The First Soliloquy in Ian McKellen's Richard III
Ian McKellen begins his 1995 film of Richard III with the Lancasters' defeat and the murder of Prince Edward and his father Henry VI. After an opening title, we see the Yorks celebrating their victory: talking, laughing, dancing, and listening to Stacey Kent singing Christopher Marlowe's "Passionate Shepherd to His Love." As Kent finishes the song, we hear a squawk from another microphone as Richard prepares to speak. He delivers the first couplet—"Now is the winter of our discontent / Made glorious summer by this son of York"—and looks at his brother Edward. The crowd laughs at his wit and applauds his subsequent, triumphant lines.
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Your comment also makes me think:
(1) Shakespeare must have had the passage in mind when he gave us Richard sitting on the throne, asking the page if he knows a good murderer. A throne stands in for a toilet—what's that about?
(2) Has any director has followed More and set part of 4.2 in a bathroom?