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February 10, 2012
Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo: The biblical case against small-mindedness involved diminishing His precious prophet
Caroline B. Glick: The Peace Process is over. Finally
Lisa M. Krieger: Man with defibrillator demands access to his own heart's information
David G. Savage: Why activists may not be in a hurry to have High Court rule on alternative marriage
Rachel Koning Beals: Gen X Women Continue to Shrink Gender Investing Gap
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand: Who Says You Can't Make Restaurant Favorites at Home?: MANGO AND STICKY RICE
February 9, 2012
Jeff Strickler: An argument a day keeps the divorce away, they say
Clifford D. May: CAIR's Crusade against The Third Jihad
Melissa Healy: Study finds jolt to the brain boosts memory
Laura McMullen: 10 Least Expensive Public Schools for Out-of-State Students
Kimberly Palmer: How to actually enjoy -- relaxing, financially -- your vacation
Emily Brandon: 10 Necessities for a Great Retirement Spot
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Winter Squash and Red Swiss Chard Risotto is Colorful Cozy Cold Weather Fare (includes detailed dos and don'ts)
February 8, 2012
Rivy Poupko Kletenik: Tree hostility: The auspicious history of the evolution of Tu B'Shevat
Steven Emerson: Planting Trees is Racist?!
Warren Richey: Why momentous Prop. 8 ruling might not satisfy gay-rights groups
Anne Applebaum: Russia's Potemkin democracy
Menachem Wecker: Though Controversial, LL.M.'s Can Lead to Specialized Legal Jobs
Emily Brandon: 10 Necessities for a Great Retirement Spot
The Kosher Gourmet byDana Velden: Going to the bother of making soup? You know it better be good. This CREAM OF TOMATO SOUP certainly is! And it's a cinch to make, too (Includes techinques and serving secrets)
February 7, 2012
Kathleen Hennessey and Christi Parsons: Obama not worried that birth-control move will hurt his re-election chances with Catholics, other faithful
Caroline B. Glick: Obama's rhetorical storm
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.: Caught off-guard? President's Super Bowl interview with Matt Lauer gives those who need a reason not to vote for him, a darn good one
Suzanne Bohan: Leaping lizards! Tiny reptiles advancing robot design
David Francis: How to Avoid an IRS Audit
The Kosher Gourmet by Emma Christensen: These homemade energy bars (3 recipes) are far better workout fuel than commercial ones, packing power and taste
February 6, 2012
Scott Peterson: Iran's top ayatollah: We're trumping the West
Jonathan Tobin: Iran Threatens Israel With Destruction, But the New York Times Doesn't Hear It
Jeffrey Fleishman: In newly democratic Egypt, tens of democracy activists jailed, to stand trial; their groups are 'threatening the stability of the homeland'
Julie Deardorff : Researchers say antioxidants may not be that effective and could do more harm than good
Philip Moeller: Where Smart Investors Put Their Money
Mark Clayton: How did Anonymous hackers eavesdrop on FBI and Scotland Yard?
The Kosher Gourmet by Joseph Erdos: Vegetable Frittata --- leftovers never tasted so scrumptious
February 3, 2012
Rabbi Dr. Warren Goldstein: Living with ideals --- in reality
Caroline B. Glick: Fool me twice
Jonathan Tobin : Adelsonphobia Strikes in Nevada Caucus
Edmund Sanders : Israeli official says Iran is creating missile that could reach East Coast of US
Kimberly Palmer : 8 Ways to Get Ready for Retirement Now
Victoria Kim: Immigrant-smuggling ring used black drivers to avoid racial profiling
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand: A quick cookie recipe: Hazelnut and Olive Oil Shortbread: Sweet, Nutty, and Savory
February 2, 2012
Rabbi Yaakov Rosenblatt : Welcome Home, Governor Perry
Jim Carney: Wrong number call may have saved her life
Reza Kahlili : Ex-CIA spy in Iran's Revolutionary Guard: What Obama doesn't grasp about striking deals with Tehran
Kelsey Sheehy : 5 Tips for Choosing an M.B.A. Concentration
Rachel Koning Beals : Investors Increasingly Tap Social Media for Stock Tips
