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Author Archives: la Clarina

Titian’s Boatman, by Victoria Blake

09 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Books

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

historical novel, multi-period novel, Titian, Titian's Boatman, Victoria Blake

I remember reading once that George Eliot wanted everything in Daniel Deronda “to be connected to everything else”.

Well, this is exactly what Titian’s Boatman feels like.

It may not look like it at first, when the reader is introduced to several characters in various places and various times. There is the eponymous boatman, plying his trade in a plague-ridden Venice in 1576, ferrying back and forth Titian’s last surviving son and plucky courtesan Tullia Buffo. Then, in present day London, there are actor Terry Jardine and Italian director Ludovico Zabarella, brought together by Shakespeare and personal loss. Lastly, there’s Cuban maid Aurora, carrying the weight of childhood trauma and widowhood – and finding consolation in a painting… Continue reading →

To brush, to skim, to graze…

02 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Lostintranslation

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Charlotte Brontë, Kidnapped, R. L. Stevenson, Translation

charlottebwI can’t remember right now whether it is in a letter or in one of the novels (Villette, maybe?) – but at some point Charlotte Brontë, either directly or through one of her French-studying heroines, bemoans the fact that English has no exact correspondence for the French word éffleurer… Continue reading →

Rescuing the Semi-Colon

28 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Emma Darwin, punctuation mark, semi.colon, This Itch of Writing

semicolonDo you use semi-colons in your writing?

Or were you – like me – taught in elementary school that the semi-colon is a half-extinct sort of thing, more stubborn than a comma and weaker than a full stop, and therefore good for nothing but to divide the items in a list? Continue reading →

Scribbling in Group

23 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling

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languages, solitary writing, writing group

writinggroupredI’m off to the first meeting of my first writing group in a few hours.

In a burst of wild originality, I’ve named it “The Scribblers”, and it is composed of myself and three former pupils, for the moment. These three hardy souls attended not one, but two writing courses of mine – and, finding they haven’t had enough, they were clamouring for more… Except, an even mildly advanced course is no picnic to prepare and teach, and I’m quite up to my ears as it is in my own writing, and theatre, and commissions, and talks. Besides, the times being what they are, it is not easy to find a library/school/club/town council willing to organise – and much less sponsor – a writing course… Continue reading →

Let there be light!

16 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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lighting design, stage lighting

lighting-grid-redWhen I was nineteen or thereabout, and a hopeful drama student, a teacher brought us to see Marivaux’s The Game of Love and Chance. It was a lovely, lovely production, directed by Massimo Castri. Everything was perfect – direction, actors, costumes, scenes – but what I truly remember, more than twenty years later, are the lights. Continue reading →

A make-believe Baroque theatre

11 Saturday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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Adriana Lecouvreur, Charles Edwards, David McVicar, Francesco Cilea, Royal Opera House, toy theatre

rohadrianaI wouldn’t call Cilea’s Adriana Lecouvreur my favourite opera. Which is a little strange perhaps, considering it’s about a bunch of actors, and one particular actress with a precarious sense of reality, and partly takes place backstage… Continue reading →

The Historical Novelist’s Dilemma

09 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in History, Scribbling, Stories

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

breaking the rules, historical accuracy, historical novel, history and story, writing

dilemma-676x305redI’m dithering…

Yes – it’s the novel. Again. But the fact is, you see, that there is this rather grim thing happening in June 1594 – historically happening, I mean. I’ve been thinking about it for a while, because while not directly involving my hero, it has two sets of ties to his circumstances – one practical (and historically documented), and one, shall we say, psychological… Continue reading →

Portrait of the Artist

08 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in History, Stories

≈ 2 Comments

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christopher marlowe, George Bernard Shaw, Léon Daudet, Nat Cassidy, Patricia Finney, Robert Brustein, William Shakespeare

stunned_shakespeareIt strikes me how often fiction and theatre portray Will Shakespeare in the act of absorbing his materials rather than creating them.

No, really: the average fictional Shakespeare spends half his life jotting down, more or less metaphorically, everything he hears… Continue reading →

Elements of Advanced Procrastination

02 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Things

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Procrastination

mehSo this is a couple of stupid days inside a mostly stupid week.

By which I mean that last week’s Shakespearean glow has faded, and I’m getting nowhere much, both work-wise and writing wise, and I’ve managed to destroy a memory stick with lots of useful things on it, and I’m squandering inordinate amounts of time on notions that might become relevant next Autumn – or then again might not at all – and even rehearsals last night rather meandered into pointlessness… Continue reading →

Hieronimo in California

31 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Theatre

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Marin Shakespeare Company, The Spanish Tragedy, Thomas Kyd

tstThis is from back in 2013, but the fact is, it struck me that productions of Thomas Kyd’s Spanish Tragedy are few and far between, nowadays – although we know it was wildly succesful in the 1580s and long later, with its dark tale of revenge and madness. Another Grammar-School man like Shakespeare, Kyd seems to have enjoyed quite a reputation in his time – but most of his work has gone lost, and his fame has been largely eclipsed… Continue reading →

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