It is the green-ey'd monster, which doth mock
The meat it feeds on."
Othello the Moor is lauded over Venice for his help in attempts to rid them of the pesky Turks in their battle over Cyprus. Yet when Othello weds the beautiful Venetian Desdemona in secret, some opinions of his prowess change, notably those of Desdemona's father. And unbeknownst to Othello, Iago, his third-in-command, is plotting a dastardly revenge for being passed over for promotion, the position being given to Othello's loyal lieutenant, Cassio. Hence proceeds perhaps the most shocking example of manipulation in literature, as Iago takes possession of Othello's mind and emotions, like a beast taking possession of its prey, transforming our noble Moor from a honest, straightforward, respected man into an enraged, vengeful monster who believes every evil of his innocent wife, including her unfaithfulness with his second-in-command, Cassio. Othello's jealousy manages to eclipse anything within our understanding.
Abd el-Ouahed ben Messaoud ben Mohammed Anoun, Moorish ambassador to Elizabeth I suggest inspiration for Othello source Wikipedia |
How does a gentle and admired military leader allow himself to be reduced to a maddened beast, his fury leading him to commit the worst atrocity against a perfectly innocent human being, and one who has loved and supported him through their short marriage? What hidden button inside Othello's psyche has Iago discovered and pushed, knowing that it will make him snap?
Maria Malibran as Rossini's Desdemona Françoise Bouchot source Wikipedia |
Othello & Desdemona Antonio Muñoz Degrain source Wikipedia |
Of all the characters in the play, my favourite character was Emilia. While she remains surprisingly unaware of the plotting and intrigues of her husband, upon realizing the truth, she becomes the voice of the audience, who has until this point been mute in horror, and satisfyingly spews vile recriminations on the head of Othello.
T.S. Eliot had a different view of the last actions of Othello than many older critics:
"I have always felt that I have never read a more terrible exposure of human weakness -- of universal human weakness -- than the last great speech of Othello. I am ignorant whether any one else has ever adopted this view, and it may appear subjective and fantastic in the extreme. It is usually taken on its face value, as expressing the greatness in defeat of a noble but erring nature. What Othello seems to me to be doing in making this speech is cheering himself up. He is endeavouring to escape reality, he has ceased to think about Desdemona, and is thinking about himself. Humility is the most difficult of all virtues to achieve; nothing dies harder than the desire to think well of oneself. Othello succeeds in turning himself into a pathetic figure, by adopting an aesthetic rather than a moral attitude, dramatising himself against his environment. He takes in the spectator, but the human motive is primarily to take in himself. I do not believe that any writer has ever exposed this bovarysme, the human will to see things as they are not, more clearly than Shakespeare."
Laurence Fishburne & Kenneth Branaugh Othello 1995 source Wikipedia |
How I hate this play. Hate is a strong emotion, and thus, to evoke it speaks well of the writer's craft. There's a reason they call em tragedies. An excellent review.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joseph. I assume that you mean "hate" in a good way, in that it emotionally devastated you, but you could appreciate it for its worth? ;-) I just finished King Lear and that one was gut-wrenching as well.
DeleteExactly
DeleteGreat review! I definitely liked the character of Emilia too. She doesn't have too many lines, but she's still a very interesting character to consider. The 'Page to Stage' course sounds fascinating; I did a similar course a few years ago, and we watched the Orson Welles Othello and then the Laurence Fishburne one after that. From what I remember, both Fishburne and Branagh were great in the leading roles.
ReplyDeleteThanks! The course is kind of hit and miss. A little to much speculation for my tastes ..... a little like Shakespeare on Oprah, but I am learning from it. I really liked the Fishburne/Branaugh version. You can't miss with Branaugh. He's awesome!
DeleteGreat review! Putting this on the 'to read list'.
ReplyDeleteOthello is the main character.....but we all remember Iago!
Antonio is the main character in Merchant of Venice....but we all remember Shylock! A well written villian can make or break a story, Shakespeare used this to his advantage!
Shakespeare is very proficient at getting you to believe the unbelievable, or perhaps the uncertain. It's a little bit of a hump, but once you're over it, you're hooked and shocked and "tragefied". :-)
DeleteWonderful review! I'd never read Eliot's comments, but that's such an interesting view. I also love Emilia. Imagine taking that stand, against your husband, and knowing you can't even save your mistress at that point.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Melissa! I'm trying to catch up to you!
DeletePeople can have such different views of Shakespeare's plays that it's quite startling. I hadn't seen it as Eliot had, but after I read his words, I thought, you know, he may be right!
Emilia screamed exactly what I wanted to. She rocks! ;-)
Loved your review & the tying in of the T.S. Eliot quote.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Carol. It was certainly a different way of interpreting his actions and perhaps shed more insight into the character of Othello.
DeleteHave you read He Knew He Was Right by Trollope? It's inspired by Othello, one of my favourite Trollopes :)
ReplyDeleteWell, I didn't know that! Thanks so much for making me that much smarter! ;-) Othello goes beyond he knew that he was right, to the point of trusting any worthless, deceptive being that comes along and refusing to listen to reason. But I haven't read this Trollope so perhaps he explores this intentional blindness as well. Sigh! Another "try to fit it in" book for 2015!
DeleteOthello is one Shakespeare I have never read. Shame on me, I know!
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I, of course, know the speech T. S. Eliot makes reference to, and, wow, his views are brilliant!
Thanks for sharing such wonderful review :-), oh, and that online course sounds quite interesting, by the way.
When you do get around to Othello, you're in for a treat!
DeleteThe course was okay, but I'm going to try another one in January on Hamlet. It's out of the UK on FutureLearn and I have high hopes for it!