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In this exuberant comedy and original revision of Shakespeare's Othello and Romeo and Juliet -- Constance Ledbelly, a drab and dusty academic, deciphers a cryptic manuscript she believes to be the original source for the tragedies, and is transported into the plays themselves. She visits Juliet and Desdemona, has a hand in saving them, and finds out what these women are about. In true Shakespearean spirit, Constance plunders the plays and creates something new, all the while engaging in a personal voyage of self-discovery. With an abundance of twists, fights, dances, seductions, and wild surprises, the play is an absolute joy of theatricality.
Clever, pointed and entertaining....This play is one of the wildest and woolliest feminist reappraisals that theatre has seen, and one of the most intellectually ambitious.
More Reviews and RecommendationsAnne-Marie MacDonald has officially been blessed by the Book Club phenomenon. With her first novel, Fall on Your Knees selected as Oprah's 45th selection, and her second, The Way the Crow Flies tapped for the Today show's Book Club, it's a safe bet that MacDonald's name is on the lips of book group members everywhere.
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May 19, 2002: My first job stage managing, I stage managed a production of this play. It was an amazing experience. To take some of Shakespeare's most famous plays and turn them into a 'What If' scenario was a stroke of genious. How often have people wondered if they hadn't of died, would Romeo and Juliet still have had a thing for each other? If Iago hadn't of convinced Othello to murder Desdemona, would the play still have been as tragic as it was? All these questions and more are addressed and answered. Not only is it a serious piece, but it's slap-knee funny also! I highly recommend this play to anyone who enjoys comedy, Shakespeare, or theatre.
Name:
Ann-Marie MacDonald
Current Home:
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Date of Birth:
October 29, 1958
Place of Birth:
Baden Baden, West Germany
Education:
Graduate, National Theatre School of Canada Acting Program, 1980
Novelist and dramatist Ann-Marie MacDonald is the author of the internationally bestselling and award-winning novel Fall on Your Knees and The Way the Crow Flies. She is also the playwright of Goodnight Desdemona, (Good Morning Juliet), which won the Governor General's Award for Drama. She lives in Toronto.
Author biography courtesy of HarperCollins.
In our interview, MacDonald shared some fun and fascinating facts about herself with us: :
"The only actual skill I possess is the ability to type. And yet, the only job I was ever fired from was office temp -- I lasted three hours. I waitressed years ago when I was starting out as an actor. I once spilled three Tequila Sunrises in a row on the same customer. Unaccountably, I was never fired from a waitressing job. I like to cook. My mother is Lebanese so my tastes lean toward the Mediterranean. I have beautiful partner, a baby, two dogs and a garden. After the "sturm und drang" of my early youth and art, I find domestic bliss to be the most conducive to articulating the inner storms that make for good fiction. I'm a homebody who travels a lot."
"I think good art, including good books, make the world bigger, one heart, one mind at a time. I craft stories that are meant to work on many levels, and not every reader needs to read on all those levels in order to be deeply rewarded. I respect the reader, and I empathize with their hope that, when they crack open the pages, they will be taken away. I try to reach a broad audience and invite readers to empathize across time, space, culture, race, gender -- the works."
"I believe people are capable of more empathy and insight than the nightly news would have us think. I believe we crave to see -- really see -- through one another's eyes, even when that might be frightening."
"My first love is comedy, and like most comedians, I derive my material from the dark. My job as a writer is to craft the invitation to the reader to undertake a journey, just as Virgil beckoned Dante into The Inferno and beyond. My pledge to the reader is the assurance that we will take this journey together. Hell, purgatory, heaven...a divine comedy indeed. As E. M. Forster said in Howard's End, ‘Only connect.'"
I still savour the opening sentence: "There was no possibility of taking a walk that day." So what does nine-year-old orphan Jane Eyre do? She gets a book from the library shelf, finds a curtained alcove in which to curl up with it, only to have her delicious and solitary reverie shattered by her brutal cousin who, never having voluntarily opened a book in his life, beats her up for the crime of reading.
My favourite scene was when Jane, still a child, is locked in the haunted "red room" and hallucinates the ghost of her dead uncle. She practically dies of fright. The illustrations in my old edition of this book were elongated -- all noses, fingers and flowing draperies. I savoured them almost as much as the words. Jane braves it all -- death, disease, cruelty, the elements, the harsh class system -- and insists that she, a penniless, not even particularly attractive female, is as deserving of respect as any king. It was in the pages of this book that I first encountered mysterious period complaints such as "chilblains" and equally mysterious period comfort foods such as "blanc mange". I was eight when I first read it and, so deeply moved was I that I tried to make over my bedroom into a replica of Jane's. I hung a toilet lid cover on my wall for a tapestry and got a chipped china pitcher as well as an enamel basin from the basement, and swore never to use running water again to "perform my ablutions." My older sister put an end to this by lounging in the doorway of my room and, with withering insight, saying, "You're being Jane Eyre, aren't you?"