Tina Susman: For woodchuck rescuer, every day is Groundhog Day
The Kosher Gourmet by Leela Cyd Ross : Savory vegetable pie is a taste of European bistro with minimal effort and maximal flavor
February 1, 2012
Nara Schoenberg: What to do when you've been dissed
Michelle Malkin: First, They Came for the Catholics
Brian Bennett: US officials see increasing threat of domestic attack from Iran
Lisa M. Krieger: Possible breakthrough in preventing Alzheimer's
Emily Brandon: How to Take Advantage of New 401(k) Fee Disclosures
Susan Johnston: 5 Apps for Organizing Your Expenses at Tax Time
The Kosher Gourmet by Mario Batali: The famed chef's Broccoli and White Bean Soup can easily be a lunch in itself, or a nice antipasto --- and is hard to mess up
January 31, 2012
Paul Greenberg: Separation of Church and State works two ways
Caroline B. Glick: Hamas and the Washington establishment
Frank J. Gaffney Jr.: Uncle Sam is joining in efforts to crack down on Islamists' critics
Danielle Kurtzleben: The 10 Worst Cities for Finding a Job
Laura McMullen: 3 Tips to Overcome a Bad Grade in College
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand: Orzo dish mixes plump, chewy grains with caramelized onions, garlic, mushrooms and sweet potato
January 30, 2012
Rabbi Avi Shafran: Blind faith and physics
Paul Richter and Ramin Mostaghim: Misreading Teheran's limits -- deadly and economically devastating as they may be -- is a risk administration, Europe seem willing to take
Suzanne Bohan: Warning: Nap-deprived tots missing more than sleep, study finds
Meg Handley: Banks Revamping Rewards Programs to Woo Customers
Menachem Wecker: 3 Do's and Don'ts for Healthy Studying in College
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Butternut Squash Gratin with Tomato Fondue is a combination of the sweet and creamy
January 27, 2012
Rabbi Berel Wein: What Pharaoh can teach us sophisticates about being stubborn
Caroline B. Glick: Obama: Of course I intend to prevent a nuclear holocaust . . . in a few months
Yochonon Donn: In liberal New York City, fervently-Orthodox Jews may soon be getting a district to call their own
Jeannine Stein: An inflated ego and thinking you're 'all that' doesn't just make others sick of you, it can make you ill
Katy Hopkins: New budget rules may affect how much money you get for college
The Kosher Gourmet by Emma Christensen: Barigoule is a light and tangy dish of artichoke hearts stewed in white wine
January 26, 2012
Jonathan Tobin: Newt the closet anti-Semite?
Ed Koch: To the New York Times, calling for the murder of Jews by those capable of having their incitement taken seriously isn't news
Martin Peretz: One Year Later: The Failure of the Arab Spring
Rachel Koning Beals: Need to Know info before investing in Muni Bonds this year
Jeannine Stein: Mental illness struck one in five U.S. adults in 2010: Report
The Kosher Gourmet by Leela Cyd Ross: Curried Coconut Carrot Soup. Need we say more?
January 25, 2012
Andrew Silow-Carroll: Speak politics the Jewish way!
Richard Simon: House passes two bills endorsing the use of religious symbols at military memorials
Fred Weir: Putin: Multiethnic Russia cannot survive as a US-style 'melting pot'; must find its own way
Susan Johnston: 5 Sneaky Coupon Strategies Consumers Should Watch Out For
Menachem Wecker: Adding an extra 'm' -- marriage -- to that M.B.A.
Melissa Healy: Harnessing shrooms' magic
The Kosher Gourmet by Hilary Meyer: 3 Secrets Leave All of the Comfort in this 'Comfort Food', but few of the Calories
January 24, 2012
Carol Clark: The price of your soul: How your brain decides whether to 'sell out'
Caroline B. Glick: America lost most in 'Arab Spring'. Sadly, many voters still don't grasp the extent
Warren Richey: Drug criminal scores win in GPS ruling from conservative-leaning high court
Jada A. Graves: 6 Careers to Watch in 2012
Jason Koebler: Who Should Have Access to Student Records?
Erika Bolstad: Black conservatives gather to talk about gaining strength
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: This luscious fruit bread marries toasted pecans with juicy pears. Perfect with a pot of tea
