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Reviews for The Lottery

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The average rating for The Lottery based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2008-12-09 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 5 stars Mark Boback
This strange, lumpy drama is oddly effective in its own discursive way, and I would highly recommend it to anyone who loves Elizabethan theatre in general or Hamlet in particular or who is fascinated by the theme of revenge. The exposition (political rivalry between Spain and Portugal, events leading up to Horatio's murder) is well executed, but after that Kyd's passion for powerful effect (particularly in Hieronimo's mad scenes) overshadows and occasionally confounds coherent plot development. Who in the court knows Horatio has been murdered and when do they know it? Clear answers to these questions might have clarified motivations and illuminated dialogue--both of which are occasionally baffling. Yet the individual scenes--Hieronimo discovering his son hanging in the garden, Hieronimo and the painter, Hieronomo with a book, Hieronimo surrounded by legal suitors, Hieronimo's direction of the play-within-a-play--are all very powerful and make reading the play worthwhile. In addition, the influences of "The Spanish Tragedy" on Hamlet are many, and it is fun to spot them as they arise.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-03-08 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars George Colindres
An arranged marriage between the Spanish king's niece, Bel-Imperia, and the Portuguese viceroy's son, Balthazar, brings an end to a war between Spain and Portugal. However, Lorenzo, Bel-Imperia's brother, is outraged when he discovers she loves Horatio, the Spanish Marshall's son. With Balthazar, Lorenzo plots to make things right, it involves murder. Lorenzo is cunning and lies easily, ready to cross anyone who gets in his way, but he's unaware a Ghost of a man who was murdered is waiting and watching with Revenge. The Spanish Tragedy is written by Thomas Kyd, a contemporary of Shakespeare and who wrote this play roughly one and half decades before Shakespeare's Hamlet is performed. Some refer to this as the lost Ur-Hamlet play. Reading it, I can understand why as there are a lot of similarities aside from the revenge tragedy. Both plays have a play in a play, in Hamlet it's to prod a king's guilty conscience, in The Spanish Tragedy it's to expose a big lie and highlight a murder. Both plays have a character who is perceived by others to be losing their mind, in Hamlet it's Hamlet, in The Spanish Tragedy it's Heironimo, Lorenzo's father. In both, these scenes provide a comical break from the dramatic tension. The character Hamlet and Heironimo are both driving the action by plotting vengeance on the ones who robbed them of a loved one with murder. Like Hamlet, death runs hand in hand with revenge with a big body count at the end. What makes this different from Hamlet is Kyd faintly structures it like a Greek drama, where the scenes with Ghost and Revenge are a chorus that bridge the action. Kyd also personifies revenge, not letting the reader/viewer forget what's behind the fate of those who've done wrong. I liked reading Hamlet but some of the main characters came across as a function to help Hamlet move the action of the play along, in The Spanish Tragedy this responsibility is distributed between several characters. I thought this made the characters rounder making the drama stronger. I also found Kyd's scene with how the play in a play was being watched realer. But what I liked the most about this play, aside from the language and its poetry, is the fusion of Elizabethan and Greek tragedy. Just thinking about it it sounds strange but in this play it works and works brilliantly. It was good to finally read this play.


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