20,000+ Professional Language Experts Ready to Help. Expertise in a variety of Niches.
Unmatched expertise at affordable rates tailored for your needs. Our services empower you to boost your productivity.
GoTranscript is the chosen service for top media organizations, universities, and Fortune 50 companies.
Speed Up Research, 10% Discount
Ensure Compliance, Secure Confidentiality
Court-Ready Transcriptions
HIPAA-Compliant Accuracy
Boost your revenue
Streamline Your Team’s Communication
We're with you from start to finish, whether you're a first-time user or a long-time client.
Give Support a Call
+1 (831) 222-8398
Get a reply & call within 24 hours
Let's chat about how to work together
Direct line to our Head of Sales for bulk/API inquiries
Question about your orders with GoTranscript?
Ask any general questions about GoTranscript
Interested in working at GoTranscript?
Speaker 1: The Public Theater's production of Julius Caesar in New York uses the words written by playwright William Shakespeare 400 years ago. The difference is the actor playing Julius Caesar looks a lot like President Donald Trump. And as anyone familiar with Shakespeare's play knows, Caesar is killed in Act III by senators who fear he had become too power-hungry. Laura Schaeffer has attended Public Theater's free Shakespeare plays in New York City's Central Park for years. But she objected to seeing a character looking like Trump covered with blood in the assassination scene. As he dies, the actor delivers one of Shakespeare's most famous lines, et tu, Brute, meant to show Caesar's surprise that his good friend Brutus joined his killing. Schaeffer says, I don't love President Trump, but he's the president. You can't assassinate him on a stage. Her comments on a radio program brought more criticism to the play. Two Public Theater sponsors, Delta Airlines and Bank of America, responded by cutting funds to support the Public Theater. No matter what your political stance may be, the graphic staging of Julius Caesar at this summer's free Shakespeare in the park does not reflect Delta Airlines' values. Delta says in a statement, The Public Theater, which began performing plays nearly 60 years ago, defends the production. It notes the play has led to heated discussions. But it says that is exactly the goal of Public Theater. Charlotte Canning is a drama professor at the University of Texas at Austin. Canning says the criticism would be understandable if the play suggests violence is acceptable. But what the play does is show how awful violence is, she says. And things don't work out so well for those who carry out Caesar's killing. Act 5 ends with Brutus killing himself with his own sword. Canning also notes that a recent production of Julius Caesar in Minnesota included a Caesar character that looked like former President Barack Obama. But the play did not draw the same criticism as the New York production. Robert Thompson is a professor at Syracuse University and an expert on popular culture. He says the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment guarantee of free speech means critics of the Julius Caesar production cannot shut it down. But the issues raised by the production are complicated. Thompson wonders if the same message about the corrupting influences of power could be made without making Julius Caesar look like Donald Trump. In the play, Caesar's wife speaks with a Slavic accent, just like Trump's wife, Melania. On the other hand, Thompson says Shakespeare's plays are sometimes difficult for modern theater audiences to understand. And making Caesar look like Trump makes the connections to political power more apparent. Lawrence Maslon is the deputy director of New York University's Graduate Acting Program. He says no one should be surprised that a play by New York's public theater might be controversial. Maslon says that one of public theater's first shows, The Rock Musical Hair in 1967, drew heavy criticism. At issue were scenes with performers with no clothing and a scene in which young people burned draft cards to protest the Vietnam War. The public theater is not the Little Red Riding Hood children's theater, Maslon says. In other words, the theater produces plays on serious issues for adults and not children. According to New York Times theater critic Jesse Green, only three words were changed from Shakespeare's original script in the public theater production. The production added three words on Fifth Avenue to Shakespeare's line, If Caesar had stabbed their mothers, they would have done no less. That line goes back to Trump's successful run for president when he said, I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose any voters. Donald Trump Jr., the president's son, tweeted his objections to the Julius Caesar production. I wonder how much of this art is funded by taxpayers. This question, when does art become political speech and does that change things? The National Endowment for the Arts, which Trump wants to eliminate under his budget proposal, says it did not fund the production. I'm Brian Lynn.
Generate a brief summary highlighting the main points of the transcript.
GenerateGenerate a concise and relevant title for the transcript based on the main themes and content discussed.
GenerateIdentify and highlight the key words or phrases most relevant to the content of the transcript.
GenerateAnalyze the emotional tone of the transcript to determine whether the sentiment is positive, negative, or neutral.
GenerateCreate interactive quizzes based on the content of the transcript to test comprehension or engage users.
GenerateWe’re Ready to Help
Call or Book a Meeting Now