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Shakespeare and the World of “Slings & Arrows”
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15 October 2024

Slings & Arrows, starring Susan Coyne, Paul Gross, Don McKellar, and Mark McKinney as members of the New Burbage Theatre Festival, was heralded by television critics as one of the best shows ever produced and one of the finest depictions of life in classical theatre. Shakespeare scholars, however, have been ambivalent about the series, at times even hostile.
In Shakespeare and the World of “Slings & Arrows” Gary Kuchar situates the three-season series in its cultural and intellectual contexts. More than a roman à clef about Canada’s Stratford Festival, he shows, it is a privileged window onto major debates within Shakespeare studies and a drama that raises vital questions about the role of the arts in society. Kuchar reads the television show – ever fluctuating between faith and doubt in the power of drama – as an allegory of Peter Brook’s widely renowned account of modern theatre, The Empty Space, mirroring Brook’s distinction between holy theatre, a quasi-sacred vocation, and deadly theatre, a momentary entertainment.
Combining contextualized interpretations of the series with subtle formalist readings, Kuchar explains how Slings & Arrows participates in a broader recuperation of humanist approaches to Shakespeare in contemporary scholarship. The result is a demonstration of how and why Shakespeare continues to provide not just entertainment, but equipment for living.
"Kuchar’s navigation of this material is edifying and elegantly written, [with] unexpectedly refreshing re-readings of Peter Brook’s The Empty Space and key writings of Northrop Frye. [It] offers a welcome return to debates about the role of Shakespeare and of a Shakespearean theatre festival in Canada. Also deeply welcome is Kuchar’s serious consideration of the show’s co-creators, especially Coyne, as significant artists with informed and compelling positions on the meaning and value of Shakespeare and of a life in the theatre." CATR Saddlemyer July