The Star Wars Shakespeare books have finally wrapped up their six part series, and they are each more beautiful than the last.
In honor of this momentous occasion, Quirk Books is generously giving away one copy of the first in the series, Verily, A New Hope. We promise once you read the first you won’t be able to put the rest down.
In order to win this contest, which is truly “A thing divine, for nothing natural / I ever saw so noble.”*
**But we aren’t pigeon-liver’d, and we’re running this contest through Twitter!
All you have to do to enter is come up with a Shakespearean adaptation based on another movie. Tweet us a one-liner from your adaptation (For example, something like, “T-rex or not t-rex… that is the question.” – Jurassic World. And no you cant use that we dont know your life.) We’ll trust that you have the rest of the manuscript buried somewhere in your quarters near the Globe. Don’t worry, official rules are listed below.
At the end of the week, a team of our best Shakespearean experts (read: those of us who know more than just Romeo and Juliet) will sit down and heretofor judge the contest, which runs from Thursday, July 30th to Thursday, August 6th at 11:59 pm, PCT.
Alright so. To clarify: if you want to win a copy of Verily, A New Hope, here’s what you gotta do:
- follow Sub-Cultured on Twitter: @sub_cultured
- Tweet at us! We want to hear your best one-liner adapted FROM a movie INTO Shakespearean style writing.
- Make sure you get in your tweet between July 30th and August 6th. The contest ENDS at 11:59, 8/6/15 (Pacific Coastal time for all you west coasters)
Jen Schiller
Staff Writer
@jenisaur
*The Tempest
**Hamlet, not The Lion King. probably.
Be honest here. How many times did you just watch that video? Was that enough Star Wars told in the style of Shakespeare for you? No? Then I have some good news.
Verily, A New Hope, written by the brilliant Ian Doescher, turns Episode IV into an Elizabethan comedy set in deep space. The entire story is told in classic (and semi-difficult to master) iambic pentameter. As a theatre nerd, my very first reaction to this book was “holy crap we have to perform this”, and as I continued reading that instinct just got stronger and stronger. In fact, this book might well be the answer to “how do we get high schoolers interested in Shakespeare?” Doescher has created a text here that satisfies Star Wars and Shakespeare fans equally– in fact it even satisfied the Bearded One himself to the point where Verily is an officially licensed retelling of the original tale.
There are few things I love more than innovative storytelling, and Verily is nothing if not innovative. Although it barely takes a few stanzas before you’re thinking that Star Wars and Shakespeare are as classic a combination as peanut butter and jelly. (hey, I can use cliches. I’m not the bard.)
Doescher has created something that is at once familiar and unique. It is both faithful to the original text, and firmly in the world of adaptation. It blends old with new in a way that retains lines such as “that is no moon”, but also makes room for a loquacious R2. For instance:
“C-3P0: But Sir, no proverb warns the galaxy
Of how a droid may hotly anger’d be.
HAN: Aye, marry, ’tis because no droid hath e’er
Torn out of joint another being’s arms
Upon a lesser insult e’en than this–
But Wookies, golden droid, are not so tame.
C-3P0: Thy meaning, Sir, doth prick my circuit board.
‘Tis best to play the fool, and not the sage,
To say it brief: pray let the Wookie win.
CHEWBAC.: Auugh!
R2-D2 [aside]: –Brute! The fool I’ll play with
thee indeed.
Yet I percieve thou and they friend have heart.”
Doescher includes an Afterword at the end of his book, explaining his inspiration and the timeline of influence that is drawn directly from Shakespeare to Lucas. In between the two giants of their art forms is Joseph Campbell and his classic text on literature, The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Lucas studied the text, which in turn studied Shakespeare’s work and the classic characteristics found therein. It would seem that Doescher’s exercise is a natural progression in literature. In other words, none of us should be surprised that Verily exists, or that it was created so successfully.
Two thumbs up, five out of five stars, and 10/10 points. Pick up your copy of Verily, A New Hope today from Quirk Books, or your local bookstore!
Jen Schiller
Staff Writer
twitter.com/Jenisaur
This past week I had the pleasure of attending Press Night for the Shakespeare Orange County production of, “Much Ado About Nothing.”
Fun thing about Shakespeare: With the use of one wrong inflection or taking too long to deliver a line, the show goes from amazing to contrite or forced. The Bard left out a lot of staging cues and many people seem to think that every line needs to be delivered in a loud, emphatic question.
Because, clearly, all the world’s a stage and all its statements questions.