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Twelfth Night: A Guide for Teachers The Warehouse Theatre 2016 Educational Touring Production For more information, contact Mallory Pellegrino, Director of Education [email protected] The Warehouse Theatre presents Twelfth Night The Warehouse Theatre’s production is a part of Shakespeare in American Communities, a national program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest. Hello Educators! Each year, The Warehouse Theatre works with dozens of schools in South and North Carolina, bringing customized residences to students in grades 3 – 12. We support English Language Art, Theatre, and Literature standards, by bringing the actor’s approach to Shakespeare to the students, empowering them to speak the speeches and embody the words we love so well – as they learn how to apply these tools to their own experience with the text. Through our curricular strategies and arts-integrated approach, we celebrate inclusion, critical thinking, teamwork, process, and problem solving. Shakespeare continues to be an important part of the curriculum in most states, and regardless of changes in standards and best practices, we believe that interacting with these complex texts teaches valuable skills which have an impact on young students’ lives beyond the ELA or theatre classroom. Critical thinking, closereading, looking at situations from different perspectives, examining societal and personal morays and motives, encountering and deciphering structure, building vocabulary and cultural references – Shakespeare brings this and much more to the young scholar! It is in this spirit that we have designed this study guide – intended for educators in middle and high schools to use as a tool to enhance student comprehension and enjoyment of The Warehouse Theatre’s production of William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. The exercises 2 contained in this guide are designed to align with the curricular goals in the middle and high school English Language Arts, Literature, and Theatre classroom. This guide may be used as a supplement to classroom study of this text—and is best used in the context of attending the Warehouse Theatre’s touring production of Twelfth Night. Please feel free to “pick and choose” articles and activities as they complement your work in the classroom! This study guide is divided into Three Sections for your convenience: THE BASICS for a general overview and knowledge of the play, THE BARD for information about Shakespeare’s life and time, and THE BONUSES for experiential and more advanced activities. We hope you will find this guide useful, and that you will let us know what information, topics for discussion, and exercises you integrate into your curriculum. Please feel free to let us know what you would like for us to include in future study guides or resources. Thank you for your support of The Warehouse Theatre! If we can support your curriculum in any additional ways, please contact me at [email protected] All my best, Mallory Pellegrino Director of Education 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS THE BASICS: Plot Synopsis…………………………………………….……....6 A Simple Structure in Shakespeare Plays………….….…...8 Characters in Twelfth Night………………..………………..10 Stock Characters………………………..…………………….11 Fools, Clowns, and Wits……………..…………………….….17 Major Themes and Motifs………………..…………………..19 THE BARD: Shakespeare's Life as a Play………………………..….……22 Shakespeare's England………………………………...…….24 Why do we study Shakespeare?.......................................30 THE BONUSES: WHT's Production Concept and Look Book......................34 Explore and Activate the Text……………………………….41 The Three Ds: Disclosure, Discovery, Decision………..…..44 Twins in Twelfth Night………………………………………….46 Shakespearean Bullying……………………………………...48 Audience Etiquette and Experiencing Theatre………….50 Sources and References………………………………...…...53 4 THE BASICS 5 TWELFTH NIGHT, OR WHAT YOU WILL: A SYNOPSIS A shipwrecked Viola finds herself in the land of Illyria, ruled by Duke Orsino. Duke Orsino is woefully in love with Countess Olivia, but Olivia has sworn to veil herself for seven years to mourn her brother and father. Having just lost her twin brother in a shipwreck, Viola identifies with Olivia’s grief and wishes to serve her, but the Captain tells her this is impossible as Olivia will not welcome visitors. Instead, she should disguise herself as a boy (Cesario) and serve Duke Orsino. As Cesario, Viola begins to win Orsino’s trust. Orsino sends Cesario to woo the Lady Olivia on his behalf, but the exact opposite happens, and Olivia falls in love with Cesario instead, sending her ring after him as a token of her affection. To make matters more complicated, Viola has fallen in love with Duke Orsino, and the love triangle is complete. Back at Lady Olivia’s estate, Sir Toby Belch (Olivia’s raucous and bawdy kinsman) has brought his friend Andrew Aguecheek to be her suitor. Maria, Toby, and the clown Feste delight in Andrew’s foolish attempts to win over Olivia, but Malvolio is always spoiling the group’s fun. Everyone finds this particularly tiresome, so Maria hatches a plan for a practical joke to make Malvolio believe that Lady Olivia is in love with him! She forges a letter in Olivia’s hand, addressed to her beloved telling him that if he wishes to earn her favor, he should dress in yellow stockings and crossed garters, act haughtily, smile constantly, and refuse to explain himself to anyone. They plant the letter where Malvolio will stumble across it and hide to watch their plan unfurl. Finding the letter and assuming it is addressed to him, Malvolio follows its commands directly, hoping to marry Olivia and becoming noble himself. Instead, he makes a complete fool of himself. Seeing Malvolio behaving so strangely, 6 Olivia believes that he has gone mad and locks him in the