Acknowledgments vii
Notes on Contributors viii
Bibliographical Note xi
Chronology xii
Introduction: Through a Camera, Darkly 1
Diana E. Henderson
1 Authorship: Getting Back to Shakespeare: Whose Film is it Anyway? 8
Elsie Walker
2 Cinema Studies: Thou Dost Usurp Authority: Beerbohm Tree, Reinhardt, Olivier, Welles, and the
Politics of Adapting Shakespeare 31
Anthony R. Guneratne
3 Theatricality: Stage, Screen, and Nation: Hamlet and the Space of History 54
Robert Shaughnessy
4 The Artistic Process: Learning from Campbell Scott's Hamlet 77
Diana E. Henderson
5 Cinematic Performance: Spectacular Bodies: Acting fyfnCinema fyfnShakespeare 96
Barbara Hodgdon
6 Gender Studies: Shakespeare, Sex, and Violence: Negotiating Masculinities in Branagh's Henry V
and Taymor's Titus 112
Pascale Aebischer
7 Globalization: Figuring the Global/Historical in Filmic Shakespearean Tragedy 133
Mark Thornton Burnett
8 Cross-Cultural Interpretation: Reading Kurosawa Reading Shakespeare 155
Anthony Dawson
9 Popular Culture: Will of the People: Recent Shakespeare Film Parody and the Politics of Popularization 176
Douglas Lanier
10 Television Studies: Brushing Up Shakespeare: Relevance and Televisual Form 197
Roberta E. Pearson and William Uricchio
11 Remediation: Hamlet among the Pixelvisionaries: Video Art, Authenticity, and Wisdom in Almereyda's
Hamlet 216
Peter S. Donaldson
Afterword: Unending Revels: Visual Pleasure and Compulsory Shakespeare 238
Kathleen McLuskie
Select Bibliography 250
Index 253