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Richard_III_files/Program RichardIII Web
Richard_III_files/Program RichardIII Web

... Richard, the Yorkist Duke of Gloucester, has not stopped plotting since the defeat of Henry VI. He conspires to play his brothers, Edward (now King Edward IV) and George, Duke of Clarence, against each other in an attempt to gain the crown for himself. By insinuating charges of treason aainst George ...
Enter Shakespeare`s Young Hamlet, 1589.
Enter Shakespeare`s Young Hamlet, 1589.

... edition of Hamlet--or rather, his monumental Arden edition of the traditional conflated Hamlet that began life in Nicholas Rowe’s 1709 edition of Shakespeare’s plays. In that canonical Hamlet, and in the second quarto published in 1604, Hamlet is undoubtedly thirty, but if no arithmetic is necessary ...
Intoxicating Rhythms: Or, Shakespeare, Literary Drama
Intoxicating Rhythms: Or, Shakespeare, Literary Drama

... Erne takes issue with the “as they were acted” claims of the Oxford edition, claims no more plausible coming from Oxford University Press than from the title pages of the many sixteenthcentury quartos (or indeed from any book). Whether in Folio or quarto versions, Erne argues, Shakespeare’s long pla ...
Stage Directions and the Theatre Historian
Stage Directions and the Theatre Historian

... most want specifics about the onstage action (is Hamlet aware of the eavesdroppers during the nunnery scene? if so, when?). What is characteristic of most playscripts of this period is not explicit detail about how to stage a given moment but some combination of 1) silence and 2) coded signals direc ...
Calling the Globe - Shakespeare`s Globe
Calling the Globe - Shakespeare`s Globe

... the name of the specific member of the stage management team displayed prominently as the title (ie: Jayne’s Plot, Wills’ Plot). The cues are a comfortable pace apart, allowing for time to check the list if needed. The Act and Scene of the cue are given, and occasionally the page number; the individ ...
R J OMEO &
R J OMEO &

... encourage you to impart as much of the information included in this study guide to your students as is possible. The following are some suggestions from teachers on how you can utilize elements of the study guide given limited classroom time. Many teachers have found that distributing or reading the ...
Not Doing Anything to Shakespeare
Not Doing Anything to Shakespeare

... is an experiment. The really looney thing is that the Shakespeare canon is turned into a totally stable given to which nothing may be added. Doubel Falseheoood is trated as being entirely external to it veen though it supposedly contains a laer of play at least partly written by Shakespeare. Hammon ...
Shakespeare Biography shakespeare_biography
Shakespeare Biography shakespeare_biography

... involved in their publication in 1609, long after most of them had been written. Even so, one can perhaps ask why such a story would have appealed to Shakespeare. Is there a level at which fantasy and dreamwork may be involved? The plays and other poems lend themselves uncertainly to such speculatio ...
VanBennekom, Angel - University of Delaware
VanBennekom, Angel - University of Delaware

... magic, and aisles and entryways are kept where they will be the least obtrusive to the patron’s experience. Audiences and actors alike place as tantamount the Modernist idea of maintaining the “fourth wall,” and go to the theatre for the experience of watching a slice of real life. The goal of the t ...
post-show discussion questions and activities
post-show discussion questions and activities

... and dramatization of certain moments/events that make up an overall narrative to shape, contain, and focus his or her specific telling. Shakespeare, as a master of plotting, knew that it isn’t possible or desirable to show an audience every moment that happens in a narrative—there is only so much ti ...
Shakespeare Biography shakespeare_biography
Shakespeare Biography shakespeare_biography

... also belonged. Taking advantage of having overheard their conversation, Shakespeare allegedly hastened to the place where the assignation had been arranged, was “entertained” by the woman, and was “at his game” when Burbage showed up. When a message was brought that “Richard the Third” had arrived, ...
Hamlet program.indd - Lantern Theater Company
Hamlet program.indd - Lantern Theater Company