dungeon. Meanwhile, Sebastian (Viola’s twin brother) arrives in Illyria with his friend and protector, Antonio. Antonio rescued Sebastian from the shipwreck and has been caring for him ever since, even following him into Duke Orsino’s domain. This is particularly troublesome for Antonio, as he and Orsino are old enemies. Observing Olivia’s attraction to Cesario, Sir Andrew challenges Cesario to a duel. Always up for entertainment, Sir Toby eggs Sir Andrew on, but instead of Cesario, they end up fighting Sebastian (because they cannot tell the twins apart). Olivia enters amid the confusion, declaring her love for Sebastian (thinking he is Cesario) and asking him to marry her. Although Sebastian is confused because he does not know Olivia, he sees that she is wealthy and beautiful and agrees to marry her. Meanwhile, Antonio has been arrested by Orsino’s officers. Seeing Cesario and mistaking him for Sebastian, Antonio begs for his friend’s help. Viola denies knowing Antonio, and Antonio is dragged off, crying out that Sebastian has betrayed him. Suddenly, Viola has newfound hope that her brother may be alive. Viola (still disguised as Cesario) and Orsino make their way to Olivia’s house, where Olivia welcomes Cesario as her new husband, thinking him to be Sebastian, whom she has just married. Orsino is furious, but then Sebastian himself appears, and all is revealed. The siblings are joyfully reunited, and Orsino realizes that he loves Viola, now that he knows she is a woman, and asks her to marry him. Sir Toby and Maria have also been married privately, and Malvolio is released from the dungeon. When the trick is revealed in full, the embittered Malvolio storms off vowing revenge for his humiliation, leaving the happy couples to their celebration. 7 A SIMPLE STRUCTURE IN SHAKESPEARE’S PLAYS (Something you can count on) According to Louis Fantasia, scholar and author of Instant Shakespeare, in all of Shakespeare’s plays you can count on the plot including four elements: 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 play. THREE: The dramatic or rising action of the play unfolds as the affected characters in the world of the play take some action in response to the decision made by the authority figure. Often, this will lead them on a journey to a “middle” world of the play that is in direct contrast or juxtaposition to the world of disorder or chaos that starts the play. FOUR: The actions taken by the affected characters force some sort of climax or resolution based on the decision made by the figure of authority. In a comedy this resolution comes in the form of multiple marriages. In a tragedy, it comes in the form of multiple deaths. Ultimately, this resolution restores order to the first world. 8 TERMS TO KNOW: Plot: Events that make up a story. Inciting incident: The event or decision that begins a story’s problem. Dramatic action / Rising action: A series of events that build toward the point of greatest interest. Climax: A decisive moment or turning point in a storyline. Resolution: The action of solving the story’s problem. ACTIVITIES: 1. Recognize It: Identify these four structural elements in Twelfth Night. 2. Support It: Find textual evidence (i.e. direct quotations) that show each of the four elements. 3. Visualize It: Create a chart, illustration, or some visual aid to represent your findings. 4. Physicalize It: Construct a tableau (frozen picture made with your body) to represent each of the four phases. Put them all together in a physical slide show. 5. Go Further: Apply this test to another of Shakespeare’s plays to see if it holds up. Compare your results. 9 CHARACTERS IN TWELFTH NIGHT: Viola, a lady from Messaline shipwrecked on the coast of Illyria. Twin of Sebastian. She disguises herself as the boy Cesario to serve Duke Orsino. Sebastian, Viola’s twin brother. Countess Olivia, a countess of Illyria Maria, Olivia’s waiting-gentlewoman Malvolio, steward to Olivia’s household Feste, Olivia’s jester Sir Toby Belch, Olivia’s kinsman (uncle) Sir Andrew Aguecheek, Sir Toby’s companion Sir Topas, a curate (parson) that Feste disguises himself as Duke Orsino, duke of Illyria Valentine, a gentleman serving Orsino Antonio, Sebastian’s friend Captain, welcomes Viola to Illyria 10 STOCK CHARACTERS Shakespeare employs many of “stock” characters from the Commedia Del-Arte tradition throughout his works. In Commedia, the play’s message is communicated largely through easily recognizable or even stereotypical characters. Once you look at their basic characteristics, it is easy to identify them across the Shakespearean canon. This identification of characters can make understanding an unfamiliar text a little easier – because the characters in a particular category behave in similar ways, and may even speak using similar rhetorical, image or verse structure. SOME EXAMPLES OF STOCK CHARACTERS IN SHAKESPEARE LOVERS Ingenue (female): Innocent, sweet, youthful, honorable Examples: Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, Hero in Much Ado About Nothing, Perdita in The Winter’s Tale, Anne Page in The Merry Wives of Windsor. Sobrette (female): Not-so-innocent, not-so-young, usually honorable, witty, likes banter and argument Examples: Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing, Rosalind in As You Like It, Katarina in The Taming of the Shrew, Rosaline in Love’s Labours Lost. Rustic/ Rude (Male and Female): country born and bred, simple, agrarian, earthy. Examples: Jaquenetta in Love’s Labours Lost, Audrey and Phebe in As You Like It, Silvius in As You Like It, Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night. Noble (Male): born of nobility, high-born, generally honest Examples: Claudio in Much Ado About Nothing, Troilus in Troilus and Cressida, Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, Sebastian in Twelfth Night 11 COMPANIONS Councilors (Male or Female): faithful, honest, convey