January 23, 2012
Melissa Dribben: Jewish voters to play a key role in Florida's Republican primary
Stephanie Hanes: Toddlers to tweens: Relearning how to play
Jack Kelly : Still ignoring history
Rachel Koning Beals: Awkward Questions You Must Ask Your Financial Adviser
Jordan Rau: In quest to grow, Catholic hospital system will announce this morning its break from church
Ali Safi: U.S. envoy gives Taliban terms for peace talks
The Kosher Gourmet by Emma Christensen: Spanakopita is a golden pie that manages to be healthy yet still taste indulgent
January 19, 2012
Clifford D. May: How terrorists lose their stigma
Suzanne Bohan: Vanquishing social anxieties without drugs
Lisa Fernandez and Sean Webby: In alternative lifestyle, domestic violence means men as victims and women being abusers
Danielle Kurtzleben: The 10 Best Cities for Finding a Job
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Three bean soup with gremolata
January 18, 2012
Edward I. Koch: Why the Crocodile Tears, Hillary?
David G. Savage: Supreme Court to Principals: You have been warned
George Friedman of Stratfor: Iran, the U.S. and the Strait of Hormuz Crisis
Jason Koebler: 'Holy Grail' of Flu Vaccines by Next Year
Alex M. Parker: The Off-the-Radar Congressional Targets of 2012
The Kosher Gourmet by Susan Russo: Got soft apples? Make Apple-Maple Walnut Breakfast Quinoa
January 17, 2012
Frank J. Gaffney Jr.: No-kidding red lines: U.S. response to an Iranian nuke may be bluster, but Israel's won't be
David G. Savage: They sued their principals after slandering them online --- now the cases are headed to the Supreme Court
Sharon Palmer, R.D.: Believe it or not, your cuppa joe offers potential health perks
David Francis: Where to Invest in 2012: With stocks expected to rebound, opportunity abounds for investors
The Kosher Gourmet by Emma Christensen: Eleventh-Hour Freezer Pasta, Made Interesting: Ravioli with romesco sauce; Tortellini salad with apples and walnuts
January 13, 2012
Chief Rabbi Dr. Warren Goldstein: Expansion Of Spirit (PROFOUND yet UPLIFTING)
Ben Lynfield: Israeli lawmakers move to annex Jewish Judea, one museum at a time
Rachel Koning Beals:Top Complaints About Daily Deal Sites --- how to avoid missteps
Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz: Thriving through touch: Gentle massage helps older people with low mobility improve in mind and body
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Braised Oxtail Stew with Olives
January 12, 2012
Warren Richey: Landmark Supreme Court ruling a 'resounding win' for religious groups
Warren Richey: Supreme Court says no to new rule on eyewitness testimony
Ken Dilanian and David S. Cloud: In secret study, CIA and 15 other U.S. intelligence agencies warn Obama against leaving Afghanistan too soon
John Fauber : Statins found to raise diabetes risk in postmenopausal women
Katy Hopkins : Consider This Before You Pay for an Online Degree
Menachem Wecker : 4 Technology Must Haves for Online Students
The Kosher Gourmet by Joseph Erdos: This mushroom and barley soup has an intense -- almost nutty -- flavor that mixes robust with Middle East. It has creaminess without cream
January 11, 2012
Shari Roan: Millions of atrial fibrillation sufferers at risk for devastating, but preventable, stroke
Tom Hussain: Pakistan -- recipient of more than $21 billion in civilian and military aid -- speeds pursuit of Iranian pipeline, defying US
David G. Savage: High court signals it won't be loosening TV's 'indecency' rules
Stephen Ceasar: Oklahoma's Islamic law amendment can't go into effect, court rules
Rachel Koning Beals: Should You Invest in Bond Funds or Individual Issues?
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand : Colorful Lentil Salad with Walnuts and Herbs
January 10, 2012
Reza Kahlili: From an ex-CIA spy: US must exploit new split in Iran's Revolutionary Guard
Karen Kaplan: Study: Nicotine replacement products ineffective when used in real-life situations
Paul Bedard: Study: Is Fox Too Balanced?
Rachel Koning Beals: Is it Time to Move into Homebuilder Stocks?
The Kosher Gourmet by Carolyn Malcoun: Brothy Chinese Noodles

