I actually don't know if subbing out the "race" moments in the plays is the answer here. What does that do, except whitewash the play? It does not interrogate how difference and blackness are used to create whiteness. It does not expose the commonplace and 1/ #ShakeRacehttps://twitter.com/upstartarts/status/1281356835040133120 …
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I haven’t watched the conversation yet, so this may have been covered, but a moment that I always wonder what I (a Jewish director) would do with is Benedick’s “if I do not love her, I am a Jew.”
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“Fool” is often substituted, and I can see why—the play isn’t about Jews & you don’t want your charming hero randomly spouting unconfronted anti-Semitism lest it seem you endorse it. And yet that’s part of the DNA of the play. Shakespeare chose to have that character say that.
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