messages, have information, confidantes. Examples: Paulina and Camillo in The Winter’s Tale, Benvolio in Romeo and Juliet, Banquo in Macbeth Bawds (Female): worldly, saucy, dispense advice, maternal with an edge Examples: The Nurse in Romeo and Juliet, Mistress Quickly in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Lucetta in Two Gentlemen of Verona, Emilia in Othello Mentors (Male): fatherly, give advice, supply the hero with the means to pursue their desire. Examples: Don Pedro and Antonio in Much Ado About Nothing, Duncan in Macbeth, The Duke in Measure for Measure AUTHORITY FIGURES AND SOLDIERS In Control (male): authoritative, most times fair, peripheral to plot, initiate or resolve conflict. Examples: Theseus in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Prince in Romeo and Juliet, Solinus in The Comedy of Errors, Cymbeline in Cymbeline In Distress (male or female): strong, noble, comprised by circumstance or bad decisions/advice, decisive, often with a flaw of temperament Examples: Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra, Macbeth in Macbeth, Titus in Titus Andronicus, Orsino in Twelfth Night, Lear in King Lear RELUCTANT HEROES Rakes & Cads (male): Walk the line between good and bad but usually turn out good,witty, bawdy, seductive, hot-tempered, loyal but independent. Examples: Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew, Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet, Benedick in Much Ado about Nothing, The Bastard in King John, Kent in King Lear 12 COMIC CHARACTERS The Wit: Language based humor, somewhat noble, melancholy Examples: Jaques in As You Like It, The Fool in King Lear, Berowne in Love’s Labours Lost, Benedick in Much Ado about Nothing The Clown: Physical comic, jester, paid to be amusing, singer Examples: Feste in Twelfth Night, Touchstone in As You Like It, The Fool in King Lear, Lavatch in All’s Well that Ends Well The Fool: situational comic, dim-witted, unaware of being a fool Examples: Dorcas and Mopsa in The Winter’s Tale, Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing, Speed and Launce in Two Gentlemen of Verona, Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night, Don Armado in Love’s Labour’s Lost. Bawds (Female): worldly, saucy, dispense advice, maternal with an edge Examples: The Nurse in Romeo and Juliet, Mistress Quickly in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Lucetta in Two Gentlemen of Verona, Emilia in Othello, Margaret in Much Ado About Nothing. OPPOSITIONAL CHARACTERS Villains (Male or Female): Charismatic but ruthless and malicious characters. They are often murderous characters driven by blood-lust, revenge, murderous ambition or simply hatred of the protagonist. Their actions are mostly premeditated. Examples: Iago in Othello, Aaron and Tamora in Titus Andronicus, Richard in Richard III Antagonists (Male or Female): As well as having some or many of the villains, the antagonists are also characterized by petty ambition, jealousy, greed, and gullibility. They are often misinformed or mistaken in their opposition. They may also lack the ability or determination of a villain. These characters are often simply at odds with the protagonist because they are culturally or ideologically opposed. Examples: Macbeth and Lady Macbeth in Macbeth, Cassius and Brutus in Julius Caesar, Angelo in Measure for Measure, Leontes in The Winter’s Tale. 13 PARENTS Dominant Father or Mother: These are strong, domineering characters who are sometimes cruel or in opposition to the desires of their children in favor of their own ambitions or sense of order and degree. Examples: Lord and Lady Capulet in Romeo and Juliet, Egeus in A Midsummer Night’s Dream Doting Father or Absent Mother It is difficult to find many doting fathers in Shakespeare’s plays and if they are found, they very often turn dominant somewhere during the action of the play. Absent mothers however, are evident in many of his plays, as they are in most fairy tales. At times, Shakespeare will use a matronly character to stand in for an absent mother. These characters are often older, simple people who are natural or foster parents or marginalized characters. They offer counsel, love and support and may find themselves in peril for their love and care. Examples: Leonato in Much Ado About Nothing (he begins as a doting father but turns dominant), Lear in King Lear (Again, he starts out doting, becomes dominant, and returns to doting), Adam in As You Like It, the Old Shepherd in The Winter’s Tale, the Countess in All’s Well that Ends Well, Constance in King John and Hermione in The Winter’s Tale (Both Constance and Hermione are removed from her child for most of the action of both plays). NON-HUMAN CHARACTERS Fantasticals / Sprits (Male, Female, or Neither) Creatures of imagination, fairies, sprites, goblins, and ghosts and even the occasional god. Often used to provide insight into future events or to council and protect mortal characters or to wreak havoc and mischief. Examples: Titania and Oberon, Puck and the fairies in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Ariel in The Tempest, Hecate and the weird sisters in Macbeth, Caesar’s ghost in Julius Caesar. 