Half the Sodium (and More Than Twice the Fiber!)

January 9, 2012
Caroline B. Glick: The land-for-peace hoax (MUST-READ/FORWARD/SHARE)
Michael Doyle: Put through legal hell over dream home, couple fought back hard --- all the way to Supreme Court
Bonnie Miller Rubin: The new college-admission essay: Short and tweet(ish)
Rachel Koning Beals: Why Mid-Caps Stand Out in This Slow-Growth Stretch
The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Cumin seed roasted cauliflower with salted yogurt, mint and pomegranate seeds
January 6, 2012
Jonathan Rosenblum: Greatness --- and those who sully it
Clifford D. May: The Historian, the Diplomat, and the Spy
Paul Bedard: Study: Obama Is Late Night's Biggest Joke
Rachel Koning Beals: An Investing Guide to Closed-End Funds
The Kosher Gourmet by Faith Durand: Slow Cooker Peppered Beef Shank in Red Wine

Jewish World Review Dec. 6, 2004 /23 Kislev, 5764

Sanitizing Merchant: Pacino Plays Shylock Like a Grouchy Tevya

By Ron Rosenbaum


Shylock returns in an inoffensive, defanged, P.C. remake



Pacino as a kinder, gentler Shylock
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http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | Believe me, I don't want to be one of those dreary people who are forever lecturing us on how the movie version of some classic betrays the book. But I have to say that the forthcoming film version of The Merchant of Venice, the one starring Al Pacino as Shylock, may be the most misguided literary adaptation since the Miramax Mansfield Park. (You know, the one that showed us a throbbing D.H. Lawrence fable of sexual liberation we had failed to notice seething beneath the surface of Jane Austen's most anti-liberation novel.

But it's hard for me to withhold comment, since I just delivered a talk (before seeing the Pacino Merchant) at a "Shakespeare and Politics" colloquium at Fairleigh Dickinson University on the strategies of evasion that contemporary Shakespearean productions have used to erase or occlude the anti-Semitism in the play. And since I'm working on a book on Shakespeare scholarship and just published an anthology on contemporary anti-Semitism, it's something I have strong feelings about. And I can't help feeling the erasure of the play's anti-Semitism in this film — however well-meaning — is part of the problem, not a solution.

Al Pacino has demonstrated a sensitivity to the complexity of Shakespeare (and ability to play the complexity) in his Looking for Richard. And he does an honorable job embodying the Shylock that director Michael Radford has sculpted from Shakespeare (Mr. Radford gives himself a "screenplay by Michael Radford" credit for "revising" Shakespeare's work — that is, mainly cutting the potentially offensive parts of the characterization and adding an extra- textual "historical context").

Already there is talk of Oscars, and in its review, The Hollywood Reporter called Mr. Pacino's performance "keenly measured."

But I regret to say that it's a keenly measured evasion. The Shylock that Mr. Radford has given Mr. Pacino to play is an inoffensive, defanged, P.C. Shylock. A Shylock that is less like Shakespeare's Jew than a heroically suffering Everyman, a Brechtian Mother Courage figure of endurance, persisting however put upon. A Shylock safe for civics classes. A Shylock who is more like a somewhat grouchy version of Tevye from Fiddler on the Roof.

Indeed, you might as well call this forthcoming film The Usurer on the Roof.

But that's what you get when your producer, Cary Brokaw, announces (in the production material for the film): "This is a play about Anti-Semitism … and about discrimination, and about prejudice but it is not Anti-Semitic. Shylock is a very sympathetic character. We understand his pain …. "

Well, yes, it's sympathetic — if you leave all the unsympathetic bits out ("He found just the right things to cut," Mr. Brokaw says of director Radford).

Then you can say, as Mr. Brokaw does, somehow channeling Shakespeare, "It's so clear that Shakespeare is writing about racism but he's not racist and the play is not racist. It's a true statement about culture at a particular time."

Forget the implicit contradiction in that last line. (Is D.W. Griffith's pro-K.K.K. film The Birth of a Nation "not racist" because the image of black people in it was "a true statement about culture at a particular time"?)

Hey, what's all the fuss been about, then? When the Nazis put on no less than 50 productions of The Merchant of Venice in the 30's, it was not because it was anti-Semitic — perish the thought. They just wanted "a true statement about culture at a particular time."


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Everyone in the production seems to be buying this line. The actress who plays Portia informs us, via the production notes, that "the depth in Shakespeare's play could never solely be trivialized under the guise of racism. 'What I want people to take away from this is it's about human forgiveness and how we rise above the norm for us, the prejudice and the differences. It's not Christian versus Jew, it's human and personal.'"

