Dominique Goy-Blanquet is professor of Elizabethan Theatre at the University of Picardie, a member of the editorial board of La Quinzaine Littéraire and a contributor to The Times Literary Supplement. Her works include Shakespeare’s Early History Plays: From Chronicle to Stage (2003), Shakespeare et l’invention de l’histoire (2004), Joan of Arc, A Saint for All Reasons: Studies in myth and politics (2003) and the French translation of and W. H. Auden’s Lectures on Shakespeare (2003).
A compendium of fascinating production detail and a compellingly argued history of a crucial period of European theatre in which Chereau played a leading role ... Goy-Blanquet's critical exegesis is detailed and illuminating. * SKENE Journal of Theatre and Drama Studies * As with Shakespeare, Chereau's space is always metaphorized (like the scenic treatment of the phantom in his Hamlet), and he gives the text its true value and the fable its faithful rhythm. The question of theater determines his vision, and his practice of theater is a total art. You have understood it: this book is one of those that must be read and reread. Shakespeare, thanks to Chereau, is our contemporary for a long time to come. * Critical Stages *