14 “EVERYMAN” CHARACTERS Rustics and Mechanicals: Pastoral or country rather than urban or city based characters. They are often simple, comical, less sophisticated, but always wise in common matters. Usually honest but highly gullible. Examples: Bottom, Quince, Snout, Snug, Flute, and Starveling in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Corin, William, Audrey, Phebe, and Silvius in As You Like It, The Old Shepherd and his son and family in The Winter’s Tale, Verges in Much Ado About Nothing. EXPOSITIONAL AND SUPERNUMERARIES Lords, ladies, soldiers, officers, musicians, messengers, servants (Male or Female) Important but often nameless and shallow characters in that we know very little about them and do not see them consistently throughout the play. They serve to deliver expositional material, bring news, or act as a sort of chorus commenting on the action of the play. There are numerous examples of these characters; just about any that don’t fit into one of the other categories. Compelling Characters Shakespeare certainly made use of stock characters but he also invented his fair share of more complex characters by integrating the types. Because of this, his characters seem more truthful, more “human.” These characters, perhaps because of their “humanness” and complexity have survived through time, unequalled in literature, and beloved for their depth and variety. Shakespeare’s characters are deeply admired by theatre artists and especially actors who consider his characters to be some of the most compelling, challenging and difficult roles to play. 15 ACTIVITY: 1. Recognize It: Assign each student a character from Twelfth Night. Have them identify a stock character type for their given character. 2. Support It: Have them choose a line of text from the play to support their choice or that epitomizes their stock character choice 3. Visualize It: Think about how you identify stock characters in movies, plays, tv shows, etc. What are external cues, such as gesture and physical attributes, that are give aways? Make a list. You may wish you make a sketch of your character as well. 4. Physicalize It: Take your list from above and choose three of the clues. Spend 5 minutes physically developing these clues (gestures, walks, voices, etc). Once they have perfected all three, ask your students to introduce themselves to the class as their character. Have the class guess which stock character type they chose for their character. Discuss whether the class guessed correctly. Remind students that the actors job is to create a clear picture for their audience, not to trick them. 5. Go Further: Apply this same test to a popular tv show or movie. Do you see repeated stock characters in contemporary entertainment? DISCUSSION QUESTIONS: What is the difference between stereotype and archetype. Are there differences in how stock characters are used in tragedy and comedy? How do stock characters influence our expectation of what is going to happen in a story? 16 FOOLS, CLOWNS, AND WITS Written By: Jayce Tromsness, Director In all of Shakespeare’s plays there is a character, or two characters, or even three and four, who serve a comic function in the structure and strategy of the play. They are often identified in the lists of characters as: fools, clowns, or wits. These names are important and yet can be deceptive. In many cases the characters who are labeled as clowns are somewhat grave and melancholy or not entirely comical or “funny.” And what distinguishes a clown from a fool? What is a wit? How are they part of the comic stable of characters? There are no hard and fast rules to follow here, but we can look to the following definitions for some perspective. A Clown A character whose occupation is to make people laugh. Clowns often, sing, perform tricks, and make use of verbal and physical comedy. A Fool A character who makes us laugh without trying to do so. Fools often lack intellectual aptitude and their humor is often based on their ignorance or mistaken logic. A Wit A character whose intellectual agility is often coupled with a wry or sardonic, manner. Wits make sharp, cutting observations; revealing and reveling in mankind’s follies. They often speak truth to power. In Twelfth Night or What You Will, there are several characters who we might respond to as humorous but this doesn’t necessarily categorize them as fools, clowns or wits. Twelfth Night is, after all, a comedy; we would assume that all the characters are “funny,” right?...or maybe not. One of Shakespeare’s favorite devices was to 17 confound expectations. Take Feste for example; this character is listed as, “Clown.” Feste certainly makes attempts at humor but the result, and often the action, is clearly tired, half-hearted, and laden with a sense of melancholy. Many productions of the play have portrayed a Feste who is weary, sad, and even acerbic. His occupation is to make people laugh but from the outset of the play his humor falls short and is even derided by Malvolio as being stale and outdated. What does this say about the world of Illyria, about our own world? On closer examination of the character, we find that Feste seems to take on more of the qualities of the Wit than of the Fool. Can you find examples of this in the text and action of the play? In the same play, we have a knight named Sir Andrew Aguecheek. He is in Illyria at Toby’s invitation to woo Toby’s niece, Olivia. He is completely inept and all of his attempts at chivalry and “knightly” behavior fall apart in humorous ways and we find ourselves laughing whole heartedly at him and his antics. But is this character trying to be funny? Does Andrew serve as a Fool in the play? Are there more fools? ACTIVTIY: Connect to other Shakespearean Plays: Look at Jaques, Touchstone, Silvius, Corin, and Audrey in AS YOU LIKE IT. Try to assign them to the roles of Clown, Fool, or Wit. Connect to today: Identify performers or actors today who you feel take on one or all of these character traits in their work. Identify characters they’ve played that you think fit the descriptions of Clowns, Fools, and Wits. 18 MAJOR THEMES AND MOTIFS Theme is defined as the central idea in a piece of writing or other work of art. Motif is defined as a distinctive feature or dominant idea in an artistic or literary composition. In drama, the central theme is usually an intrinsic or essential idea surrounded by several more literal or representative motifs. Below is a list of words representing either themes, dominant images, or motifs from Twelfth Night. love duality servant desire gender fool grief identity music melancholy class food deception status starvation disguise master excess ACTIVITY: Themes and motifs often help directors and designers choose their concept. 