So even thinking of it as about "racism" is trivializing it. And none dare concede there is anti-Semitism in the play (it's, rather, "about anti-Semitism"), or say it has something to do with the theological specificity of religious hatred directed at the Jews. Not ecumenical enough. So it's about intolerance in general. About how we should all love each other.

And then, in an interview I found online, director Radford clued us in to what his Merchant is really about:

"The Merchant of Venice I saw as a piece that basically spoke not just of Jews and Venetians. But using the epoch of the 1500s it spoke of a very modern situation — -that is two cultures that don't understand each other in terms of culture and beliefs. I think it's a film that's talking about something other than the controversy between the Jews and Christians. It does speak of that, but it's a text set back then. We all hope that people understand what we are saying."

Actually, it's not that easy to understand what he is saying. I'd venture to translate that he means that the whole "controversy" between Jews and Christians (his way of speaking about 2,000 years of murderous religious-inspired hatred of Jews, I guess) is not a truly fit or relevant subject for our times. It's so five centuries ago.

I think what we're supposed to understand — the "very modern situation" he's speaking of — is the clash of civilizations that Europe is undergoing between Muslim immigrants and Western culture.

All this raises an interesting question: What does it mean to stage or film The Merchant of Venice? Does it mean that you can put on a "piece" that is a plea for tolerance designed to be safe for high-school civics classes and call it The Merchant of Venice? It's the question raised by the famous 17th-century "happy ending" adaptation of King Lear by Nahum Tate (which was virtually the only version of King Lear played for more than a century), the one that had Shakespeare's all-too-downbeat tragedy end instead with Cordelia alive and marrying the good guy Edgar to rule over a peaceful and united kingdom.

You want tragedy in King Lear, that old thing? You see The Merchant of Venice to be anti-Semitic, at least in part, or about Jews? How silly and antiquated. Merchant of Venice teaches tolerance, and Shylock is an oppressed hero.

An interesting contrast to the words of John Gross, the astute British critic whose definitive 1992 history,
Shylock: A Legend and Its Legacy, concludes rather unequivocally:

"Shylock is meant to be a villain. There can be arguments about his motives and his personality, but there can be no serious argument about his behavior. Given the opportunity — an opportunity which he himself has created — he attempts to commit legalized murder. He is also a Jewish villain. He didn't have to be: Christians were moneylenders too, and the story would have worked perfectly well with a Christian villain …. Behind his plot against Antonio lie fantasies of ritual murder, ultimately going back to the Jews' supposed role in the Crucifixion."

Mr. Gross concludes: "I personally think it is absurd to suppose that there is a direct line of descent from Antonio to Hitler, or from Portia to the SS, but that is because I do not believe that the Holocaust was in any way inevitable. I do believe, on the other hand, that the ground for the Holocaust was well prepared, and to that extent the play can never seem quite the same again."

But hey, let's not let that harsh our mellow. That's so 50 years ago. We'll make an uplifting Merchant. In sanitizing the play, in making it a universalist fable of the injustices of intolerance, in occluding the problem of anti-Semitism, this production erases history.

This urgent flight from even conceding that there is a problem, that the play is not just about anti-Semitism, but that Shakespeare's Shylock is an anti-Semitic caricature, may be part of a trend, one that could come under the rubric of "anti-Semitism denial," the phrase coined by Gabriel Schoenfeld (in The Return of Anti-Semitism). Things that seem to involve anti-Semitism (Mel Gibson's Passion, Philip Roth's The Plot Against America, which many clever reviewers have informed us, contra Roth, is not really about Jews and anti-Semitism, but about George Bush), really aren't about anything as parochial and old hat as Jews and Jew hatred. Please, that would be missing the deeper, more sophisticated and universalist point. Abstraction, one-dimensional political allegory, substitutes for the complexity of history.

Anti-Semitism is, of course, a bit embarrassing to talk about — one doesn't want to let so parochial a concern intrude upon sophisticated literary discourse, or inhibit in any way a fanciful literary critic or an au courant director. Why be bound by the ostensible content of a controversial work when one can use it to demonstrate one's belief in tolerance and one's other political virtues?

Which is what Merchant director Radford does. Of course, his Merchant is not an anti-Semitic work: He just removes all the most anti-Semitic elements from it. Not the anti-Semitic taunts against the Jew Shylock, but the elements in the original Shakespearean text which put the Jew in a bad light. Which identified Shylock's flaws as specifically Jewish flaws, which exploited venomous racial and religious stereotypes that deepened rather than ameliorated the anti-Semitism that could be dismissed as cartoonish caricature in Marlowe's Jew of Malta.

