One of William Shakespeare’s most beloved and oft-performed comedies, ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ is the story of two headstrong young lovers who are brought together…almost entirely against their will.
Returning from victory in war, the Italian Prince Don Pedro and his officers – including the veteran Benedick and the young Claudio – are enjoying a well-deserved vacation at the sprawling estate of Leonato, the Governor of Messina. Claudio becomes smitten with Leonato’s daughter Hero, much to Benedick’s disgust. Benedick – despite his teasing pseudo-courtship with the sharp-witted beauty Beatrice – has sworn himself to bachelorhood, prompting Claudio, Leonato and the Prince to try and trick the two lovers into expressing their desire for each other. (Meanwhile, Don Pedro’s villainous brother is plotting to drive Claudio and Hero apart, simply for the pleasure of doing so.)
Filled with wit, humor, deception and redemption, ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ is a favorite among audience and Shakespearean scholars alike and is presented here in its original and unabridged format.
Over de auteur
William Shakespeare is generally acknowledged as the greatest dramatist in the history of English literature. Also a poet and actor, Shakespeare was born in Stratford-Upon-Avon, where he received an education at the local grammar school, but whether he attended any educational institution subsequent to his early tutelage is unknown. By eighteen, Shakespeare was married – to an already-pregnant Anne Hathaway – and the couple would go on to have three children, Susanna and the twins Hamnet and Judith. (Hamnet died at 11 years old.) Shakespeare moved to London soon after the birth of the twins and began publishing poems (‘Venus and Adonis’ (1593) and ‘The Rape of Lucrece’ (1594)) and joined the Lord Chamberlain’s Men as an actor and playwright. Shakespeare stayed with the Lord Chamberlain’s Men throughout his career, producing some of his finest work – ‘King Lear, ‘ ‘Macbeth’ and ‘The Tempest’ among them – after the company fell under the patronage of King James I and became The King’s Men. During his career, Shakespeare penned 38 plays, two narrative poems and over 150 sonnets and enjoyed considerable financial success, eventually buying New Place, one of the largest homes in Stratford. Following his death in 1616 at the age of 52, thirty-six of his plays were collected and published as the First Folio and his entire canon – including his extant plays, sonnets and poems – were published as The Complete Works of William Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s plays are the most produced dramatic works in existence and they have been translated and adapted into countless stage, screen and television productions over the years. Entire theatres are devoted to producing his works and his writings are studied and analyzed in literature classes around the world.