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Dr. Andrew Doyle

Dr. Andrew Doyle

Writer

Dr. Andrew Doyle

Dr. Andrew Doyle

Writer

The Shakespearean Comedies

In The Shakespearean Comedies, a nine-hour course, Dr. Andrew Doyle guides us through eight lectures on Shakespeare's comedies, exploring how they remain relevant centuries later through their blend of high and low art, universal human traits, and masterful language that transcends genre boundaries. We examine major works—including The Merry Wives of Windsor, The Comedy of Errors, Love's Labour's Lost, The Taming of the Shrew, Much Ado About Nothing, As You Like It, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Merchant of Venice, and Twelfth Night—discovering how Shakespeare infuses even his lightest comedies with emotion, wit, and psychological depth. The course highlights his remarkable character development, linguistic mastery, and ability to combine humor with insight into the human condition.

Lectures

  • The Comic Shakespeare

    1. The Comic Shakespeare

    In our introductory lecture, Dr. Andrew Doyle presents us with the world of Shakespeare's comedies, exploring why they remain funny and relevant despite being centuries old. We examine how Shakespeare blends high and low art, ignores strict genre boundaries, and creates characters with universal human traits that transcend time. The lecture concludes by highlighting Falstaff as Shakespeare's greatest comic creation, embodying the playwright's genius. He forms characters who are fully alive and self-aware, demonstrating that while specific jokes may age, human folly remains eternally recognizable.

  • Merry Wives & Comedy of Errors

    2. Merry Wives & Comedy of Errors

    In lecture two, we explore two of Shakespeare's farcical comedies: The Merry Wives of Windsor and The Comedy of Errors. Dr. Doyle explains how The Merry Wives features a "pseudo-Falstaff" who lacks the wit of his earlier incarnation, while The Comedy of Errors plays with twin identities and unexpected dangers amidst the comedic chaos. The lecture highlights Shakespeare's ability to transcend genre conventions by infusing even his lightest comedies with moments of authentic emotion and ominous undertones.

  • Love's Labour's Lost

    3. Love's Labour's Lost

    In lecture three, we study Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost, examining how the play explores courtship rituals, the absurdity of sex, and the transformative power of desire. We analyze Shakespeare's masterful use of language, including his elaborate wordplay, rhetorical devices, and sexual puns, which reflect Elizabethan linguistic sensibilities while revealing how love simultaneously degrades and elevates us. The lecture concludes by discussing the play's unusual ending, where the intrusion of death transforms the comedic tone, postponing marriages and highlighting the collision between romantic ideals and stark reality.

  • Taming of the Shrew & Much Ado

    4. Taming of the Shrew & Much Ado

    In lecture four, we further analyze Shakespeare's comedic mastery through The Taming of the Shrew and Much Ado About Nothing, focusing on combative couples whose verbal sparring masks deeper attraction, while addressing modern concerns about gender and power. We trace Shakespeare’s development from the farce of Petruchio and Katherina to the sharper wit of his later couples, showing his evolution as a playwright who uses comedy to explore complex human relationships. The lecture concludes by examining key dramatic moments, showcasing Shakespeare's ability to blend comedy with psychological realism.

  • As You Like It

    5. As You Like It

    In lecture five, we evaluate Shakespeare's As You Like It as the quintessential pastoral comedy, exploring how it both celebrates and satirizes the idealized rural escape from civilization's constraints. We examine how Shakespeare transforms the popular pastoral tradition by adding complexity through mirrored brotherly conflicts, multiple satirical perspectives, and Rosalind's remarkable self-awareness that allows her to both mock and embrace love's absurdities. Dr. Doyle concludes by highlighting Shakespeare's deliberate use of improbability to create a dream-like world that, despite its unreality, draws us in completely.

  • Two Gentlemen & Midsummer Night's

    6. Two Gentlemen & Midsummer Night's

    In lecture six, we witness love, friendship, and folly in Shakespeare's comedies through the medieval tale of Aristotle and Phyllis, showing how even the wisest can be made fools by desire. We examine The Two Gentlemen of Verona and its controversial ending, where male friendship outweighs romantic love, and consider how this early play shaped themes Shakespeare perfected later. The discussion then shifts to A Midsummer Night's Dream, where supernatural intervention and parallel plots dramatize love's irrationality and invite audiences to embrace theatrical illusion as willingly as lovers embrace their whims.

  • The Merchant of Venice

    7. The Merchant of Venice

    In lecture seven, Dr. Doyle contrasts Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice as a response to Marlowe's The Jew of Malta, transforming a simplistic anti-Semitic caricature into the complex, morally ambiguous Shylock. The play probes appearance versus reality, exposing Christian hypocrisy while complicating anti-Semitic tropes—from Shylock’s humanity and desire for revenge to the forced conversion that reveals the Christians’ vindictiveness. Ultimately, it leaves us questioning the gap between outward show and true character, showing how justice, mercy, and virtue can be obscured, and how its moral complexity allows for multiple interpretations.

  • Twelfth Night

    8. Twelfth Night

    In our eighth and final lecture, we reflect on Shakespeare's Twelfth Night as a fusion of form and matter, where Shakespeare’s language aspires to “the condition of music” and rhythm mirrors desire itself. We examine mistaken identities, idealized love, and social ambition, and consider Malvolio’s cruel trickery, which transforms comedy into unsettling moral ambiguity. The play ultimately showcases Shakespeare’s genius in complicating the comic form, leaving audiences to reflect on human folly, longing, and the uneasy tension between laughter and discomfort.

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