... about Shakespeare’s childhood, education, or young adulthood before he married Anne Hathaway on November 28, 1582. Shakespeare was 18 at the time; Anne was 26, and pregnant. Their first daughter, Susanna, was born on May 26, 1583. The couple later had twins, Hamnet and Judith, born in 1585. Hamnet d ...
Theatre - Universidad de Zaragoza
Theatre - Universidad de Zaragoza

... Much Ado about Nothing and As You Like It. Ed. John Russell Brown. (Casebooks series). Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1979. 23031.* ...
Much Ado about Nothing - Utah Shakespeare Festival
Much Ado about Nothing - Utah Shakespeare Festival

... not, closer to our own times than to Chaucer’s, two hundred years earlier. Indeed, the history and development of the English language unfolds as follows: Old English, 449–1100; Middle English 1100–1500; and Modern English 1500-present. Shakespeare was firmly in the Modern English period. At the tim ...
SPONSORSHIP PACKAGE - Stafford Festival Shakespeare
SPONSORSHIP PACKAGE - Stafford Festival Shakespeare

... details please refer to Appendix two, page 12. > The largest proportion of the audience profile for Stafford Festival Shakespeare is made up of adults of both sexes classification: A, B, C1 and C2, generally twenty years plus with an interest in theatre, literature, cinema, culture and the arts ...
Julius Caesar study guide - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
Julius Caesar study guide - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey

... encourage you to impart as much of the information included in this study guide to your students as is possible. The following are some suggestions from teachers on how you can utilize elements of the study guide given limited classroom time. Many teachers have found that distributing or reading the ...
KTS Anarchist 2011.indd - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
KTS Anarchist 2011.indd - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey

... Mussolini’s army but refused to fight, opting instead to hide in an attic until the war was over. Initially studying to be an architect, Fo made his acting debut in Milan in 1952 and began writing satirical cabarets. In 1954, he married Franca Rame, who was also from a theatrical family, and in 1959 ...
I. Shakespeare and the Value of Personality II. Shakespeare and the
I. Shakespeare and the Value of Personality II. Shakespeare and the

... of “honor,” and all ideas of order whatsoever. The brilliant fantasia upon Bardolph’s nose does not allow us much residual awe in relation to Jesus’ rather uncharacteristic parable. What chance has the rhetorical threat of hellfire against the dazzling metamorphoses of Bardolph’s nose, which goes fr ...
Peter Saccio
Peter Saccio

... 3. Define prose and explain why Shakespeare uses prose in a given instance. 4. Identify various kinds of rhymed verse and explain how they are used. 5. Discuss the general effect of verse and explain why Shakespeare uses it. ...
PDF
PDF

... made the belly?" (I. i. 103), employs, in Hunt's words, an "insulting audible body language" (2004, 222). He says: Sir, I shall tell you, with a kind of smile, Which, ne'er came from the lunge, but even thus For, look you, I may make the belly smile As well as speak - it tauntingly replied To th' di ...
World Shakespeare Congress 2016 – Panels and Roundtables
World Shakespeare Congress 2016 – Panels and Roundtables

... Alfred Dampier (1843-1908) was a British provincial actor who made his career in the Australasian colonies. For many years he starred in “Friday night Shakespeare”, as well as in popular and nationalistic melodrama, often playing opposite his daughter Lily with his wife and another daughter in the c ...
Interview Transcript
Interview Transcript

... make a little five or ten minute joke. Then when I realised I had to create something that was twenty-five minutes or an hour long, I took Shakespeare’s script and I edited it down. That was the first step – to get the story across. Homer is playing Macbeth and he can’t remember his monologues anywa ...
Tézisek angolul - doktori
Tézisek angolul - doktori

... research and careful selection on the part of the organizers, the festival in Pécs had managed to present a collection of some of the best examples of Shakespeare on the puppet stage, and may have thus repeatedly given an impression of a profusion of such performances. This impression would have bee ...
Program - San Francisco Lyric Chorus
Program - San Francisco Lyric Chorus

... Shakespeare! It’s tbe 400th anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare, the poet and playwright considered the greatest writer in the English language and the world’s most important dramatist. We offer musical settings of his texts, from his time to ours, as well as two lively selections to bri ...
much ado about nothing - Theatre for a New Audience
much ado about nothing - Theatre for a New Audience