1. Recognize It: Choose what you believe to be the one central theme in Twelfth Night. 2. Support It: Find at least three lines of text to support your chosen theme. 3. Visualize It: Assign students different elements of design (set, costumes, lights, sound). Collect visual research that supports your theme. How would this research impact your design? 4. Physicalize It: Present your theme and research to the class. Read your lines of text aloud. Focus on highlighting your particular theme. 5. Go Further: Choose another theme but keep the same chosen three lines of text. Can you make your theme work for these lines? 19 20 THE BARD 21 SHAKESPEARE’S LIFE AS A PLAY ACT I 1564-1576/78 Sense and Sound, Family, Foundation Shakespeare’s personal history is actually quite a mystery. What we know if him is based mainly on his plays and a few legal and church documents. He is thought to have been born on April 23, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, near Warwickshire. His father, John, was a glover (a tradesman and craftsman who works in fine leather), and later an alderman and bailiff. Shakespeare’s mother, Mary Arden, was a landed local heiress; her family was an old and respected one in the area. According to church record, William was the third of eight children. During this time period Shakespeare learned Latin, philosophy, theology, history, and classic mythology at the local grammar school but he also learned the day-to-day customs, manners, and language of rustic and country life. ACT II 1576/78-1582 Work? Apprentice? Tutor? Shakespeare did not proceed to university after Grammar school. Other than this, little is known for sure. During this next span of time Shakespeare probably learned his father’s trade and may have been engaged as a tutor for children of local noble families. ACT III 1582-1590/92 Marriage, Family Documents concerning Shakespeare’s marriage to Anne Hathaway, a woman some seven or eight years his senior, on the 28th of November in 1582 and the births of their children Susanna in May of 1583, and twins Hamnet and Judith in February of 1585, provide some of the only information we have about William Shakespeare during this time. Shakespeare all but vanishes from record for seven years after the birth of the twins. This period in his life is often called the “Lost Years.” How or why he ends up in London writing plays and acting is a mystery that has sparked many theories and arguments among scholars and historians. ACT IV 1588-1603 London, the age of Elizabeth Even less is known for certain as to how Shakespeare came to join a professional troupe of actors and then become a playwright. What we do know is that by the year 1588, he was gone from Stratford and living in 22 London working as an actor and later as mainly a playwright. In1592, a rival playwright named Robert Greene publically attacked Shakespeare in a critical article in which he refers to Shakespeare as an “upstart crow.” By 1594 Shakespeare was a managing partner of one of the most popular theatre companies in London, the Lord Chamberlain’s men (Later the King’s Men) and the company’s principle playwright. His star was on the rise. In 1596, his son Hamnet, twin brother to Judith, dies. ACT V 1603-1616 Wealth, Fame, Return to Stratford Shakespeare achieved a significant fame and notoriety by this time. His company was successful and his plays well known and even published during his lifetime (not a usual occurrence during this era). By the end of his career, Shakespeare was a part owner in the company, the Globe theatre itself, and was involved in the establishment of one or more other theatres. He was wealthy enough in 1611 to purchase a new house in Stratford and retire in comfort; a highly respected, and distinguished gentleman. He is reported to have died on his birthday, April 23 in 1616. His last lines of verse to us are those of his epitaph: Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbeare To dig the dust enclosed here. Blessed be the man that spares these stones, And cursed be he that moves my bones. EPILOGUE 1623 and beyond John Hemminges and Henry Condell, two of his theatrical partners, organized and had printed the First Folio edition of the collected plays of their friend William Shakespeare. Half of this collection included plays that had previously been unpublished. We owe these two gentlemen a great debt. William Shakespeare is arguably the greatest playwright of the English language. His body of work has stood the test of time and distance with his plays still being produced all over the world on a regular basis. He is one of the most produced playwrights in history. 23 SHAKESPEARE’S ENGLAND THE RULERS: Most of Shakespeare’s plays were written during what is referred to as the Late or High Renaissance period. In England, this era is also referred to as the Elizabethan Period after Queen Elizabeth I. It is important to note that Shakespeare’s world, while dominated by Elizabeth, was shaped by other monarchs before and after her reign. Starting with her father, Henry VIII, and concluding with her nephew, James I, we see that Shakespeare was the subject of a turbulent and volatile royal family. Henry VIII (1509-1547) Excommunicated, started English Reformation Edward VI (1547-1553) Devoted Protestant, died young Mary I (1553-1558)Fanatical Catholic, persecuted protestants 24 Elizabeth I (1558-1603) Protestant but tolerant of the old faith to a point James I (1603-1625) More a politician than devout, fascinated by the occult 25 THE THEATRES: The Theatre: 1576-1598. The first public theatre in London. When it was torn down its timbers were used in constructing the first Globe Theatre. It was owned by James Burbage and his son Richard who would originate many of Shakespeare’s leading characters including Hamlet. The Blackfriars: Eventually owned by Richard Burbage in 1597 and intended to operate as a second space for the King’s Men. The Curtain: One of the longest standing theatres, it lasted from about 1577 until the 1660s. The Rose: Probably the first London theatre in which Shakespeare’s plays were seen. Opened by Phillip Henslowe who would go on to work frequently with Shakespeare. Later, the theatre fell into ruins and could not compete with the newly built Globe Theatre. The Rose was torn down in 1605. 