A tower of strength - Shakespeare Speaks (with subtitles)


source: BBC Learning English      2016年3月29日
What's in a name? Learn a phrase from Shakespeare that is still in use today.
For activities and extra materials connected to this episode: http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/...
Shakespeare Speaks is a co-production by BBC Learning English and The Open University.

Narrator: It was a dark and stormy night. Thomas Swann is in his favourite pub, the Duck and Whistle. He's rehearsing the role of King Richard in Shakespeare's Richard III.

Thomas: The King's name is a tower of strength... Hmmm. I could play it quietly: The King's name is a tower of strength... or angrily: The King's name is a tower of strength...

Barmaid: Here you go Mr Will, Mr Thomas, two more ales.

Thomas: Will, how should I play this line? What is Richard's motivation here?

Will: Thomas, Thomas, don't you understand? King Richard is about to go into battle. The opposing army has six or seven thousand men.

Thomas: That's a lot of men!

Will: Richard is not afraid. He has three times that number of soldiers.

Thomas: Twenty thousand men - that's a big army!

Will: Yes, but Richard has something more powerful than even the greatest army. He has his name: King Richard. That name makes him strong; powerful. It makes ordinary people fear and respect him.

Thomas: So the name King Richard is as strong as a tower...

Will: Exactly. Richard's enemies don't have that.

Thomas: So this line needs strength and confidence.

Will: Yes. This play is about power - and what people will do to get it. Let us rehearse. I am Norfolk, your general. Six or seven thousand is their utmost power.

Thomas Swann as Richard III: Why, our battalion trebles that account. Besides, the King's name is a tower of strength

Which they upon the adverse party want.

Will: You have it! Well done! I'll drink to that. Another jug of ale!

Barmaid: Here you are, sir.

Narrator: We'll leave them there for now. In Richard III, or as I like to call it, the Mafia play, King Richard murdered everyone that stood between him and the absolute power that he wanted, including the Prince of Wales, his brother Clarence, Misters Rivers, Vaughn and Grey, Lord Hastings, King Edward IV's two young sons - and his own wife! Of course, these days, you don't have to kill your family to be described as a tower of strength - you just have to be strong, reliable, trustworthy, dependable and good in a crisis. Like footballer David Beckham, who said:

Clip 1: Alex Ferguson was like a father to me. He was a tower of strength.

Clip 2: My husband was a tower of strength when I had that operation - he really looked after me well.

Barmaid: Mr Will, a message from your wife. She says if you're not home in five minutes, don't bother coming home ever again.

Thomas: The old ball and chain at it again, eh? Come on Will, have another beer!

Will: Hmmm... To beer, or not to beer: that is the question.

Peter's tower of strength: Shakespeare Speaks Extras

source: BBC Learning English     2016年3月21日
The phrase 'a tower of strength' describes someone who is strong, reliable, trustworthy, dependable and good in a crisis. Who is actor Peter Kenny's tower of strength? For more about this phrase, visit our Shakespeare Speaks pages on BBC Learning English: http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/...