... that they “loved together,” meaning they loved each other but did not know it.1 He also writes of a society in which “dark forces lie just outside the charmed circle of delighted lords and ladies.”2 Shakespeare’s play contains these sorts of “dark forces,” making Beatrice and Benedick into much more ...
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Sir Thomas More (play)



Sir Thomas More is an Elizabethan play and a dramatic biography based on particular events in the life of the Catholic martyr Thomas More, who rose to become the Lord Chancelor of England during the Reign of Henry VIII. The play is considered to be written by Anthony Munday and Henry Chettle and revised by several writers. It is particularly notable for a three page handwritten revision that is considered by many scholars to be by William Shakespeare.This play is not simply biographical, because, for example, significant facts of More’s life are not described: There is no mention of his literary career, his book Utopia, or the dispute between Henry VIII and the Pope in Rome. Also the life of More is at times expanded beyond what actually occurred and beyond the sources that were used, in order to suit the drama. What the play is about has been debated, but the issues revolve around obedience to the crown and rule of law, particularly when a populace becomes stirred up in an anti-alien fervor. Even More must obey; when he doesn’t he loses his life.There are three primary actions in the drama: First is the uprising of 1517 known as Ill May Day and More’s quelling of the rioters. Second is the portrayal of More’s private life, his family and friendships, demonstrating his generosity, kindness, and wit. Third is his service as Privy Councillor and Lord Chamberlain, and the principled stand he took in opposition to the king, which leads to More’s execution.The particular articles More refuses to sign are never described, so the play avoids the specific conflict that occurred between the church in Rome and the English Church, and so then the story can focus on the issue of freedom of an individual conscience from worldly authority. This explains why Munday, who fought against the Catholic Church, would be an author of a play that vindicates More, a Catholic martyr. Munday’s abiding interest, as demonstrated in his other plays, was in speaking out against attacks on an individual’s freedom, attacks that came from both church and state.Considered in terms of theatrical performance, it is seen as effective and dramatic in the scenes dealing with the rioting, it is warm and human when dealing with his private life, and it is sympathetic and admiring as More sticks to his principles in the conclusion of the play. It is considered to be the best of the dramatic biographies that were written in Elizabethan times. Even with these qualities it would not have attracted as much interest if it were not for the association this play has with Shakespeare.The original manuscript, involving so many revisions, has reinforced the incorrect idea that the play has been pieced together or is in poor condition. Instead, the revisions should be considered in recognizable theatrical terms as a script’s natural progression towards its being readied for production.The original manuscript is a handwritten text, now owned by the British Library. The manuscript is notable for the light it sheds on the collaborative nature of Elizabethan drama and theatrical censorship of the era. In 1871, Richard Simpson proposed that some additions to the play had been written by Shakespeare, and a year later James Spedding, editor of the works of Sir Francis Bacon, while rejecting some of Simpson's suggestions, supported the attribution to Shakespeare of the passage credited to Hand D. In 1916, the paleographer Sir Edward Maunde Thompson published a minute analysis of the handwriting of the addition and judged it to be Shakespeare's. The case was strengthened with the publication of Shakespeare's Hand in the Play of Sir Thomas More (1923) by five noted scholars who analysed the play from multiple perspectives, all of which led to the same affirmative conclusion. A second significant gathering of scholars to consider Sir Thomas More grew out of a seminar that was held during the meeting of the Shakespeare Association of America at Ashland, Oregon in 1983. It resulted in a second book of essays, eight by eight different authors, that was published as Shakespeare and Sir Thomas More; Essays on the Play and its Shakespearean Interest. It is a comprehensive study of the manuscript, and states that it appears more likely than ever that Shakespeare did indeed contribute to the revision of this play. This would make it the only surviving manuscript text written by Shakespeare. Although some dissenters remain, the attribution has been generally accepted since the mid-20th century and most authoritative editions of Shakespeare's works, including The Oxford Shakespeare, include the play. It was performed with Shakespeare's name included amongst the authors by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2005.
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