I'll be working at UCSF Mon-Thurs, but evenings will be free for seeing people
If you aren't all booked up for business lunches that entire week, you can always run around the corner for lunch here (or I could tote Matilda up to campus -- the taqueria ladies at the food court like to check up and squee over her).
R&J specifically are just... argh. On the other hand, it's a very good example of how love can make you do the wacky.
Yeah, I get that. I guess liking them doesn't make that much of a difference to me in how I react to the play. They make me cringe, a bit, but mostly because I see my own First Love craxy-ass brainless hormonally heightened-stakes selfish lunacy in them, and it's utterly watch-from-the-hall once you've had that experience and come out the other side.
And then I get gutpunched by the pointless viciousness of the family politics, and the sheer stupid unfairness of the cost to R&J. Most people get to be stupid and selfish and ego-ridden and ruled by hormones without dying of it; they're not the world's greatest kids or the world's greatest lovers (although, damn, as
Slings and Arrows
amply demonstrates, that's some of Shakespeare's most gloriously, shamelessly erotic language), they're just dumb and perfectly ordinary teenagers and it is thoroughly fucked that, because of their families, their very run-of-the-mill romantic stupidity costs them their lives.
Egad, everyone with the neuronitis and the migraines and the back pain. I'm so sorry! Sending brain and back and nervous system~ma to everyone.
Well, whatever I do will be followed by walking to Trader Joes and then walking back with a few bags of groceries, and then cooking. (Or, at least, heating up frozen things and topping with bottled sauce.) I think I'll do a cursury kitchen cleaning (take out the trash, get the dirty dishes in the dishwasher) and then try to do some research. Because I just remembered that I need to be at the department later on this afternoon anyway.
And then I get gutpunched by the pointless viciousness of the family politics, and the sheer stupid unfairness of the cost to R&J.
Very, very true. Especially Juliet's father coming down on her like a sack of oranges.
It helps that I've recently(ish) seen a couple good performances of Juliet. For a while, it seemed that she was being played as a modern 13-year-old, with that kind of sheltering, instead of as a girl who could reasonably be expected to start bearing children ASAP. That can't happen - Juliet needs to be a little more wordly to be believable, which is why I liked Claire Danes' performance.
Not to interrupt the Shakespeare fest, but...
PIIEEEEEE!!!
I am eating pumpkin pie. With whipped cream. At work. Work rocks.
Pie would cure my headache. I'm sure of it. Must find pie.
When come back, bring pie.
Oh, also --
So yeah. If you want to talk about gut-wrenching unrequited love or ugly ladies of the night with a bad case of the clap at your wedding, Shakespeare's sonnets are for you! Otherwise, not so much.
I feel like an uneducated hick for liking the sonnets.
I feel like an uneducated hick for liking the sonnets.
Why? They're chock-full of awesome language, burning passion, and they're travel-sized (as compared to The Rape Of Lucrece) - what's not to like?
I feel like an uneducated hick for not having read the sonnets. And reading maybe five of the plays, all told. I'm not counting the ones I used Cliffs Notes for.