That's it for today!
Thank you for all your questions. Here are Anthony’s hopes for the New Year.
Bev Lawrence asks:
Having seen and enjoyed your portrayal of Falstaff in Henry IV parts 1 and 2, I wonder if you would like to play the plump Knight in The Merry Wives of Windsor at some point in the future?
fitba1 asks:
I saw you recently as Falstaff: I was so utterly convinced by the performance that I felt almost as if the man himself had stumbled into the theatre to present a show of scenes from his life. It was a style of acting that was plausible and Shakespearean at the same time. Do you think there is a “style” of Shakespearean acting and how has it changed over the years?
Bullfinchington asks:
In an earlier piece for The Guardian you alluded to the golden generation of actors that you found difficult to identify with (Gielgud, Olvier, Michael Redgrave). Personally I think you carry the mantle of verse acting with both integrity and a similar panache to those mentioned. As to those, they all worked with the John Barton and Peter Hall.
How influential are the ideas of Barton and Hall (as well as Trevor Nunn) among members of the RSC today, including an artistic director like Greg Doran, who, among other things, is a respected Shakespeare scholar?
MrJohnDoe asks:
Hello Mr Sher, I’m a student studying Richard III for my A-Levels. As a Shakespearean actor, what are some of your favorite and most disliked traits about that character, and what things did you consider in your critical evaluation of Richard before you played him? Thanks in advance for taking the time to reply to this.
jonteedrama asks:
Hi Anthony,
Just finished teaching at the Guildhall after 15 years and trying to set myself up locally in Cambridge as I believe there is a shortage of enthusiastic Shakespeare teaching - teaching which inspires - where students are allowed to perform and hear the words - understand characters and themselves far deeper through the language as opposed to analysis and iambic pentameter. Keep hearing the words - boring and outdated - SOS - Save Our Shakespeare - my question is what do you believe is missing in educating our young people in Shakespeare - so many love it when they visit Stratford and see actors make sense of the language but still many are not given that chance - what can we do?
Will Papa Lazarou Spence asks:
Is there any actor or director who you haven’t yet worked with, but who you would love to work with in the future?
ukbazza asks:
After your stint at the Barbican, you will be taking on the role of Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman at the RSC. Its a role that has been done by the great and the good; how do you prepare for such an iconic role and get your own take on the character.
Alexxe asks:
My favourite work of yours is Indian Summer, aka Alive and Kicking - a 1996 film you did with Jason Flemyng. Several of my friends, no longer with us, were ill at the time... and the film just helped me deal with that and support my friends even better. It appealed on so many personal levels - I used to dance and knew many dancers, my friends were ill, and I was also at college at the time, to become a community social service worker, much like your character. You got the pain and frustration so exactly right. Did you consult with any social workers for your research?
Benji Bailey asks:
What has it been like living with the current artistic director of the RSC, has it been a big change? And are there many Shakespeare roles you’re still hoping to play?
cybersuperhero asks:
Hi Tony, I’m currently in the process of reading your book on RIII, ‘Year of the King’; it’s wonderfully written and the drawings are fantastic, although the high point so far has undoubtedly been the anecdote about Michael Gambon. Utterly brilliant and hilarious. At the start you mention that you promised Harold Pinter that you’d leave the RSC, so what made you stay for all these years?
MortonsFork asks:
Hi Mr Sher, the first time I ever went to the theatre was when my parents took me to see you as Shylock in The Merchant of Venice at the Barbican in the ‘80’s. It is still the most incredible experience i’ve ever had at the theatre - you were absolutely extraordinary and gave me a love of Shakespeare for life - thank you. My question is do you believe Shakespeare was who we all think he was, the actor from Stratford, or do you subscribe to any of the conspiracy theories regarding his real identity, Marlowe, Bacon etc?
xyzzy asks:
You performed the title role in Peter Flannery’s play “Singer” in the Swan in the late 1980s; what a cast, you, Joe Melia, Malcolm Storrie. I don’t believe it’s been revived since, although there was a readthrough done as part of a “things the RSC has done in the past” event in Stratford a few years ago. It’s a play of its (Thatcherite) times, but what are your memories of performing it, and do you think it would speak to audiences today in similar times of austerity?
Anthony is in the building!
Post your questions for Antony Sher
Richard III, Iago, Shylock, Malvolio... in a career with the Royal Shakespeare Company that started in 1982 Antony Sher has tackled some of the Bard’s most reprehensible and rich characters, his own favourite being Macbeth.
Not only has his RSC work helped earn him a knighthood and constant critical acclaim, his partner Greg Doran runs the company – the pair met during a Merchant of Venice production in 1987, and became one of the earliest high-profile couples to get a civil partnership.
Doran is currently directing Sher as Falstaff in a production of Henry IV, described as a “magnificent” performance by the Guardian’s Michael Billington: “Sher balances Falstaff’s cruelty with sufficient charm to justify his role as magnetic pub entertainer. But, just as you start to warm to this Falstaff, you are reminded of his rapacity.”
With the play continuing at London’s Barbican until mid-January, Sher is joining us to answer your questions about it and anything else in his career – be it his own direction, the plays he’s written, or big-screen roles like Disraeli opposite Judi Dench’s Victoria in Mrs Brown. It runs from 12.30pm onwards on Tuesday 9 December; post your question in the comments below, and he’ll try to answer as many as possible.
I hope people can see the Henries - both parts! Which play at the Barbican until the end of January.
And then I hope they'll come and see Death of a Salesman, which plays in Stratford in March and April. This should be very exciting - it's the first time we're doing a modern classic on that great Shakespeare stage. But I think that Arthur Miller's play ranks as one of the great tragedies ever written. So it should be just the right home for it.
I hope people buy my book Year of the Fat Knight next June! And read all about the rollercoaster ride I've had with the Fat Knight.