26 The Swan: Little is known of this theatre which operated between 1595-1632. It is important to history because of a famous sketch of it made by Johannes de Witt and later copied by Aernoudt. This sketch provides us with the most detailed picture of an Elizabethan theatre. The Globe: Home to the Lord Chamberlain’s Men (Later the King’s Men) the first version of this theatre opened in 1599. Both Shakespeare and Burbage were part owners. It burnt down in 1613 and a new Globe was built in 1614 and lasted until 1644. Fortune Theatre: Built by Phillip Henslowe in 1600 to compete with the Globe Theatre. The contract for the construction provides detailed information about the characteristics and operation of an Elizabethan theatre. 27 PLAYWRIGHTS AND CONTEMPORARIES: Edmund Spenser (London—1552-1599) Influential poet and playwright. His poem, The Fairie Queen, is one of the greatest epic poems of its age John Lyly (Kent—1554-1606) Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit and Euphues and His England. Credited with developing “polite comedy” in England. Thomas Kyd (London—1558-1594) Author of the play, The Spanish Tragedy, which set the standard for Elizabethan tragic form. Robert Greene (Norwich—1560-1592) A member of a group of writers known as the “University Wits.” He was a critic of Shakespeare and attacked his work in public articles. 28 Christopher (“Kit”) Marlowe – Canterbury – 1564-1593 Said to have been a significant influence on Shakespeare and may even have been regarded as a rival. His life and writings have become almost legendary. His plays Faustus, Tamburlaine the Great, and The Jew of Malta are most famous. Ben Jonson – London 1572-1637 Regarded as one of the literary masters of his age, Johnson was a contemporary of Shakespeare’s who both praised and criticized him. His plays Volpone, The Alchemist, and Bartholomew Fair are most famous. 29 WHY DO WE STUDY SHAKESPEARE? William Shakespeare is the most popular and most produced playwright in the western world. His plays and poems have outlived the popularity of countless other playwrights. When being introduced to his work, students and young artists are right to ask why? Each new generation must come to its own conclusions regarding his continued popularity and significance. The following list contains many commonly agreed upon reasons for this popularity. 1. Shakespeare expressed in both concrete and abstract terms the range of the human condition. His eloquence and instinct for capturing with words what it means to be human is the strongest reason for his enduring popularity. 2. Shakespeare knew what stories appealed to his audience. While he borrowed many or most of the plots for his plays from outside sources or even other plays based on the same subject, event, or characters, Shakespeare was original in how he told the stories. He told every kind of story and always with attention toward the human condition as it was altered by the events of the story. This is one reason why they last today; they’re about the human experience. 3. Complex, compelling characters that could be us. Shakespeare’s characters are borrowed from history, other plays or stories, or are purely his invention. They have in common recognizable human qualities, rich and difficult contradictions, sublime language, and passionate, volatile actions. We see ourselves in these characters regardless of their eras or social status or circumstance. Scholar Harold Bloom often says that Shakespeare, “invented” the human on stage. 30 4. Language for all time. Shakespeare’s language is not four hundred years old; it is four hundred years young. At the time he was writing, the English language was just coming out of its childhood and into adolescence. The high contrast between Saxon and Latin based words and phrases created a built-in conflict or tug-ofwar that Shakespeare took full advantage of. He was also extremely instinctive and inventive; leaving us with many words and phrases that have moved out of the specific context of the plays they were written for and into common, everyday use. What do you like about Shakespeare? What do you dislike about Shakespeare? Remember that all opinions are valid— although they need to be supported. Think about WHY you like or dislike Shakespeare. What would you CHANGE if you could? 31 32 THE BONUSES 33 Twelfth Nigh Production Concept and Look Book Written By: Jayce Tromsness, Director Theatre is an ensemble endeavor. A show’s director is that member of the ensemble who is elected to serve as the eyes and ears of the audience during rehearsals. It is an honor to be entrusted with this task but with that honor comes another somewhat daunting responsibility. The director must also take on the task of integrating ideas toward a single vision and concept for a particular production. They must try to steer all of the elements; theme, action, language, staging, pace, tone, style, and design toward that agreed upon vision. To do this they must unify all of the creative elements and contributions in order to deliver to the audience an entertaining and meaningful experience in the theatre. In our production of Twelfth Night the Warehouse Theatre production staff and guest director, Jayce Tromsness, started the pre-production phase by anchoring all discussions to three guiding principles set forth