I read it eleven more times, right into my twenties, and found that it is a novel that can grow with one. It was rich and intoxicating when I was eight, and it was profound and erotically subversive once I hit high school. I think the best fiction speaks to a broad audience on numerous levels; it combines compelling characters and narrative pull -- the "page-turner" effect -- with layers of thematic, poetic and political meaning.
An important aspect of Jane Eyre is the fact that Charlotte, like her sisters Emily and Anne, wrote under a man's name. When it came to light that the author of the new runaway best-seller was actually a woman, the critics savaged her for a host of literary and moral crimes, all which came down to: "not very ladylike, is she?"
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
I love movies so I'll just mention a few vintages greats that I still watch:
And just about anything starring Clint Eastwood.
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I like a broad range of music, but here are a few things I listened to over and over again while writing The Way the Crow Flies: Lotte Lenya's recording of songs by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weil. A wonderful CD of French music hall songs of the thirties and forties. Eric Burden and The Animals' Greatest Hits. Blondie. Joan Jett. Doris Day. The Four Aces. Miles Davis, Dvorak, Chopin, and Fred Hersch.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading -- and why?
If I had a book club we'd be reading I Don't Know How She Does It? by Allison Pearson. It's about a working mother running the gauntlet of career and families. It's very funny and very painful, and written with that wonderful British deftness. It stirs up a lot of muck that we, as women and men, would like to think we've risen above. Another book club selection would be the nonfiction work Scattered Minds by Dr Gabor Maté. Whatever you think about ADD (and even if you never think about it) you will be surprised and utterly engaged. It's a fascinating, deeply humane book, both clinical and personal. With so many kids on medication nowadays, this is kind of a must-read.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
I love to get dictionaries and reference books -- big, heavy compendia of knowledge. When I don't get them from other people, I buy them for myself as gifts. I recently treated myself to The Oxford Companion to English Literature. When it comes to giving, that depends entirely on the recipient. I try to key into what will both surprise and engage them.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
I have one writing ritual: force myself through the door of my office at phantom gunpoint. Sit at desk. Keep sitting. Stay there. Stay. Do you think you've earned a snack? Okay, you can get up. For a minute. On my desk? An archaeological stratification of important notes that may never be found again, and humus-forming research materials that I also can't seem to find. Thank God for the dog.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
I started my career as an actor, then morphed into a playwright who accidentally became a novelist with my first book Fall On Your Knees. I thought I was working on a new play, and for the first time in my writing life I was really stuck. I couldn't understand why I was writing all these really long stage- directions. When I realized it was fiction, I was equal-parts exhilarated and horrified. Horrified because I didn't know how to write a novel, exhilarated because I didn't know how to write a novel. I still act for theatre, film, and TV (I wrote a whole lot of TV scripts to fund the writing of my first novel), and I still write for theatre, so this progression is cumulative, not linear. I grew up moving around because my Dad was in the Air Force -- I think this has carried over into my work in that I like to hop around from one medium to another.
I was fortunate when it came to Fall On Your Knees because I didn't have to send it out as an unsolicited manuscript. I had already "paid my dues" in theatre here so I was not an unknown quantity. The best anecdote I have concerns when I got the call from Oprah for Fall On Your Knees The book had already done very well internationally and I really wasn't expecting any further "bump" in the works. When Oprah's producer called, she was extremely polite. She asked me if I would mind waiting five or ten minutes for Oprah to call me personally -- a rhetorical question if ever there was one. The whole Oprah experience was a delight. You can tell a lot about a person by the people who work for them. Everyone connected with this amazing woman was smart, friendly and on-the-ball. They must have a good boss.
If you could choose one new writer to be "discovered," who would it be -- and why?
There is a poet whose work I love. Her name is Deanna Young, and her book is called and her book is called The Drunkard's Path published by Gaspereau Press. Like Carol Shields, she takes the minutiae of life and builds something lyrical, moving and profound.
In this exuberant comedy, MacDonald asks, What if Desdemona and Juliet were allowed to live? Constance Ledbelly, a tweedy academic, has ghostwritten the papers of her mentor for years, when suddenly he announces he's marrying a riva.. Escaping into her research, Constance decodes the Gustav Manuscript, and discovers a pair of comedies that she believes are the source for Shakespeare's Othello and Romeo and Juliet. Transported into the world of her theory, she comes face-to-face with Desdemona and Juliet and discovers that, far from shrinking violets, they are hellions full of surprises. What follows is a riotous retelling of theatrical legend that brings Constance out of her gloom and straight into a new and confident self.
Clever, pointed and entertaining....This play is one of the wildest and woolliest feminist reappraisals that theatre has seen, and one of the most intellectually ambitious.
Imagine a collaboration among Shakespeare, Lewis Carroll and Woody Allen, and you have the essence of Goodnight Desdemona.
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