It's not that I want to see anti-Semitic characterizations perpetuated, but erasing and sanitizing history is not the solution. It's as if someone took you down to lower Manhattan, and showed you a beautiful new development that was growing around a large hole in the ground, but refused to acknowledge the murderous hatred that had produced Ground Zero.

If you want to see a disturbing rather than comforting Shylock, if you want to understand the anti-Semitic potential of the Shylock that Shakespeare wrote, the Shylock that has incited hatred of Jews over history, rather than the sanitized Shylock of Mr. Radford, catch one of the British (Jewish) actor Steven Berkoff's embodiments of Shylock in his Shakespeare's Villains one-man show (see my Observer column on Mr. Berkoff, Jan. 29, 2001).

Or, better, read the astonishing passage from Philip Roth's novel Operation Shylock, one of the most impassioned passages in his entire impassioned body of work, in which one of the characters delivers an ecstatically enraged exegesis of Shylock's first three words, "Three thousand ducats" (this is the amount Shylock is asked to lend the Venetians in a bond sealed with the infamous pound of flesh):

"I studied those three words by which the savage, repellent, and villainous Jew, deformed by hatred and revenge, entered as our [i.e., Jews'] doppelgänger into the consciousness of the enlightened West. Three words encompassing all that is hateful in the Jew, three words that have stigmatized the Jew through two Christian millennia …. " Stigmatized the Jew as caring only for money at the expense of flesh and blood.

And Mr. Roth's character goes on to remind us what the defining Shylock of the eighteenth century, the actor Charles Macklin, did with those three words:

"We are told that Mr. Macklin would mouth the two th's and the two s's in 'Three thousand ducats' with such oiliness that he instantaneously aroused, with just those three words all of the audience's hatred of Shylock's race …. When Mr. Macklin whetted his knife to carve from Antonio's chest his pound of flesh, people in the pit fell unconscious …. "

Who can blame Mr. Pacino for not wishing to evoke the implicit hatred in the role? But then why do the role at all? Why do a bowdlerized erasure of the harsh truth about the role?

But Mr. Roth's character is no less (justly) harsh against what he calls the "vulgar sentimental offense" of the Victorian versions of Shylock, "a wronged Jew, rightfully vengeful." Mr. Roth's character condemns this as well: "the vile Victorian varnish that sought to humanize the Jew, dignify the Jew has never deceived the enlightened European mind about the three thousand ducats … that chilling and ferocious Jew whose villainy flows inexorably from the innate corruption of his religion." Shakespeare's Jew.

If you want to put on a Merchant of Venice as an examination of an important historical source of anti-Semitism, as an investigation of the question of where Shakespeare stands in relation to it, there's justification for that. But there can't be an investigation if you erase the original. And to claim that it's an antidote to anti-Semitism rather than an example is "vile varnish," whitewash.

It refuses to concede that Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice is a fact of history, not just a play — a real problem that a little cutting won't solve. A problem that calls for "negative capability," the ability Keats attributed to Shakespeare of holding two opposed points of view "without irritable reaching" after certainty. And yet, all the production's voices ring with hysterical certainty: No anti-Semitism here!

Many find it hard, especially those who have succumbed to uncritical bardolatry, to hold in mind the possibilities that Shakespeare could be both the greatest writer in the language and not the greatest human being who ever lived, that he was vulnerable to flaws and that, when he wanted to incite people against a Jewish character, he knew how to incite people against a Jew all too well.

His saving grace is that he didn't make a habit of it; it seemed about theatrical effectiveness here rather than committed animus.

But the anti-Semitism is still there, no matter how desperately one hangs onto one speech ("Hath not a Jew eyes …. lf you prick us do we not bleed"?), which is often misread or recited out of context as a plea for tolerance when, in fact, in the play it's as much "Jewish" casuistry, disguised self-incitement to revenge (if you read the speech to the bitter end).

Shylock, if played like Shakespeare's Shylock, is a problem one can't wish away. One can cut it out, so to speak, but the play is something else without it.

In my talk at the Fairleigh Dickinson colloquium, I spoke about the strategies used to sanitize Shylock besides invoking "if you prick us do we not bleed?" Strategies of evasion that modern actors and directors use to sanitize Shylock.

