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Theatre

It wouldn't be a tragedy if Shylock was a woman

Casting a Shakespearean role with a different gender than the one envisaged by the Bard is nothing new.

January 21, 2016 15:08
A recent Globe production

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

3 min read

If Maureen Lipman was serious when she told this newspaper a few months ago that she would like to play Shylock, she might find a willing home for such a production at Shakespeare's Globe. The theatre's incoming artistic director Emma Rice has argued for an age - and a stage -of gender equality. In other words, women will be eligible not only for the 155 female roles in the Shakespeare canon but the 826 male ones, too.

Casting a Shakespearean role with a different gender than the one envisaged by the Bard is nothing new. Leaving aside the more obvious examples of boys playing female roles when the plays were first staged, ever since Sarah Bernhardt's Hamlet women actors have taken on Shakespeare's best known male roles. Among the most audacious of these was seen recently at the Donmar Warehouse when Ashley McGuire unforgettably played Falstaff in an all-female version of the Henry IV plays.

If anybody had doubts that Shakespeare's characters should be available to women, then that performance proved that it is as ridiculous to assume that only men can play men as it is that only Jews can play Jews. Or, put another way, that only white people can play historical white characters, which is why anyone who complained of say, Adrian Lester's terrific Henry V would have looked like an idiot, especially as Nicholas Hytner's production was updated to the present day.

Women, the record seems to suggest, tend to go for the more alpha male of Shakespeare's men. Richards II and III have been played by Fiona Shaw and Kathryn Hunter respectively, Janet McTeer took on the role of arch-chauvinist Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew, Vanessa Redgrave was a memorable Prospero and Lear has also been played by a woman - Hunter again. Off the top of my head I can't remember if Lady Macbeth's husband has been played by a woman, but there must be many a female actor out there who would like to take it on. But Shylock? Apparently not. At least not in a high-profile production. Is it fair to suggest that Shakespeare's Jew is less of an attraction to women actors than the other major (non Jewish) male Shakespearean roles? And if it is, why might that be so?