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The BBC Merchant
Diminishing returns
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Ten years after his production for the National Theatre, Jonathan Miller had the opportunity to produce The Merchant of Venice again, this time for the BBC as part of its ambitious plan to record all of Shakespeare's plays. Citing the work of recent social historians, he set out to reconstruct the fundamental 'Elizabethanism' of the plays, creating for each one a sort of period verisimilitude that would demonstrate how Shakespeare engaged the social and political attitudes of his audience. Television thus helped Miller to fulfil his ambition of fashioning The Merchant as a naturalistic nineteenth-century drama suitable for Masterpiece Theatre. Miller had elected to sacrifice the public dimension of Shakespeare's traditionally climactic scene in order to achieve the naturalism he thought television required. The theatrical fictions of the play worked against Miller's use of the medium. A number of critics found director Jack Gold's Merchant balanced, simple, direct, and inoffensive.

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Shakespeare in Performance

The Merchant of Venice

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