• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Amanda Penlington and Ben Spiller
Amanda Penlington and Ben Spiller

... Towards the end of the interview, Grandage provided a clue as to what his next Crucible project might be: ‘I’m a fan of Marlowe, and I’ve a lot of Shakespeares that I want to do, and more Marlowes’. ...
EDUCATOR GUIDE Story Theme: Page to Stage Subject: California
EDUCATOR GUIDE Story Theme: Page to Stage Subject: California

... Greeks and Romans, written by the historian Plutarch (45-125 CE). An English translation of this text was made by Sir Thomas North in 1579, and was published in 1579 and 1595. Julius Caesar is Shakespeare’s second Roman play, in addition to Titus Andronicus, published circa 1593-94, and it is the sh ...
england and scotland: literature and pop culture
england and scotland: literature and pop culture

... Spend the afternoon at leisure exploring the city on your own. Globe Theatre Performance Travel back in time 400 years as you attend a Shakespearean play at the Globe Theatre. As part of the experience, theatergoers can sit on wooden oak benches or choose to be a `groundling,' where they can jostle, ...
Shakespeare`s Madwomen: How Elizabethan Theatre Challenged
Shakespeare`s Madwomen: How Elizabethan Theatre Challenged

... (Gainor 723). It might also be worth noting that some scholars have admitted that the text is unclear on whether or not Hamlet has taken Ophelia’s virginity. In fact, Kenneth Branagh’s most recent film depiction of Hamlet includes a brief sex scene between the lovers in the form of a flashback. If t ...
`Imitation` to
`Imitation` to

... In August of the same year when Chowringhee was gutted, Mrs. Leach, previously associated with Chowringhee, opened Sans Souci in Waterloo Street. Sans Souci continued to stage plays here for a year while a bigger theatre was being built in Park Street by public subscription. Dwarkanath Tagore and Lo ...
Crossing the Boundaries in Kushner and Shakespeare
Crossing the Boundaries in Kushner and Shakespeare

... represents a person that is feared in society. This fear and hatred resounds in Tony Kushner’s Angels in America, “faggots; we’re just a bad dream that the real world is having, and the real world’s waking up” (2.34). Viewing the stigma against syphilis in early modern England, which Pandarus repres ...
Study Guide PDF - Seattle Shakespeare Company
Study Guide PDF - Seattle Shakespeare Company

... from the shore of a nearby island and despairs for the lost souls. Her father, Prospero, calms her fears and explains that both the boat and its men are safely ashore. In truth, Prospero conjured the storm using magic to purposely wash its passengers on to the island because his deceitful brother, A ...
Kemin lyseon lukio
Kemin lyseon lukio

... the fertile imagination of those who choose to buy into it. Then again, the curse of Macbeth may have been the last thing on his mind. (10) ...
Emily Mann on Twelfth Night
Emily Mann on Twelfth Night

... have a great deal of information about his life. The following are some frequently asked questions, with information provided courtesy of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. When and where was Shakespeare born? According to the church records, Shakespeare was baptized at Holy Trinity Church, Stratford ...
What is a Shakespearean tragedy?
What is a Shakespearean tragedy?

... he noted its failure to observe what he termed ‘an essential part of the [Shakespearean] tragic pattern’;1 which would seem to imply that these plays do have some shared characteristics peculiar to them. Nevertheless, objections to comprehensive definitions of ‘Shakespearean Tragedy’ are well founded ...
Teacher Resource Guide - University Musical Society
Teacher Resource Guide - University Musical Society

... • The stage will extend out into the audience and much of the action of the production will happen on this thrust. • This production’s actors are from the United Kingdom and have years of experience performing live theatre. • Musicians will play music in the lobby prior to the start of the performan ...
Tis in ourselves that we are thus or thus
Tis in ourselves that we are thus or thus

... Season, a dirty dozen, and affairs of the heart. Our tenth season felt like an enormous milestone, but there’s something especially impactful in simply saying that we’ve been in business going on a dozen years. We are hitting our stride here at Actors’ Shakespeare Project, and that has been almost e ...
ROMEO AND JULIET Entire Folio.pub
ROMEO AND JULIET Entire Folio.pub

