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  • O BRASIL EH O QUE ME ENVENENA MAS EH O QUE ME CURA (LUIZ ANTONIO SIMAS)

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    segunda-feira, setembro 26, 2022

    New Britain, same as the old one: the legacy of the second Elizabethan era |

      Queen Elizabeth II leaving Buckingham Palace for the state opening of parliament in 2009.

    "Since impersonations of living royalty were first permitted, and with performers as varied as Pam Ferris, Prunella Scales, Diana Quick and Claire Foy all enjoying successive triumphs, actors now agree that playing the part of Queen Elizabeth II has become the most infallible gig of the lot.

    It’s not hard to see why. There is nothing more satisfying than playing a part where the audience does nine-tenths of the work for you. It was partly in the character, and partly in the function awarded to Elizabeth Windsor that, from adolescence onwards, she chose to express herself as little as possible. Whereas we have an all-too-clear idea of exactly who Boris Johnson is, and, for that matter, of who Tony Blair is, the Queen spent more than 70 years perfecting her technique of hiding her thoughts. In dramatic narrative, nothing is more powerful than the withholding of information. It’s only inexperienced performers who ask for more words. As film-maker Alexander Mackendrick observed, a long speech explaining motivation will not make the audience feel closer to a character. Rather, it will make them feel that the character is alarmingly prone to self-pity – and will drive them away.

    Of all the mistakes a monarch, or indeed a screenwriter, can make, explaining yourself is the worst of the lot. Much of the Queen’s authority rested on her remaining opaque. Her subjects were able to insist they detected in her whatever they chose."


    read article by playwright DAVID HARE

    New Britain, same as the old one: the legacy of the second Elizabethan era | Queen Elizabeth II | The Guardian:

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