Page 164«..1020..161162163164

Category Archives: Brexit

How Kronborg Castle helped to inspire Shakespeare | Latest Brexit news and top stories – The New European

Posted: May 2, 2020 at 2:47 pm

PUBLISHED: 21:49 29 April 2020 | UPDATED: 21:49 29 April 2020

Charlie Connelly

An aerial image of Kronborg Castle, Helsingr (Photo by Blom UK via Getty Images)

2010 Blom UK

Email this article to a friend

To send a link to this page you must be logged in.

Become a Supporter

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only continue to grow with your support.

We all have little jobs around the house that weve planning to get around to for years in some cases. One of mine was going through a big box of old DVDs that needed sorting out and last week it took a global pandemic for me to finally sit cross-legged on the floor and get thoroughly stuck in at last.

In the middle of matching loose discs to their correct cases I came across one orphan with no identifying marks. Slipping it into the player I closed the drawer and pressed play, at which the television screen, from which I was sitting no more than four feet, was suddenly filled completely by my own stupid face. I reeled backwards and let out a yelp that brought my wife running in from the other room.

When this understandable alarm had diminished to manageable proportions I realised to my disappointment this wasnt some kind of time-travelling message from a future me assuring us of a post-virus world of greater European unity and a government with a philosophy based on kindness and tolerance. Instead it was a film Id presented for the BBC about 15 years ago on the subject of literary Denmark.

A prime-time series that profiled nice places to go seems even further off now than it ever did, but there it was on the screen so that kind of thing definitely happened in the olden days, a prelapsarian era when people didnt only leave their homes at will but went to places that werent the supermarket. Good times.

We sat and watched, taunted by the younger me driving around Zealand babbling about Hans Christian Andersen then parking my behind on Karen Blixens writing chair as if driving around, babbling and sitting on other peoples chairs was the most natural thing in the world.

One part of the film in particular invoked a particularly profound sense of yearning, especially this week marking the anniversary of Shakespeares birth and death. Kronborg Castle sits on a nipple of land on the eastern coast of Zealand, looking out across the resund strait towards the Swedish town of Helsingborg thats so close you can see traffic moving along the opposite shore. Its a perfect castle location at the narrowest point of the strait, and at the height of Danish military power in the late 16th century Frederick II had turned it into a formidable fortress that exacted lucrative tolls on all shipping going in and out of the Baltic Sea. Its a combination of beautiful Renaissance architectural flourishes turrets in three corners with ornate copper roofs that have gone bright green with age and a forbidding military structure of considerable size that from the water must look absolutely impregnable.

The reason I was there and babbling on screen was that Kronborg is also the setting for Hamlet. Helsingr, the Danish town that huddles behind its military protector, is the Elsinore of the play, estimated to have been written by the Bard at the dawn of the 17th century.

Watching myself wandering around the castle led me to a thought process free of social isolation to some of the Shakespeare locations Ive visited over the years. Theres the house in Stratford-upon-Avon in which he was born, of course, and visiting his grave inside the parish church was an experience I found more moving than I expected. Ordinarily both these sites of literary pilgrimage would be absolutely packed this week, but possibly for the first time since the Shakespeare revival started in earnest during the late 18th century they will be padlocked and deserted, empty like the painting of a sorrow, a face without a heart described by Claudius to Laertes in Hamlet.

I thought too of some the productions Ive seen, from a magical rendering of A Midsummer Nights Dream in the perfect setting of Regents Park Open Air Theatre to an RSC production of The Merry Wives of Windsor at Stratford-upon-Avon a couple of years ago that contained enough anti-Brexit asides to recruit the Bard firmly to the Remain cause.

And a Remainer he would certainly have been. Like every jobbing actor and playwright of the period worth their salt, Shakespeare worked with one eye permanently on the rest of Europe. The companies of the day earned as much of their corn touring abroad as they did treading the boards at home. There are frustratingly large gaps in what we know of Shakespeares life, long periods in which we have no idea where he was or what he was doing. Its likely that, certainly in his younger days, he spent chunks of that time trundling around the continent with a bunch of other actors in a cart loaded with props, costumes and bits of scenery.