by the Warehouse Theatre’s mission and educational philosophy. One of the most exciting and challenging jobs the director has is to follow those principles while at the same time shaping all the elements into a coherent and thoughtful presentation of the story of the play. Those principles are: Develop for a young audience a clear and exciting “first” or “early” experience with Shakespeare’s plays Focus on finding concept, action, and meaning through attention to the text; to bring the play to life through Shakespeare’s rich and powerful language Create a world and circumstances in which the play unfolds that clearly tell the story while at the same time shedding light 34 on questions and themes that have relevance today by drawing parallels to universal issues that have an effect on us here and now. Every director works differently and every cast and production staff is made up of actors and theatre artists who also all work differently. They come together for a short time to create something meaningful and lasting but once the production opens all but the cast, crew, and stage manager will move on to new projects. And when the production closes all that will remain are some props, costumes, and set pieces, some photos and maybe a video to record its existence. This is one of the special qualities of Theatre, it is ephemeral; it vanishes even as soon as it happens. Unlike a film, each performance of a play is different than the one before, it is truly original. And each production of the same play is different than previous productions. The director’s job is to steer a particular production toward something that is maybe new and different or something that reinforces notions and ideas about the play’s meaning. Okay, so how do they do that? What would you do? How would you start? You could say that a production goes through three phases from beginning to end: Pre-production, rehearsals, and production. Each phase has more than one component. For example: PRE-PRODUCTION: Hiring and assignment of all production positions by the Theatre (Designers, stage managers etc.) Investigation of the text (the play) by the director and design department heads as well as the marketing staff. Early production meetings to begin discussing ideas and concepts, strategies and scheduling. 35 REHEARSALS: Initial presentations of concept and images, models, sound, etc. by the director and designers (scenery, lights, costumes, props, sound) and the production staff. First readings by the cast for the production staff, marketing staff, producers and board members. Table work. Close reading of the play as a group; gathering textual evidence for acting choices, characterization and staging. Mining the play as literary detectives to build the cast and production team’s shared vocabulary for the play. Staging rehearsals (Blocking). Beginning to set a basic shape for the action of the play. Determining where and how the actors move about the stage. Working rehearsals. Refining, modifying, and testing the staging (blocking) and thematic concepts. Observing the actor’s performance choices and making adjustments that clarify and reinforce the story and concept. This includes vocal and physical characterizations as well. This is a highly collaborative phase between actor and director. Running rehearsals. Playing through acts and/or scenes of the play without interruption and with the steady addition of props, costume and scenic elements and sound. Decisions are made here that will shape the next phase of rehearsals. TECHNICAL REHEARSALS: Rehearsals leading up to performances in which the design and technical elements of the production are incorporated into the show. Timing of lights, sound, scene shifts and transitions and the mechanics of using the fully constructed set are key aspects of this phase. 36 Production: The preview(s), and performances of the production for audiences. This is when all the aspects of production come in to play with the integration of the final “player;” the audience. A production is not an act of theatre without an audience. For the purposes of this study guide, we’ll talk about the first phase; pre-production. As has been said, every director works differently and may focus on one of these phases more than another or on all equally. Some may have completely different phases they work within. But it is safe to say that all directors attend, in some manner and at some level, to this phase. It’s a time for ideas to incubate and to hatch. We asked you earlier how you would start. Here’s how our director starts each pre-production phase. The Look Book The look book is a collection of images, colors, textures, words, passages of text, articles, essays and commentary, and journal-like entries from the director. They are assembled in some sort of hard or soft (digital) format and shared with, first, the designers and production staff, then with the marketing staff, and, later, with the cast. This last sharing happens after the collection of elements has been refined, edited, and, hopefully, reduced to the essential elements that most clearly convey the vision of the production. You may view the look book for WHT’s Twelfth Night through this link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4N-NzreJGnkTjY2MVJPamc3VkU/ view?usp=sharing To appreciate and understand what you are seeing, let’s first go back to the second guiding principle of the Warehouse Theatre’s mission. Focus on finding concept, action, and meaning through attention to the text; to bring the play to life through Shakespeare’s rich and powerful language 37 Our production’s director begins to shape a vision for the play by delving into the language. In doing so they start to sense and see emerging patterns and images and themes inspired by the language of the play. The director makes a comprehensive list of what they feel are key words for the entire