Shakespeare is German

Synopsis
Radio broadcast. Patrick Spottiswoode, Director of Education at Shakespeare’s Globe, explores Germany’s intense relationship with Shakespeare, using archive and recorded performances from celebrated German actors.
Language
English
Country
Great Britain
Medium
Radio
Transmission details
29 Dec 2012 at 10:30 (Channel: BBC Radio 4)
Duration
30 mins

Credits

Producer
Clive Brill
Contributor
Gert Voss; Maik Hamburger; Norbert Kentrup; Patrick Spottiswoode; Rainer Wiertz; Thomas Döring; Thomas Ostermeier; Vanessa Schormann

Additional Details

Production type
Documentary/Educational/News
Plays
Hamlet; Merchant of Venice, The
Subjects
Drama
Keywords
German culture; Shakespeare, William (1564-1616); Translation

Notes

General
From the BBC programme website : "There are records of touring productions of German adaptations of Romeo and Juliet and Hamlet as early as the first decade of the 17th century. But it was in the 18th century that Shakespeare’s influence on German culture really took hold. Goethe proclaimed to a group of friends in a lecture in celebration of Shakespeare given in Frankfurt in 1771: ‘Once I had read an entire play, I stood there like a blind man given the gift of sight by some miraculous healing touch.'

Twenty-two of Shakespeare’s plays had already appeared in German prose translation by 1766. The world’s first academic Shakespeare society was founded in Weimar in 1864 and continues to hold an annual Shakespeare conference. A Shakespeare statue was erected in Weimar in 1904 and seems as at home there as the statues of Wieland, Goethe and Schiller. Germany has an almost obsessive fascination with the bard, exemplified perhaps by the Ferdinand Freiligrath poem of 1844 that opens: ‘Deutschland ist Hamlet’.

There are now more productions of Shakespeare’s plays in Germany every year than in England."

Production Company

Name

Pacificus Productions

Sponsor

Name

BBC

Notes
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

Archive

Name

BoB

Email
bob@learningonscreen.ac.uk
Web
https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/ondemand External site opens in new window
Phone
020 3743 2345
Address
Learning on Screen - the British Universities and Colleges Film and Video Council
330 Holborn Gate
1st Floor, Suite 120
London
WC1V 7QH
Notes
Formerly a service from BUFVC, British Universities Film & Video Council
Name

British Library Sound Archive

Email
listening@bl.uk
Web
http://www.bl.uk/nsa External site opens in new window
Phone
020 7412 7676
Fax
020 7412 7441
Address
96 Euston Road
London
NW1 2DB
Name

Learning on Screen Off-Air Recording Back-up Service

Email
services@bufvc.ac.uk
Web
http://bufvc.ac.uk/tvandradio/offair External site opens in new window
Phone
020 7393 1514
Fax
020 7393 1555
Address
For Learning on Screen Members only
77 Wells Street
London
W1T 3QJ

How to cite this record

Shakespeare, "Shakespeare is German". https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/shakespeare/search/index.php/title/av74762 (Accessed 25 Nov 2024)