The Tempest (version 2)
William Shakespeare
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Few plays have been seen as a more fitting conclusion to a playwright's career than Shakespeare's The Tempest. Focusing on the aging sorcerer and rightful Duke of Milan, Prospero, we are transported to a remote island where magic and strange music fill the air, and the monstrous slave Caliban roams in bitterness. Seeing an opportunity to restore his slandered name, Prospero conjures a mighty storm to bring down a ship containing his wicked brother and the King of Naples, both of whom had driven him out of Milan twelve years before. By stranding them on a remote end of the island, and with the help of the airy spirit Ariel, Prospero sets out to right the wrongs that had been done to him, before renouncing his magic forever. Featuring some of the most powerful speeches in Shakespeare's canon, and with an incredible grasp on tone and the Neoclassical unities of time, place and action, The Tempest remains a formidable and moving farewell to both the Bard and the timeless works he left behind.
And to perform it all? Three men (Craig Franklin, Tomas Peter, and Brad "Hamlet" Filippone) and one woman (Sonia), determined to give you a performance of Shakespeare's final work that you will never forget. You thought you knew your Shakespeare? Well, think again! - Summary by Tomas Peter
Craig Franklin: Narrator; Alonso; Gonzalo; Trinculo; Iris; Boatswain; Third Mariner.
Brad “Hamlet” Filippone: Prospero; Stephano; Adrian; Ship Master; Second Mariner.
Sonia: Miranda; Ariel; Antonio; Juno; First Mariner.
Tomas Peter: Caliban; Sebastian; Ferdinand; Francisco; Ceres; Fourth Mariner. (2 hr 25 min)
Chapters
Dramatis Personae | 2:11 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Act 1 | 39:17 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Act 2 | 33:56 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Act 3 | 25:49 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Act 4 | 19:12 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Act 5 | 25:03 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Reviews
loved it
ms.biblio
I really like the play it had everything one craves for in a play. the moral, as I'd like to put it is simple:: Live LAUGH and LOVE
Ai
Ai
close your eyes and imagine you are at the globe, for surely the only thing missing is a stage... absolutely brilliant!
Very enjoyable.
Bastet
The readers were great. They did an excellent job of giving each character a unique voice.
A LibriVox Listener
Every voice was amazing, I'd suggest to listen on a faster speed to avoid sleeping in between.
A LibriVox Listener
This text had the best diversity of voices and went at an understandable yet decent clip
Carolyn Lussier
fairly read. would love to have sound effects.