The first is to give us a kinder, gentler, warmer, fuzzier, more dignified Shylock. The user-friendly Shylock (usurer-friendly?). Olivier's dignified Edwardian banker. The Shylock of Henry Goodman at the Royal National Theater in 1999, a calm, likable, even clubbable chap. A strategy that inevitably deepens rather than erases the anti-Semitism of the play. Because if the production is in any way faithful to the central moment of the text, when Shylock sharpens his knife ecstatically preparing to cut out the "pound of flesh" from Antonio, then the entire gentrifying process performed on Shylock works to argue, in effect, that even the most likable, dignified Jew will — when it comes down to it — be ready and willing to cut the heart out of a Christian to settle a debt.

The other chief sanitizing strategy of contemporary Merchants is to emphasize the supposedly equivalent miscreance of the money-hungry Christians. Yes, they're louts and layabouts and materialistic, but in being so, they are explicitly defying the purported loving essence of Christianity. While Shylock (in the actual play, anyway) is fulfilling the true mercenary purpose and destiny of Jews in his greed. It's in his Jewish genes.

But hey, no problem, just leave that stuff out. And you've got your lesson in tolerance that high-school teachers can safely send their students to. We can make the rest of literature safe, too; I guess we should get started.

Oh, well. Whatever you think of it, it is not a "safe" play. I concluded my talk by advancing a view of the religious subtext of Merchant, inspired by William Empson, involving a rift within Christianity. The one involving the Socinian Heresy over the Doctrine of Satisfaction — Jesus as the "pound of flesh" that the Christian God required to pay the debt for man's Original Sin: God as Shylock, Empson might say. So it's dangerous to Christian doctrine as well, I think.

Another strategy deployed recently is Stephen Greenblatt's conjecture (in Will in the World) that Shakespeare was chastened by the bloodthirsty, inciting effect that Marlowe's Jew of Malta had on crowds, and wanted to make a kinder, gentler, more humanized Jew in response.

Nice if that were the effect, but again, "humanizing" can backfire and make the villainousness of Jews something more deeply embedded than the comic-villain mask that Barabas the Jew of Malta dons. A more human Shylock can make for a more anti-Semitic Merchant of Venice.

Marlowe's Jew of Malta is a comic-strip villain, a mustache-twirling, cape-swirling comic caricature of evil. Humanizing Shylock gives the audience a more "naturalistic" basis for their distaste for Jews.

Michael Radford's chief strategy of evasion is Al Pacino. Mr. Pacino is too smart to make Shylock saintly. Instead, he gives us a Shylock who is not a kinder and gentler, warm sort of guy. He's angry, even bitter about oppression, but he's just trying to go about his business, a Jew in an anti-Semitic world that locks him up in the ghetto at night.

Mr. Pacino is great at being the hardy, put-upon Joe Sixpack Shylock. And to some extent, his soulfulness and craft work: You feel his pain, and you feel anger against prejudice and what it can do to its objects and all those good things. But is sanitizing Shakespeare the solution?

PS: I suppose it's true I have some special animus against sanitized Shylocks because I think one of them killed Zero Mostel. That's right, you may not recall, but Mostel dropped dead after his first performance as Shylock in the British playwright Arnold Wesker's Broadway-bound play of that name (loosely based on Merchant), which was beginning tryouts in Philadelphia.

Mr. Wesker had written the ultimate nice-guy Shylock. His Shylock was a genial bibliophile, intellectual and friend of Antonio. And yet the attempt to make Shylock the ultimate nice Jewish guy and then have him seek to cut out his friend Antonio's heart was making the entire production incoherent, according to Mr. Wesker's candid diary account in The Birth of 'Shylock' and the Death of Zero Mostel.

And Zero Mostel was rendered incoherent, as I read it, by the attempt to tame him into Mr. Wesker's gentrified Shylock.

Mr. Wesker doesn't say it himself, but I can't help wondering if the attempt to make sense of the incoherent role contributed to Mostel's sudden death after the first performance. Yes, there were many medical risk factors, but I blame the curse of Shylock.

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JWR contributor Ron Rosenbaum is a columist for The New York Observer and the author, most recently, of "Those Who Forget the Past : The Question of Anti-Semitism" and "Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil" "The Secret Parts of Fortune: Three Decades of Intense Investigations and Edgy Enthusiasms". Comment by clicking here.

© 2004, Ron Rosenbaum