Skip to Store Area:

My Cart

You have no items in your shopping cart.

 

Information to all our lovely Drama teachers, school finance departments, customers, parents, and students:

We are just in the process of updating our website. However, for now, please continue to place orders via this website, or you can email us on sales@ehdltd.co.uk to discuss your individual requirements, and you'll hopefully see our new site and products soon!

More Views

As You Like It

Availability: In stock.

£7.99

Quick Overview

Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Penguin Classics (30 April 2015)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 014139627X
ISBN-13: 978-0141396279
Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 1.3 x 19.8 cm


William Shakespeare's exuberant comedy As You Like It is his playful take on the Renaissance tradition of pastoral romance, edited by H.J. Oliver with an introduction by Katherine Duncan-Jones.

'All the world's a stage,

And all the men and women merely players'

When Rosalind is banished by her uncle Duke Frederick, who has usurped her father's throne, she flees to the forest of Arden where her exiled father holds court. There, dressed as a boy to avoid discovery, she encounters the man she loves - Orlando, similarly forced into exile by his older brother Oliver - and resolves to remain in disguise to test his feelings or her. A gloriously sunny comedy, As You Like It is an exuberant combination of concealed identities and verbal jousting, reconciliations and multiple weddings.

This book contains a general introduction to Shakespeare's life and Elizabethan theatre, a separate introduction to As You Like It, a chronology, suggestions for further reading, an essay discussing performance options on both stage and screen, and a commentary.

William Shakespeare (1564-1616) was born to John Shakespeare and Mary Arden some time in late April 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon. He wrote about 38 plays (the precise number is uncertain), many of which are regarded as the most exceptional works of drama ever produced, including Romeo and Juliet (1595), Henry V (1599), Hamlet (1601), Othello (1604), King Lear (1606) and Macbeth (1606), as well as a collection of 154 sonnets, which number among the most profound and influential love-poetry in English.