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Desperate outsiders in a money-drunk world
The Merchant of Venice directed by Daniel Sullivan (2010) and Rupert Goold (2011)
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The commercially successful and provocative productions discussed in this chapter were staged at exceptionally popular, publicly funded theatres. Daniel Sullivan directed the play for the Delacorte stage of the Public Theater in New York’s Central Park, with the rising star Lily Rabe as Portia, playing against Al Pacino, who revisited Shylock after performing the part in Michael Radford’s film. The production merited a two-month run on Broadway. For the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon, Rupert Goold cast Patrick Stewart as Shylock – the actor’s second take on the character after John Barton’s RSC’s chamber production in 1979. Goold revived The Merchant at the Almeida Theatre, London, with Ian McDiarmid as Shylock. Susanna Fielding gave an award-winning performance of Portia on both stages. Casting star actors as Shylock and talented interpreters of Portia, Sullivan and Goold gave these characters equal attention. Goold set the play in the casinos of Las Vegas and the reality TV shows of garish consumerism. On the Delacorte stage, in turn, the power of money was symbolised by a mammoth set of concentric metal railings, which first divided the privileged from the outsiders, but eventually seemed more like a prison for all. Enticing audiences with the affective power of, respectively, vaudeville and glamorised popular culture, Sullivan and Goold expunged the romance from Shakespeare’s play. The productions underscored the morally corrosive power of money in a cold, acquisitive world.

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Shakespeare in Performance

The Merchant of Venice

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