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The Hobart Shakespeareans

The Hobart Shakespeareans (2005)

September. 06,2005
|
8.5
| Documentary

Rafe Esquith, 1992 American Teacher of the Year and National Medal of Arts recipient, teaches 5th-grade children whose parents don't speak English at a school in a dangerous, poor, drug-infested 100% Latino/Asian neighborhood in Los Angeles.

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Reviews

Nonureva
2005/09/06

Really Surprised!

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Phonearl
2005/09/07

Good start, but then it gets ruined

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Humaira Grant
2005/09/08

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Hayden Kane
2005/09/09

There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes

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KissEnglishPasto
2005/09/10

.......................................................from Pasto,Colombia...Via: L.A. CA., CALI, COLOMBIA and ORLANDO, FL Having been a teacher myself for 41 years, there is nothing I find more inspirational than watching the burning intensity of passion for teaching displayed by people like Rafe Esquith and the pure joy of learning exhibited by his students in the classroom.Truly gifted teachers comprehend the symbiotic nature of the teacher/student relationship. Working mostly with inner-city kids who speak a foreign language at home, Esquith demonstrates what can be accomplished when the bar is set high by someone who dares to be inspirational to children others complacently might have expected nothing more than being able to read at grade level! If you have never been a teacher, certainly you've been a student... and this documentary will lift the hearts of both teachers and students alike.10* GOLD STARS*....ENJOY/DISFRUTELA! Any comments, questions or observations, in English or Español, are most welcome!

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angelofvic
2005/09/11

THE HOBART SHAKESPEAREANS is a riveting, life-changing documentary on Rafe Esquith, 1992 American Teacher of the Year and also National Medal of Arts recipient (plus many other teaching awards, including Oprah's Use Your Life Award), who teaches fifth-grade in a dangerous, poor, drug-infested 100% Latino/Asian neighborhood in L.A. to kids whose parents do not speak English.He even has them performing an entire Shakespeare play to live audiences every year. The film had me in tears several times, and the kids themselves were in tears several times -- when Rafe is reading and describing Huck Finn's difficult choice about turning Jim in; and when the school year ends and the fun and learning is over for the students.Rafe does even much more than this with these students, and he makes sure they are well-loved, well-traveled, and well-equipped not only to continue their academic trajectories, but also to live wisely and richly. His limitless enthusiasm and passion for teaching and for mentoring and for the life of the mind and soul is contagious. Rafe is also the author of several well-known books describing his teaching philosophy, insights, and methodology.The film is a grand inspiration and absolutely full of ideas and hope and sensible advice!

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stevedesantis
2005/09/12

Wow! I was assigned to view this documentary as part of a class in my teacher certification course of studies. This teacher has his 5th grade students reading books that I didn't get to until I was one to five years older. By the way, these students are the children of immigrants, for whom English is their SECOND language.Oh and he has them studying AND performing Shakespeare! These students stay after school and study Shakespeare - and as Sir Ian McKellen said -- the children understand what every word means, this is something that you can't say about adult actors working with the same material.Inspirational!I hope I can accomplish even one tenth of what Rafe has done, once I get into the classroom.

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moonspinner55
2005/09/13

Theatrically-released documentaries today seek to inform and (most importantly) entertain and amuse us, and for the most part they do a very good job. But how about a documentary experience which is something so personal, so special, it has the viewer reexamining his formative years? This PBS valentine to education is quite like that: moving, emotionally and intellectually provocative, tender. There's not a grandstanding or shallow moment in the hour as Los Angeles teacher Rafe Esquith (his students address him simply and naturally as "Rafe") goes through his own personal rigors to teach a class of inner-city immigrant 5th graders all the standard elementary school topics as well as Shakespeare, and at the end of the year they perform "Hamlet" for their amazed families. I was amazed, too at how Mr. Esquith, a handsome, gentle, friendly man, manages to turn a classroom into a forum for ideas, truth, honesty and intellect. One ends up reconsidering his own years in grade school, and I know I was one of those kids who dreaded the thought of going to class in the morning. Esquith has his bad days (and amusingly admits there are times when he feels like packing it in), but he also knows that he'd be cheating many, many children by giving up, and cheating himself as well, and I don't believe he ever will. Ironically, a teacher like this, who is so effective at reaching his students, is actually resented by OTHER teachers at the same school (it's like a high school-pecking order mentality but amongst adults). And yet, Esquith proves to be heroic. This simply-shot, simply-produced hour (with wonderful appearances by Ian McKellen and Michael York) shows that lives ARE being changed, year in and year out, by one person who gives a damn. When the kids are gathered for one last goodbye backstage, it is a graduation of honors--they have been honored and they feel honor--and the tears are of hope, joy, pride, and maybe nervousness, for they have each grown to see their future become an open book in front of them with pages they soon will fill. It sounds corny to say "I laughed, I cried", but this recorded document of learning (and the love of learning) should touch a lot of people--I did laugh, and I did cry.

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