English performers were hugely popular on the continent in Shakespeares day. Indeed the first theatre ever built in Poland, in Danzig around 1600, was designed specifically to accommodate English touring companies. It became part of a well-trodden circuit that encompassed what are now Czech and German lands, the Baltics and Scandinavia including Kronborg.

Well never know if Shakespeare actually showed up at Kronborg but the references in Hamlet have just enough detail to suggest detailed knowledge of the place, even if it wasnt the man himself who was able to provide it.

On the day I visited I was able to walk the outer ramparts where in the opening scene of Hamlet the ghost of the princes murdered father Claudius spooks the guards and sets in train the events of the play. I stood beneath the windows of the apartments constructed for the use of the royal family, where Claudius would have lingered and died. I poked my head into the chapel where Claudius prayed before confronting his queen and Hamlets mother Gertrude.

I strolled through the banqueting hall in which ancient tapestries hung, one of which could well have been the arras behind which Ophelias father Polonius met his end (watching the DVD confirmed that the poor old Polonius, eh? Stabbed in the arras line I introduced to the script was cut for the broadcast even though I delivered it perfectly after jumping out from behind what might have been the actual arras). And I walked through the courtyard with Karen, the woman then in charge of the annual performances of Hamlet that take place right there, in the open air, on the very spot Shakespeare had in mind when he wrote the play more than 400 years ago. Ghosts of some of the greatest actors in the world flit around here, soliloquising and dilly-dallying, making everything in the courtyard feel like a play within a play.

If we dont know whether Shakespeare actually visited Kronborg we can be sure that three people he knew very well definitely did. In 1586 the castle had just been extensively modernised by Frederick II and that year three English actors arrived, engaged for the summer to mark the fortresss rebirth at the request of the Danish ambassador to London. They were Will Kempe, George Bryan and Thomas Pope, known associates of Shakespeare, when all four were part of the Lord Chamberlains Men troupe, to the extent that the Bard even wrote roles with Kempe specifically in mind. Hence when he came to write Hamlet, modernising an ancient tale just after the castle itself had been modernised, and set it at Kronborg, Shakespeare had expert location knowledge to call on even if he hadnt seen the place for himself.

The annual performances at the castle have attracted some of the biggest names in the acting profession. Hamlet is a role to which every actor aspires, but the chance to play the prince in the intended setting of the play has proved intoxicating to leading men from many different countries. The first performance took place in 1816. It was two years after Britain and Denmark had signed a peace treaty towards the end of the Napoleonic Wars and happened also to be the bicentenary of the playwrights death.

Danish soldiers garrisoned at Kronborg staged the play, with a young lieutenant named Nicolai Peter Nielsen in the title role who would go on to be one of Denmarks finest actors after he left the army. This was no knockabout version either: a special prologue was written for the occasion by the poet Adam Oehlenschlger that concluded, Here Hamlet is played; outside on the terrace path the spirit itself walks by.

The current tradition began in 1937, when the Old Vic company came over from London, a production directed by Tyrone Guthrie with Laurence Olivier as Hamlet and Viven Leigh as Ophelia (and an up and coming 23-year-old called Alec Guinness as Osric). The first night was washed out by rain and transferred to a nearby ballroom but the following evening the sun shone and 2,500 people witnessed a performance from Olivier that had the man from the Times declaring, When Hamlet came out it was indeed as if time had for the moment got out of step with reality.

The following year saw a German production starring the great German actor Gustaf Grndgens in a performance attended by Hermann Gring, who happened to be holidaying nearby on his yacht. But in 1939, as the shadow of war loomed over Europe, John Gielgud arrived to a fusillade of cannon and a brass band playing Its a Long Way to Tipperary with Fay Compton leaving her sick bed in London to play Ophelia.

