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Wednesday, April 20, 2022

A To Z Challenge 2022: Shakespeare- Q Is For Mistress Quickly And Queen

 

Mistress Quickly And Falstaff. Public Domain.


Mistress Quickly is the proprietor of the Boar’s Head Tavern in Eastcheap, where Prince Hal and his friends, including Falstaff, hang out in Henry IV Part 1. This is, I think, her first appearance, but she is in a number of other plays, including Henry IV Part 2, Henry V and The Merry Wives Of Windsor.


She is a comical character, who utters a lot of malapropisms and is annoyed at Falstaff for calling her a woman. The first time you see her she is telling him off for owing her a lot of money. However, the speech she makes in Henry V, describing Falstaff’s death, is quite poignant.


She is married in the first play, but presumably is widowed by Henry V, because she has married Pistol, one of the Boar’s Head gang. 


The role has been played by some well known actresses such as Julie Walters in The Hollow Crown and Judi Dench in the Kenneth Branagh Henry V. It is a plum role for a middle-aged actress.


There are a lot of Queens in Shakespeare’s plays, so I will stick to one, Gertrude from Hamlet.


Gertrude is, of course, Hamlet’s mother. She loves him, really she does, but she has, in his opinion, committed a crime in marrying his uncle, Claudius, so soon after his father’s death, and that’s before he finds out his father was murdered. He isn’t crazy about Claudius in the first place and doesn’t understand why she would marry the inferior brother after having his father. There is, though, no real indication that she knew about the murder. 


In the Franco Zeffirelli production, starring Mel Gibson, the role was played by a relatively young Glenn Close, due to the theory that Gertrude would probably have been married young, as women were in those days. While it’s possible, we know that Hamlet is thirty because the Gravedigger reminisces about a battle Hamlet’s father won on the day he was born, thirty years ago. So Gertrude would be, at best, in her mid forties.  


Julie Christie played the role in the Kenneth Branagh version. She was in her fifties at the time. 


Wayne and Schuster did a Hamlet skit, “All In The Royal Family”, in which Gertrude talks like the character from All In The Family, telling us that “my son Hamlet is coming home from college!” It was a very funny skit, but the only one I could find on YouTube was dubbed into Spanish! 


As per usual for a Shakespeare tragedy, the stage in covered in bodies in the last scene, including that of Gertrude, who has drunk poisoned wine her husband has put out for Hamlet. 


Let’s stop here and see what tomorrow brings! 


6 comments:

Tasha Duncan-Drake said...

Great choices for Q. I've only seen Hamlet once, but I really did enjoy it, although I have to admit I did not remember the queen's name. I find it most annoying that when I was younger I would watch something and all the details would go in, but these days I'm lucky if I remember half of it 😉
Tasha
Tasha's Thinkings: YouTube - What They Don't Tell You (and free fiction)

Jayashree Srivatsan said...

I have never watched any Shakesparean play but there are movies in Indiancontext based on Shakespeare. There is a movie called Shakespeare In Love where the queen of England has a significant role to play , i believe. Have you watched it ?

Debra She Who Seeks said...

Gertrude is underestimated, in my opinion. She was one smart cookie to keep herself in a position of wealth and power by marrying Claudius when her husband died. The alternative -- obscurity and widow's weeds -- was pretty dire. Too bad her son was such an idiot.

Ronel Janse van Vuuren said...

The women in Shakespeare's plays always seem to end up subdued, mad or dead. Sigh.

Ronel visiting for the A-Z Challenge My Languishing TBR: Q

A Tarkabarka Hölgy said...

I wonder what Shakespeare's audiences thought of recurring characters like Mistress Quickly :) Was it their version of a continuous TV show?...

The Multicolored Diary

Sue Bursztynski said...

I have no idea, Zalka! At least they knew what to expect.