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3.Renaiss.English.drama 106KB Feb 14 2017 04:45:58 AM
3.Renaiss.English.drama 106KB Feb 14 2017 04:45:58 AM

... Eliot, T. S. "Four Elizabethan Dramatists." 1924. In Eliot, Selected Essays. 3rd. ed. London: Faber, 1951. 109-17. _____. Essays on Elizabethan Drama. New York, 1936. _____. Essays on Elizabethan Drama. 1960. (? = Elizabethan Dramatists. London: Faber) _____. Elizabethan Essays. London: Faber, 1934. ...
Othello Ongoing: Feminist and Postcolonial Adaptations
Othello Ongoing: Feminist and Postcolonial Adaptations

... to control the whole action of the play. Othello is one of the most frequently adapted works by Shakespeare because of its significance and the critics’ interest in it. A. C. Bradley (1905) in his book Shakespearean Tragedy, states that “Of all Shakespeare’s tragedies Othello is the most painfully e ...
2014|2015 SEASON • Issue 1 - Shakespeare Theatre Company
2014|2015 SEASON • Issue 1 - Shakespeare Theatre Company

... to have died. On November 27, 1582, a marriage license was granted to 18-year-old William and 26-year-old Anne Hathaway. A daughter, Susanna, was born to the couple six months later. We know that twins, Hamnet and Judith, were born soon after and were baptized. What we do not know is how the young S ...
OTHELLO Study Guide - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
OTHELLO Study Guide - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey

... •When more class time is available prior to your visit, we recommend incorporating the background information on William Shakespeare and the play itself. One teacher divided her class into groups and assigned each group research topics based on the divisions found in the study guide. Using a copy of ...
Book-It Repertory Theatre_Encore Arts Seattle
Book-It Repertory Theatre_Encore Arts Seattle

... the power of the human voice to illuminate experience. YSW was awarded the nation’s highest honor for out-of-school youth arts training in 2011, the National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award. ...
Translations of Shakespear
Translations of Shakespear

... Translation of Shakespeare has a long history in the region of Bengal. It began in 1809 when Charles Monckton , a student of Fort Wi lliam College, translated a few excerpts from Tempest into Bangia. Since then, there have been many more attempts to translate Shakespeare into Bangia. Most translatio ...
Nine Ways Of Opening Macbeth
Nine Ways Of Opening Macbeth

... The “simplicity of effect” which critics rightly call for, can only be brought about by a process which is very elaborate, different and costly. It is something like the ideal peace amongst nations, which not only passes understanding, but which can only be maintained by force of arms; or it is like ...
Stage-Managing `Otherness`: The Function of
Stage-Managing `Otherness`: The Function of

... how to "compare this prison ... unto the world," and engage in setting "the word itself against the word" (5.5.1-14). Given his knowledge of Desdemona's innocence--the sight of "the tragic loading of this bed"--and the realization that he has been nothing more than a comic actor in Iago's deadly pla ...
Interminability and Overdoing in Teaching Hamlet
Interminability and Overdoing in Teaching Hamlet

... does he, love Ophelia? Why does he put on the antic disposition? Does he really go mad? Is Horatio a Dane? If Horatio was at the funeral of King Hamlet, and the play opens about two months after his death, why has Hamlet not seen him until 1.2? What is the “election” that appears necessary to crown ...
here - Congress Business Travel
here - Congress Business Travel

... performance by Robert Gordon, showing the impact of the play on the Jewish culture. The programme will also include the screening of the film version of Václav Havel’s latest play, Leaving, based, among other sources, on King Lear. The political and cultural contacts between Elizabethan and Jacobean ...
macbeth - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
macbeth - 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 ...
Shakespeare`s Romances - University of Hartford`s Academic Web
Shakespeare`s Romances - University of Hartford`s Academic Web

... The mood of the play associates it with the formulaic prose romances that were so popular during this period, in which the hero suffers a series of reversals, often involving shipwrecks or attacks by wild creatures, young lovers and harsh fathers, oracles and prophecies, and particularly family memb ...
Click HERE to a Know The Show Guide
Click HERE to a Know The Show Guide

... happy to be second best” for Éliante, should things not work out for her and Alceste. The pair are interrupted by Alceste’s outburst of grief over Célimène’s alleged betrayal. Having procured a letter from Arsinoé that he thinks Célimène has written to Oronte, he is in despair, and appeals to Éliant ...
2011-2012 - Shakespeare Theatre Company
2011-2012 - Shakespeare Theatre Company