Karen Blixen was in the audience. Between the acts, I went backstage on the Bastion and smoked a cigarette with Hamlet in his long cape, she wrote afterwards. The evening was so clear and full of stars I might have really entered Shakespeares world.

Since then a succession of household names have played the Dane at Elsinore including Richard Burton, Derek Jacobi, Kenneth Branagh, Simon Russell Beale and Jude Law. A BBC production was filmed there in 1964 to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeares birth, directed by Philip Saville with Christopher Plummer as Hamlet and Michael Caine as Horatio.

Companies from across Europe and beyond have staged Hamlet at Kronborg, above the dreadful summit of the cliff that beetles oer his base into the sea which is not, in truth, that dreadful a summit but hey, Shakespeare wasnt writing a documentary. The roster of Hamlets reminds us of better times, of European integration and the ability we take for granted to wander across continents. What better time to appreciate them than in the week marking the beginning and the end of the life of Shakespeare, the European?

They should still have left my arras joke in, though. Philistines.

Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.

Go here to see the original:

How Kronborg Castle helped to inspire Shakespeare | Latest Brexit news and top stories - The New European

Posted in Brexit | Comments Off on How Kronborg Castle helped to inspire Shakespeare | Latest Brexit news and top stories – The New European

Brexit: EU Trade Talks Could Collapse in June over Fishing, Regulations – Breitbart

Posted: at 2:47 pm

Negotiating sources on both sides of the English Channel have admitted that UK-EU trade talks could collapse in June over fishing and regulations.

The British government revealed in February that if sufficient progress is not made on a trade deal with the EU by June, then Londons negotiators would pull out of talks and the government would spend the rest of the transition period preparing to move the UK onto World Trade Organization (WTO) terms with the bloc.

Following the two parties recommencing negotiations since the coronavirus, one British source told The Times:If they [the EU] continue to insist on their position on a so-called level playing field and on continuing the common fisheries policy, for example, we are never going to accept that.

The level playing field relates to the European Commissions position that the UK must continue to abide by regulations on the environment, taxation, and government subsidies so that Brexit Britain does not represent a competitive risk to the EU.

The EUs chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said last week that the UK could not both refuse to extend the transition period and refuse to surrender on regulatory alignment and fishing. The EU demands that France and other member-states have continued access to Britains lucrative fishing waters.

Sources speaking to The Telegraph have said that the EU wants the existing conditions set out by the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) maintained. EU fishermen currently have rights to access more than 60 per cent of all landings by weight in British waters. By fish, the quota varies, however, with the French getting 84 per cent of English Channel cod compared to the UKs paltry nine per cent.

The UKs source told the newspaper that unless the EU shifted on fishing demands, negotiations would be over by the summer.

There are some fundamentals that were not going to change, nor going to move on. Because they are not so much negotiating positions as theyre sort of what an independent state does, the source told The Telegraph.

An independent state has independent control over coastal waters what we are wanting now is an EU understanding that we are not going to subordinate our laws to them in any areas, they added.

The source said that if the EU does not submit to the UK sovereign rights, then preparing for a WTO relationship will become the primary focus of effort.

However, one of the governments senior ministers admitted that the UK is not working on any contingency arrangements for a WTO relationship, weakening the UKs negotiating hand in revealing that the government is not serious in preparing the country to be a fully independent nation.

Michael Gove had said on Monday:We dont have any plans to stand up operation Yellowhammer [government no-deal planning] again because we are confident we will secure an agreement.

Brussels interpretation of Mr Goves remarks was unsurprising, with one diplomat confident that the UK will blink first.

The diplomatic source told The Guardian:If No 10 doesnt change its negotiating approach, we will very likely be looking at a no-deal scenario. So we take this statement [on the positive chances of a deal by Michael Gove] as a welcome sign that the UK will change its negotiating stance.

