should find its way to purchasing the complete set in much the same way that many purchased the complete set of BBC Shakespeare videos.


Get it. Period.

If you have to empty your penny jar, if you have to cash in your IRA, do so. Get this. These are absolutely superb recordings of some of the best English ever written and some of the most memorable characters ever created. So you don't recognize every word. Doesn't matter. The excellent actors carry you along and draw you intimately into the drama.

You can follow the play in text if you choose to -- they follow the readily available Complete Pelikan Shakespeare. But you don't need to -- if you aren't familiar with a play the brief four or five line summaries of each scene in the small fold-out accompanying each play are quite sufficient to know which characters are involved. It's possible to listen to these while driving, but you can't concentrate fully unless you're totally stuck in traffic. My number one recommendation is to take a Walkman and a pair of headphones to a hammock under a tree and indulge yourself. Second best is a comfy easy chair.

However you listen to these, do get them and listen to them. Or persuade your local library to get the set.

The price -- ...-- seems high until you figure that this is 38 complete plays -- less than the cost of the same play in paperback -- and there are a total of 83 disks, so you're paying just $5 per disk. Cheap! And these aren't some pop music you'll listen to once; these are a lifetime investment for yourself and your family.

Get it. Period.

 

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