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Othello Essay Prompts
Othello Essay Prompts

... It has been said Othello “is a play about a handkerchief.” How far do you agree or disagree with this viewpoint. What ideas of your own do you have about this? 4. IAGO—MASTER OR FOOL? Iago is able to manipulate his victims so skillfully because he thinks in the same terms they do. Camille Wells Sigh ...
Shakespeare Medium Term Plan
Shakespeare Medium Term Plan

... The difference between film/TV and theatre. (En2 5c) iii) Drama activities to familiarise students with the nature of performance. (En1 4c) iv) Set design and theatre management. (En1 11c) ...
Renaissance Review
Renaissance Review

... What is perspective? How is this associated with the Italian Renaissance theatre? What was the “Intermezzi” and what part did it play in the beginning of opera? What was the plague? What caused it? What were its effects on society and its economy? What effect did capitalism have on renaissance socie ...
The Winter`s Tale Programme
The Winter`s Tale Programme

... and details of this can be found in the programme. There are several people that I personally wish to thank including our Patron, Dame Norma Major, whose unstinting support is very much appreciated. Also thanks to my fellow Trustees and their long suffering families for all their valuable work and d ...
KAT CHAT - Khandallah Arts Theatre
KAT CHAT - Khandallah Arts Theatre

... Shakespeare in Hollywood opens next week on Thursday 6 October starting at 7.30pm. The play is set in Hollywood in the 1930s where Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream is being filmed. So; what happens when Oberon and Puck from a wood near Athens end up on the 1930s set? Mistaken identities, hila ...
Twelfth Night: A Guide for Teachers
Twelfth Night: A Guide for Teachers

... ONE : The world (or worlds) of the play begin in some sort of disorder or chaos as a result of some inciting incident. TWO: Some figure of authority (a king or queen, prince, duke, parent) makes a decision that will have a significant impact on the lives of the other characters in the world of the p ...
Terence Staged in the Sixteenth Century by Hugh Macrae
Terence Staged in the Sixteenth Century by Hugh Macrae

... Griphius edition. This Lyonais illustration in the Riverside edition may account for the central hut-like construction which provided the total set for the Royal National Theatre’s 1994 production of Volpone in London (with Michael Gambon in the title role) –- for the vast, empty Olivier stage comes ...
Aug. 7, 2010 - Shakespeare Returns (Brampton Guardian)
Aug. 7, 2010 - Shakespeare Returns (Brampton Guardian)

... generous support of Brampton’s local theatrical community whose members donated their time Bard's stories. Melissa-Jane Shaw and Scott Lale seen here in a and wardrobes. performance of Taming of the Shrew. This year, Shakespeare in the The 45-minute version of the bard’s comedy is Square, returns wi ...
BBC Learning English Entertainment Shakespeare`s Globe
BBC Learning English Entertainment Shakespeare`s Globe

... Well it was built in 1599 and Shakespeare and a group of actors put money together to build the theatre. It was the first time ever in England actors had paid to build a theatre. So that was very special. And it became the number one theatre in London as Shakespeare's company became the number one a ...
Shakespeare and globalization
Shakespeare and globalization

... necessarily intercultural. The past really is another culture, its remoteness disguised by language that can occasionally appear as familiar as we seem to ourselves, whom we understand so imperfectly.’19 This argument applies even more strongly when a Shakespearian work is translated into foreign la ...
The Winter’s Tale Tickets now on sale! Return to the Forbidden Planet
The Winter’s Tale Tickets now on sale! Return to the Forbidden Planet

... The Winter’s Tale contains several of Shakespeare’s most famous oddities. One such peculiarity is the most wellknown stage direction in all of Shakespeare’s works, “Exit, pursued by a bear.” Was there a real bear in early productions of The Winter’s Tale? While some scholars believe that a man would ...
Of Shakespeare and Kalidasa
Of Shakespeare and Kalidasa

... his weakness. He joins them and they immediately catch hold of him to demand the money he owes them. This scene reads like an occurrence in modern absurdist theatre. Dialogue, movements and gestures are all acted in a stylistic fashion to heighten the drama. In Shakespeare’s King Lear, Gloster wants ...
Oxford the Actor - The De Vere Society
Oxford the Actor - The De Vere Society

... the three playwrights and the actor, can be shown to demonstrate that Oxford has to be the ‘upstart crow with his tiger’s heart in a player’s hide’ , who ‘supposes’ he can write. I would say that Chettle was misled into thinking Oxford an ‘upstart crow’ because Chettle misinterpreted his recent retu ...
Summer 2015 PSF Newsletter - Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival
Summer 2015 PSF Newsletter - Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival

... Part of Henry the Fourth is interesting because there are two competing endings that advertised two very different plays to come. One epilogue we know was delivered by the comic actor Will Kemp, who declared “our humble author will continue the story, with Sir John [Falstaff ] in it, and make you me ...
Literature in Context: Macbeth
Literature in Context: Macbeth

... greatest playwright of all time—was born in Stratford-on-Avon in 1564. 23rd April is traditionally recognised as his birthday; it is also the date of his death in 1616. Shakespeare’s Life Shakespeare’s father, John, was a respected middle-class glovemaker who held political positions in local govern ...
True/False
True/False

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The English Drama
The English Drama

... into English. An example of Seneca’s influence on English drama can be seen in the works of Thomas Kid. His most popular play was The Spanish Tragedy and it includes many Senecan elements. ...
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True/False

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Valerie Clayman Pye - Manhattanville College
Valerie Clayman Pye - Manhattanville College

... utilizing antithesis, metaphor, simile, assonance and alliteration; understanding and contextualizing Elizabethan performance conditions and the historical context in which Shakespeare wrote. (Newly devised curriculum) Clayman Pye 3 ...
ROMEO AND JULIET on Film - Emporia State University
ROMEO AND JULIET on Film - Emporia State University

... Hussey's full figure during filming, and ordered that no more pasta would be served on the set. The first major film production of this play to actually cast leading actors who were close to the ages of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Zeffirelli needed to get special permission to show teena ...
The Comedy Of Errors - Denver Center for the Performing Arts
The Comedy Of Errors - Denver Center for the Performing Arts

... Of course, in the 16th and early 17th centuries, when William Shakespeare wrote, acted and managed a theatrical company, the members of the entertainment world as we now call it were not the celebrities that they are today. No one hastened to record their thoughts and activities for posterity. It pr ...
to read the Julius Caesar Press Release
to read the Julius Caesar Press Release

... August 9, 10, and 15. A special guest lecture will be given on opening night, August 8, at 7:00pm by Michael Sexton, Artistic Director of the Shakespeare Society in New York City. “We chose to do Julius Caesar because of the many aspects of human nature that it addresses,” says Elements Artistic Dir ...
Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet

...  Poorer people would have eaten very little meat and most of what they ate would have been beef and pork sausages (it's the cheapest), but Romeo and Juliet were from rich families so they'd have been able to afford foul and beef and goat and occasionally pork. (Hogs are nasty and take lots of work ...
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)

... actor and playwright. He wrote approximately 38 plays, two epic poems, and over 150 sonnets. His work was immensely popular, appealing to members of all social spheres including Queen Elizabeth I and King James I. While the plays were wellliked, Shakespeare’s work was not considered by his educated ...
Shakespeare`s Globe
Shakespeare`s Globe

... playhouse especially to hear and see the play, not to spoil their enjoyment. At the end of the performance the actors would announce the next day's play, and if it was unpopular people might throw things and shout that this was a bad choice. Why were there no actresses? The short answer is tradition ...
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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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