Slings & Arrows
Adapting Shakespeare in Theatre and Television

By (author) Don Moore,Kailin Wright

ISBN13: 9781487507725

Imprint: University of Toronto Press

Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Format: Hardback

Published: 09/12/2025

Availability: Not yet available

Description
Canadian television comedy Slings & Arrows shows the backstage lives of a Shakespearean theatre company. Finding wild success in Canada and abroad, the series won twenty-two television awards, received rave reviews in the United States, and the Brazilian version, Som e Fúria, earned audiences of eighteen million viewers. This book not only asks but also answers the question, why Shakespeare today? Offering a diverse collection of essays as well as original interviews with the actors (Rothaford Gray) and creators (Susan Coyne, Bob Martin, and Mark McKinney) of the show, this text is a pivotal resource for any fan, critic, or scholar of Slings & Arrows and Shakespeare adaptation. With the backdrop of debates over Shakespeare’s cultural value today, this book fittingly articulates and fosters its own scholarly debate about the relevance of Slings & Arrows in Shakespeare adaptation studies and Canadian theatre. A common theme linking the different perspectives of the book’s contributors is the idea that the adaptation of colonial figures like Shakespeare continues to be contentious, and, in fact, is symbolic of colonialism deeply embedded in Canadian cultural identity. Slings & Arrows, the book proposes, does not merely explore Shakespeare and Canada, but rather the more provocative relationship of Shakespeare as Canada. Tying together themes of art, theatre, film, culture, and colonialism, this collection investigates the longstanding relevance of Shakespeare through the lens of adaptation.
Foreword Acknowledgments   Introduction: Slings & Arrows: Adapting Shakespeare as Canada in Theatre and Television Kailin Wright Act I "Neither a Borrower nor Lender Be": The Adaptation and Remediation of Shakespeare 1. Reborn in Germany: Theory and the Theatre in Slings & Arrows Matt Williamson 2. Slings & Arrows: An Intermediated Shakespearean Adaptation (reprint) Kim Fedderson and J.M. Richardson 3. Specters of Ethics, Race, and Colonial Inheritance in Slings & Arrows: The Hyperreal Spectacle of Shakespeare as Canada Don Moore 4. Performing "a Nobody": An Interview with Rothaford Gray on His Role as Nahum in Slings & Arrows Don Moore and Kailin Wright Act II "What Players Are They?": Vulnerable Performativity, Spectatorship, and Ghosts 5. "Who’s There?": Slings & Arrows’s Audience Dynamics (reprint) Kailin Wright 6. Actors, Names, and the Cultural Inheritance of Slings & Arrows Laura Estill 7. Fistfights and Sacrifice: Troupe Dynamics, Transformation, and Shakespeare Offstage Elizabeth E. Tavares 8. Coloured "Extras" and Spotlit Whites: Spectating "Race" in Slings & Arrows George Elliott Clarke 9. Comic Terror and Masculine Vulnerability in Slings & Arrows: Season Three. (reprint) Francesca T. Royster Act III "The Play’s the Thing": Television, Theatre, and the Afterlife of Slings & Arrows 10. "Why Shakespeare? Why Canada?": An Interview with Susan Coyne, Bob Martin, and Mark McKinney on Creating Slings & Arrows Kailin Wright 11. Levinas-Based Shakespearean Adaptation, Performance, and Fandom in Slings & Arrows Lisa S. Starks 12. Haters Gonna Hate: Vid Adaptations of Slings & Arrows Charlotte Stevens 13. Exhaustive Shakespeare, Shakespearean Exhaustion: Slings & Arrows and the End of Endless Adaptation Daniel Fischlin Afterword Mark Fortier Contributors Bibliography Index
  • Theatre studies
  • Theatre: individual actors & directors
  • Media studies
  • Professional & Vocational
  • Tertiary Education (US: College)
Height:229
Width:152
Spine:25
Weight:1.00
List Price: £60.00