... award on behalf of everyone who has worked tirelessly for this on-going artistic adventure. With our 25th anniversary, we commemorated all of the traits that make the Shakespeare Theatre Company a pillar of the community. We began with the beloved Washington tradition, Free For All, now in Sidney Ha ...
Hearing or seeing a play?: Evidence of early
Hearing or seeing a play?: Evidence of early

... than 12 to 1. Within that pattern I can detect no significant changes over time: neither expression is markedly more or less prevalent at either end of the period. In deciding whether the word play is being used in the sense of dramatic performance (as opposed to other kinds of spectacle) I have exc ...
Theatrical Temporality and Historical - English
Theatrical Temporality and Historical - English

... Historical Time / Theatrical Time in Sixteenth-Century England Early modern author and playgoer Thomas Nashe described the spectacle of Lord Talbot’s death in Shakespeare’s play 1 Henry VI (c. 1592) as one where “ten thousand spectators at least (at seuerall times)” amid their “teares . . . imagine ...
Rereading Shakespeare`s Ophelia: Marcelo
Rereading Shakespeare`s Ophelia: Marcelo

... published in Shakespeare Survey (1995, p.13), John Russel Brown states that the bard’s plays, with their “inherently flexible structure and openness of style”, invite distinctive reinterpretations mainly in performance, when they can be readjusted at will, depending on the directors’ intentions and ...
The midsummer night dream
The midsummer night dream

... the circles intersect. Queen Titania teases Oberon and tells him that he used to love Hippolyta and now she will marry Theseus. So, he tells her that he knows about her love to Theseus. So, we see people from the fairy land love people from Athens. Thus, the love stories intersect. Also, the fairy ...
The Taming of the Shrew
The Taming of the Shrew

... Celebrating its twenty-fifth Anniversary Season, Chicago Shakespeare Theater is Chicago’s professional theater dedicated to the works of William Shakespeare. Founded as Shakespeare Repertory in 1986, the company moved to its seven-story home on Navy Pier in 1999. In its Elizabethan-style courtyard t ...
- ASU Digital Repository
- ASU Digital Repository

... Poel's and the Elizabethan Staging Society's influences on theatre practitioners can be traced through the twentieth century, which Falocco does, through productions by directors who chose to present Shakespeare via Renaissance means. These early and mid twentieth-century attempts illustrate the con ...
Directing violence from "stage to page": revenge tragedies and the
Directing violence from "stage to page": revenge tragedies and the

... Shakespeare and many of his contemporaries, their original works passed through many disrupting filters before they reached the publisher. If a manuscript is based on a scribal copy, it may be cut or contain changes for a particular performance (ex. the exclusion of the deposition scene [IV.i] in ea ...
2009-2010 - Shakespeare Theatre Company
2009-2010 - Shakespeare Theatre Company

... Considered playwright Ben Jonson’s best comedy, The Alchemist follows the antics of three con artists: Subtle, Face and Dol. When the gentleman Lovewit flees England to avoid the Plague, the trio set up headquarters in his home to expose the social ills of their fellow Londoners. The New Republic sa ...
Book chapter - Archive ouverte UNIGE
Book chapter - Archive ouverte UNIGE

... at least two reasons. Firstly, because of its historical location on the trajectory from an earlier, medieval pre-print culture to a later, firmly printbased culture of literacy. And secondly, because the page and the stage are the twin media for which Shakespeare conceived his plays. Such at least ...
Page 1 Page 2 THE CAESAR KIDAAV 一The Earliest Japanese
Page 1 Page 2 THE CAESAR KIDAAV 一The Earliest Japanese

... condition that whenever the performance proved harmful to public peace and order it would immediately be banned. The local chief of police of the district of N]honbashi and some other inspectors used to come by turns and watch the performance every evening, each with a copy of the censorship-approve ...
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW - Ms. Knudsen`s English classes
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW - Ms. Knudsen`s English classes

... Here’s how to be a part of the play in a way that everyone—audience, actor, and crew—can enjoy: 1. It’s perfectly all right to laugh, cry, gasp, or applaud if the play makes you feel like doing so. You’re there to experience the story, after all. It could not be told without you, and it is more than ...
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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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