00:00Ma se io vi dicessi che Shakespeare non ha mai scritto una sola parola?
00:09For me what's important is that someone wrote these works.
00:13Nobody knows.
00:14So we owe it to the person who did write these works to ask the question.
00:21Allora che scritto Amleto?
00:23It may or may not be Edward De Vere,
00:24but it would be wrong of us to assume that it was one or the other.
00:31We have to ask this question because then we can look at the plays differently
00:35and understand them in a different way and revisit them.
00:38And that's been their power for centuries.
00:41If they weren't great, we wouldn't have made this film.
00:44Nel mio mondo non si scrivono commedie, lo fa gente come voi.
00:48You know, some writers want to write.
00:50Shakespeare, or De Vere, was someone who needed to, who had to.
00:57It was a physical response to the world, which is why he was so prolific.
01:03It was a possession, almost, a spiritual possession,
01:09which must be thrilling and insane at the same time.
01:18You know, a form of madness, I would say, you know, like extreme schizophrenia.
01:27Why can't I change the world with the words?
01:30Absolutely, I think all art can and should be political.
01:35Then it would have been very powerful because, you know,
01:39the populace was largely illiterate.
01:42So the only source of new ideas or new information or discussion,
01:48it wouldn't have happened in the church.
01:50The church was so autocratic and corrupt at the time.
01:54So the theater would have been the only place.
01:56And that's why, of course, the theaters were burnt to the ground several times.
02:01And I think, you know, the theater then would have had the power
02:04that the internet has now.
02:07Promettimi di mantenere il nostro segreto.
02:09Promettimi di nenorale il nostro segreto.
02:12жизнь di
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