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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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locking, as she stands across the stage from Orlando when she is upset. Her anger is seen in the distance<br />

that she maintains from Orlando. When he steps forward to be near her, she moves across the stage to get<br />

away from him. After telling him that he would not die from being in love, they are close and they touch,<br />

but she snatches her hands away from him and stuffs them in her pockets and walks about like she is trying<br />

to return to her masculine ways. She again moves clear across the stage because Orlando tells her that he<br />

must leave. These things indicate that love transformed her, that she is freed from any restrictions of the<br />

court, and that she is not afraid to express herself.<br />

McAnuff’s production of Shakespeare’s As You Like It gives rise to the development of Rosalind’s<br />

character. Although she begins as a fearful, dependent woman, she blossoms through the experiences that<br />

she has in the forest, particularly those with Orlando. This growth is noted in the changes that occur with<br />

Rosalind’s costume and mannerisms on stage. The love that she finds in Orlando is believed to have opened<br />

her up to a world where she is free to think for herself, for after her meetings with him she is full of<br />

confidence. The audience is able to see that she will not let others control who she is and that she is quite<br />

capable of making decisions for herself and even others in the forest. The Rosalind that McAnuff creates is<br />

one of a women finding strength in love after living under a repressive regime.<br />

Works Cited<br />

As You Like It. By William Shakespeare. Dir. Des McAnuff. Stratford Festival Theater,<br />

Stratford, Canada, 12 Oct 2010.<br />

Shakespeare, William. As You Like It. Barron’s Educational Series: Hauppauge, NY, 2009.<br />

395

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