My loyal readers know that I regularly watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. His monologues are hilarious. As a non-English speaker, I often have to think long and hard before I understand a pun.
After his solo performance, Stephen welcomes guests, and that's when I usually switch off.
Ian: Shakespeare wrote many plays, 37 of them, by himself, but he also contributed to other people's shows. And one of the speeches he wrote for a play called Thomas More has been preserved. And it’s the only sample of his actual handwriting of some of the words of a play by him. And it’s not in the Fuller library. It’s in the British library you can see it. It’s on display there in London.
And hark. On December 23 last year, I published a blog post that drew only mediocre interest from my readers. The blog addressed the Thomas More manuscript by William Shakespeare that I read in 2015 and had since forgotten.
Ian McKellen continued: And it happened that the play was never performed during Shakespeare’s lifetime because it was thought to be a bit seditious.
It had its actual premiere on stage in 1964. It was the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s birth, and I played Thomas More. So you are looking at a man who created a part by William Shakespeare.
Stephen: So this is handwritten. They know this is his handwriting of this monologue that you did ...
Ian: ... of a speech you probably don’t know but you ought to because it’s a wonderful speech.
Stephen: I don’t know that. Would you mind? Would you mind doing it for us?
Ian: No, I wouldn’t. I wouldn’t mind because you’ll enjoy it. All right. Live Theatre.
Stephen: What’s the setting?
Ian: It’s all happening 400 years ago and in London. There’s a riot happening, there’s a mob out in the streets, and they’re complaining about the presence of strangers in London, by which they mean the recent immigrants who arrived there. And they’re shouting the odds and complaining, and saying that the immigrants should be sent back home wherever they came from. And the authorities sent out this young lawyer, Thomas More, to put down the riot, which he does in two ways, one by saying that you can’t riot like this. It’s against the law. So shut up, be quiet, and also being by Shakespeare with an appeal to their humanity. So, in order to set it up, we really need somebody to shout that the strangers should be removed. Could someone do that?
And the audience shouts: The strangers be removed!
Because of the present situation in the ICE age, Ian McKellen’s performance went viral online. Here is a DEEP DIVE helping native speakers with Shakespeare’s English.
Stephen: I don’t know that. Would you mind? Would you mind doing it for us?
Ian: No, I wouldn’t. I wouldn’t mind because you’ll enjoy it. All right. Live Theatre.
Stephen: What’s the setting?
Ian: It’s all happening 400 years ago and in London. There’s a riot happening, there’s a mob out in the streets, and they’re complaining about the presence of strangers in London, by which they mean the recent immigrants who arrived there. And they’re shouting the odds and complaining, and saying that the immigrants should be sent back home wherever they came from. And the authorities sent out this young lawyer, Thomas More, to put down the riot, which he does in two ways, one by saying that you can’t riot like this. It’s against the law. So shut up, be quiet, and also being by Shakespeare with an appeal to their humanity. So, in order to set it up, we really need somebody to shout that the strangers should be removed. Could someone do that?
And the audience shouts: The strangers be removed!
Because of the present situation in the ICE age, Ian McKellen’s performance went viral online. Here is a DEEP DIVE helping native speakers with Shakespeare’s English.
And finally, here is the whole 26-minute interview with Ian McKellen.
**











































