The Merchant of Venice
Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers
William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice was probably written between 1596 and 1598, and was printed with the comedies in the First Folio of 1623. Bassanio, an impoverished gentleman, uses the credit of his friend, the merchant Antonio, to borrow money from a wealthy Jew, Shylock. Antonio pledges to pay Shylock a pound of flesh if he defaults on the loan, which Bassanio will use to woo a rich heiress, Portia. A subplot concerns the elopement of Shylock's daughter Jessica with a Christian, Bassanio's friend Lorenzo. In its focus on love and marriage, the play shares certain concerns with Shakespeare's other comedies. Yet its depiction of the tensions between Jews and Christians in early modern Venice - and its highly dramatic trial scene in Act 4 - create darker currents in the play. (Summary by Elizabeth Klett)
Cast:
Duke of Venice: Filippo Gioachin
Prince of Morocco: Mark F. Smith
Prince of Arragon: David Nicol
Antonio: David O'Connell
Bassanio: mb
Salanio: Rosalind Wills
Salarino: Laurie Anne Walden
Gratiano: David Leeson
Lorenzo: Aaron Elliott
Shylock: etk
Tubal: Carolyn Frances
Launcelot Gobbo: L. Lambert Lawson
Old Gobbo: David Lawrence
Leonardo: Laurie Anne Walden
Balthasar: David Lawrence
Stephano: Lucy Perry
Portia: Arielle Lipshaw
Nerissa: Megan Kunkel
Jessica: Elizabeth Klett
Clerk in court: Ernst Pattynama
Portia's servant: Joshua B. Christensen
Narrator: Dennis Sayers (2 hr 26 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
Very helpful
An Icse student
thank you very much for this book...I can now listen to the book while reading...it helps me concentrate and I remember more!!!
Nearly perfect
Chandini
Full Review at https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1795673092 I am seriously impressed with the quality of this recording. Nearly all of the readers really got into the roles. Shylock's speech in 3.1 was awesome. Actually, all of Shylock's performances were well done. How can anyone not like Portia? She's clever, sarcastic, generous and loyal. Ms. Lipshaw does justice to the character. I was particularly impressed by the song in 3.2, I'm not sure who did the singing but kudos to you. Only 3.5 was completely disappointing. It's supposed to be a light humorous exchange between Jessica, Launcelot the clown, and Lorenzo but most of them just read off the lines mechanically. All the teasing tone is gone. 5.1 was another problem. Aaron Eliot reads Lorenzo and does a technically good job but doesn't seem to connect to the text in any way. It is an uncomfortable conflict to Jessica (read extremely well by Ms Klett) in the same scene. Lorenzo's lines that should be funny are read just like lines that are romantic.
standing o
alamedared
well done! thanks to the reader for taking gobs of precious time so we can just sit back and listen. bravo!
Just ok...
Some of the actors spoke too slowly and it was obvious that some did not understand the text they were reading.
ICSE
very nice audio book love hearing it
Earnest Effort - Mild Cast
Sorker
A for effort; C for overall result. This piece is an honest effort, with the voice talent varying from 5 stars to 1. Kudos to Elizabeth Klett as editor - the timing is great. Perhaps she has in mind to continue editing to replace certain performances over time? The better actors here deserve that if it is planned. Special mention goes to the superb performance of Arielle Lipshaw (Portia), very well supported by Elizabeth Klett (Jessica) and etk (Shylock). In lesser roles, enjoyable performances by David Leeson (Gratiano), David Nicol (Prince of Arragon) and David Lawrence (Old Gobbo). Other performances range from adequate to the (too often) embarrasingly benthic (one AE young man self-conciously snickering into the mic as he haltingly hacked his lines).
being an icse student it helped me a lot. when it is boring to read text again and again this helps me a lot
I'm too an icse student .. helps me a lot
Manav Jain