Continued here:

Brexit: EU Trade Talks Could Collapse in June over Fishing, Regulations - Breitbart

Posted in Brexit | Comments Off on Brexit: EU Trade Talks Could Collapse in June over Fishing, Regulations – Breitbart

Coronavirus lockdown: Brexit talks could be eased with informal Zoom drinks over video conference – inews

Posted: at 2:46 pm

NewsPoliticsBrexitSources say lack of informal talks during negotiations has become a major downside

Thursday, 30th April 2020, 3:45 pm

Trade discussions between Westminster and Brussels have been continuing despite the social distancing restrictions using the video conferencing platform Zoom.

The i politics newsletter cut through the noise

The i politics newsletter cut through the noise

The latest round of negotiations took place last week, ending in a fresh impasse, with both sides demanding compromise or risk the talks collapsing entirely.

Brexit quarantinis?

One UK source close to the talks said part of the problem was the inability of either party to go for informal coffees or drinks at the side of the negotiating table, to try and forge a way forward.

The insider stated there were pros and cons to having to conduct the negotiations over Zoom, with one major advantage that there was no need to have large numbers of people hanging around waiting to be involved in their specific area.

But the source added the downside is you cant take people off for a coffee and have those informal discussions alongside the formal talks.

"We will have to be tolerant of each other, what is more difficult is replicating the atmospherics," the source said.

Socialising via video conference has become a common pastime for people across the globe during the pandemic crisis, with some even arranging virtual pub quizzes.

Asked whether both sides could try to replicate informal talks by having "virtual drinks after work" to ease the tension in the negotiations, the senior UK source said: "We havent planned anything like that yet to have informal discussions. I dont see any reason why we shouldnt do it, we are all inventing new ways of doing it."

Concentrate minds

The source quipped: I am always willing to have a drink with anybody.

Much of Boris Johnsons success in securing a Brexit divorce deal last October has been attributed to his decision to hold informal discussions with the Taosieach Leo Varadkar on the Wirral.

Earlier this week, Michael Gove suggested to MPs that the Covid-19 outbreak could increase the chances of the UK sealing a trade agreement with Brussels, claiming it may concentrate the minds of EU negotiators.

See the original post here:

Coronavirus lockdown: Brexit talks could be eased with informal Zoom drinks over video conference - inews

Posted in Brexit | Comments Off on Coronavirus lockdown: Brexit talks could be eased with informal Zoom drinks over video conference – inews

Government should stop grandstanding over Brexit | London Business News – London Loves Business

Posted: at 2:46 pm

Extending the Brexit transition period would provide much needed reassurance to the economy, say leading tax and advisory firmBlickRothenberg.

David Hough, a business advisory partner at the firm said: It is disappointing that the Government are refusing to countenance extending the deadline for a trade deal beyond the current deadline of 31 December.

He added: Both the UK and the EU have more pressing concerns at this time and extending the Transition period,ideallyfor at least a year, would provide some much-needed reassurance to the economy, and just as importantly allow Government to focus on matters currently at hand.

The Government may well ultimately secure a good trade deal but now is not the time for grandstanding.Business needsreassurance now as it contemplates how to come out of the lock down.

Hough said: For the last few weeks business owners have been working out how to address the immediate challenges they were facing of generating short term cash flow and finding the best way to look after as many employees as they can.

He added: The risk of a second peak later in the year should not be discounted and the ability, and means, to negotiate a trade deal would be significantly impacted by this if the UK has allowed 1 July 2020, the date an extension has to be legislated, to pass.

Allowing for the time required for approvals by the UK and EU States that means that an extension needs to be agreed in principle by probably no later than the end of May.

Hough said: The reassurance that an extension would bring is important because certainty improves the quality of forecasting which makes lenders and investors more willing to part with their money, giving businesses the platform to trade with confidence rather than simply trading to survive.

This will be crucial in re-igniting the economy and to reduce the reliance on Government grants.

Read more here:

Government should stop grandstanding over Brexit | London Business News - London Loves Business

Posted in Brexit | Comments Off on Government should stop grandstanding over Brexit | London Business News – London Loves Business

Page 164«..1020..161162163164