Results
8 results found for '"G. Wilson Knight"' in Person.
As You Like It: A Contemporary Look at Shakespeare (1981 Video)
aka: Contemporary Look at Shakespeare, A
- Director
- Patte Falese
Scholar and critic G. Wilson Knight is interviewed by Keith Keating of Nassau Community College about As You Like It. The discussion also briefly touches on King Lear and Timon of Athens.
Wilson Knight on Hamlet (1971 Radio)
- Series
- Open University A100
Open University programme to support the A101 Arts Foundation course. Brian Stone interviews Professor Stone about his views on Hamlet. No. A101/24.
Lift Up Your Hearts (1964 Radio)
aka: 1: A King’s Prayer 2: Christianity and Man 3: Tragic Revelation 4: Beyond Tragedy 5: Shakespeare’s England
- Series
- Lift Up Your Hearts
G. Wilson Knight gives the ‘Lift Up Your Hearts’ talks for the anniversary week. The five episodes focus on different aspects of Shakespeare and his faith.
Shakespeare’s Sonnets (1964 Radio)
Radio broadcast. In this talk about Shakespeare’s sonnets and the problems that they raise, G. Wilson Knight surveys recent literature on the sonnets, particularly Leslie Hotson’s book Mr. W. H. (1964),...
Shakespeare. Part 3 (1964 Radio)
- Series
- University of the Air
Third of a series of five talks on Shakespeare. G. Wilson Knight speaks on Shakespeare and the English language.
What Happens in Shakespeare? (1964 Radio)
Radio programme. C.B. Purdom discusses with G. Wilson Knight his view that in Shakespeare’s dramas the action is always presented from the point of view of the protagonist after the crisis.
Shakespeare’s Rhetoric (1963 Radio)
- Producer
- G. M. MacBeth
Radio programme in which Professor G. Wilson Knight reads a number of long speeches from Shakespeare’s plays and comments on their construction and development of verse movement. The plays are: Hamlet, The...
Yorkshire Tragedy, A (1955 Radio)
- Producer
- Colin Shaw
Radio adaptation of a play attributed to Shakespeare, produced for broadcasting by Colin Shaw. Set in Calverly Hall in Yorkshire, 1605, the plot of the domestic tragedy is derived from the actual murder by...