... A feud is an ongoing cycle of violence between two groups of people that continues because of acts of retaliation and vengeance. In order for a feud to end completely, both sides must agree to stop the violence. The desire to avoid appearing weak or shameful kept most ancient feuds, like the one fea ...
the Twelfth Night Study Guide
the Twelfth Night Study Guide

... The first known printing of Twelfth Night is the First Folio of 1623, in which the scene of Malvolio’s “torture” places the stage direction “Malvolio within” on a separate line before Malvolio’s first speech. Nowhere does “Enter Malvolio” appear in the scene. In other words, he’s off-stage througho ...
TITUS ANDRONICUS. By William Shakespeare. Royal
TITUS ANDRONICUS. By William Shakespeare. Royal

... gruesome play, Titus Andronicus has returned to the RSC repertory in a new production that has already generated considerable controversy. Although purists might disagree with director Deborah Warner's piercingly cerebral interpretation, the new RSC production is so strikingly performed and directed ...
Much Ado About Nothing - Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival
Much Ado About Nothing - Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival

... Get to know the characters. Shakespeare liked to create a large cast of characters. The people in his plays are as detailed and diverse as the people in our world. As their names can be unusual, it is helpful to review who is who and what they do before the play begins. Just like in Shakespeare’s da ...
Early Twentieth- 20 th C entury . European Touring Stars and the
Early Twentieth- 20 th C entury . European Touring Stars and the

... success of a Shakespearean performance in Spain during much of the twentieth century? The aim of this paper is to explain why Shakespeare’s plays were and were not performed. {state your aim in positive, not genitive terms. And state it once, not twice. I maintain that at the beginning of the twenti ...
Abstract: Boy Players` Theatre and Acting Skills in the Ho! Plays
Abstract: Boy Players` Theatre and Acting Skills in the Ho! Plays

... while simultaneously reflecting deliberatively about the difficulty of opening, or more precisely, entering into the ear of a younger person. In such a situation, the speaker may ruminate about and or even delineate the aural skills necessary in order for the lecture to have its desired effect, and ...
Document
Document

... “What country, friends, is this?”: Australian and New Zealand Productions of Twelfth Night in the Twentieth Century The production history of a Shakespeare play serves as a remarkable matrix by which to observe changes in styles of production and reception in any society in transition from colony to ...
History of English Literature II
History of English Literature II

... and gives an account of Christianity in England from the beginning until his own day. Also, modern time keeping (=AD) was established by Bede. From age 7 to 59, his life was fully devoted to the church. Bede described scholarship as being inferior to the study of the scriptures. Bede was almost cert ...
me and orson welles
me and orson welles

... in a world lurching towards fascism and war. Know a Shakespeare play well, and you can gain huge insights into the times in which it gets produced – each production being in many ways a barometer of that moment. A recent Henry V for example, suddenly acquired a huge relevance because the country was ...
PDF
PDF

... opening of Australia’s first licensed theatre. The ideological ambitions of the project far exceeded what we would see today as the purpose of “entertainment”. Public theatre was seen as an expression of cultural and hence political continuity with Britain; nationalism was bound up with imperialism ...
Functions (or politics) of Metatheatrical Techniques in King Lear and
Functions (or politics) of Metatheatrical Techniques in King Lear and

... Once people were admitted to the public theatre, they could see all kinds of people of different classes. As John Davies put it, “citizens and artisans joined with gentlemen and prostitutes, porters and household servants” could attend the same play (Gurr 217). This fact supports Jean Howard’s opini ...
THROUGH KENNETH BRANAGH - British Council | Northern Ireland
THROUGH KENNETH BRANAGH - British Council | Northern Ireland

... camaraderie and lack of hierarchy within the company. A further aim was to improve the reach and accessibility of Shakespeare. Alongside two contemporary plays, Twelfth Night opened the inaugural season of the company. The Shakespearean comedy, directed by Branagh, played over December 1987 at the R ...
The Comedy of Errors Entire First Folio
The Comedy of Errors Entire First Folio

... 1592, William Portrait of Shakespeare engraved by Shakespeare d i d Martin Droeshout, found on the title become involved in the page of the First Folio edition of s works, 1623. London theatre scene as Shakespeare’ a principal actor and playwright with one of several repertory companies. ...
< 1 ... 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 ... 39 >

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.
  • studyres.com © 2026
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report