play. They do this scene by scene. Below is a list of just some of the words that went onto an early list for just the first two scenes. (Our first two scenes are out of order from the original text order) Some of these are words directly from the text of the play and some are the result of impulses and instincts from the director that are reactions to the play’s language and action. The words in bold and italics are the ones that became our strongest images and reminders of what we thought this play focuses on and what we wanted to explore. All the words on the list are important. Which ones would you choose to highlight that we didn’t? Which ones might you remove from the list or lower in importance? Shakespeare’s Act One Scene Two Storm Perchance Daughter Shipwreck Brother Mourning Stranger in a strange land Peril Virtuous Elysium So long as I could see Seek the love Shakespeare’s Act One Scene One Excess Cruel Weeping Surfeiting Pursue Remembrance Sicken and die Self-pity Debt of Love Not so sweet now as it was Indulgent Flowers and bowers Spirit of love Self-centered Conceal Love Rejected Disguise Fancy Unrequited love Fantastical Cloistress Desires Veiled 38 Now armed with a list of words, and ideas, our director begins to look for images in books, magazines, on line, etc. that connect with and visually express these words and concepts. They also begin to listen to different music, different songs, genres and styles to find something that captures the essence of these emerging ideas and general themes. For this production our director started with the word “Romantic.” as a general theme. Can you guess why? It’s okay to go for an obvious answer. This lead to an investigation of the word in both its small ”r” and capital “R” manifestations. In terms of literary and visual arts and musical movements in history, There have been two primary eras labeled “Romantic” and “New Romantic.” They are divided by over a century. And they are both several centuries removed from Shakespeare’s writing of Twelfth Night. How could we be on the right track? Further investigation led to our settling on the Romantic era of the early 1800s and the “Sublime” school of art and thought. Finding beauty and joy in the sorrowful and perilous is the dominating idea of the Sublime movement. The possibility of danger or the fear of the unknown are what create the beauty. Another characteristic of the Romantic era was excess and indulgence. Do you recognize any of these elements in Twelfth Night and in our production of the play? It was to the “New Romantic” movement of the early 1980s that we turned for music that would support the production. This era in music reflected many of the key features of the Romantic era of the nineteenth century. Sometimes called “New Wave” or “Peacock Punk,” it is a type of music that embraces the high level of emotional intensity and the appeal of the “sublime.” It is highly reflective, overt, intellectual, and whimsical all at the same time. There is a “stormy and moody” quality in it that we felt described the characters in the play as well as their essential actions.” Bands and performers of this era would include David Bowie, Bryan 39 Ferry, The Cure, Bauhaus, The Cocteau Twins, The Smiths, Spandau Ballet, Howard Jones, Adam Ant, Bow-Wow-Wow, Siouxie Sioux and the Banshees, Joy Division, The Talking Heads, Brian Eno, etc. ACTIVITY: 1. Recognize It: Choose three or more of the images from our “Look Book” and identify the elements and qualities mentioned concerning the Romantic and New Romantic eras. 2. Support It: Do you see anything in any of the images that might have inspired a moment in our production? 3. Visualize It: Generate your individual or group “Look Book.” Follow the steps we did but seek a new way in; develop a new concept and support it with language and ideas from the text and images and sound/music of your own. You can create a hard copy using a sketch book or journal, cut-out images from magazines, etc. that are arranged and pasted onto the pages with accompanying writing, etc. Or, you can create a digital look book using Powerpoint, Pinterest, Prezi, etc. 4. Physicalize It: Choose some of your favorite images from the look book (either WHT’s or your own!) and bring them to life by making tableaus (frozen pictures, like statues) of the images. 5. Go Further: Choose a monologue or scene from Twelfth Night. Incorporate your tableaus into the reading or acting of the monologues or scene. How does having physical inspiration inform your understanding of the text? 40 EXPLORE AND ACTIVATE THE TEXT: EXPLORE the Imagery: Objective: Students will break apart Shakespeare’s text for main action, common images, and comprehension. Directions: 1. Have students examine the following speech. This can be done individually, in small groups, or as a class. . 2. Go through and list the verbs and nouns in two columns, and the adjectives in another. 3. Read the speech with just the nouns and the verbs. Do you get the main idea of the speech if you do this? (This can also be a great tool for uncovering the main action or core of a speech) 4. When looking at your lists, what patterns of related images emerge? Do these images connect with a theme in the play? Text: Duke Orsino: If music be the food of love, play on; Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die. That strain again! it had a dying fall: O, it came o'er my ear like the sweet sound, That breathes upon a bank of violets, Stealing and giving odour! Enough; no more: 'Tis not so sweet now as it was before. O spirit of love! how quick and fresh art thou, That, notwithstanding thy capacity Receiveth as the sea, nought enters there, Of what validity and pitch soe'er, But falls into abatement and low price, Even in a minute: so full of shapes is fancy That it alone is high fantastical. 41 ACTIVATE with Power Words: Objective: Students will speak Shakespeare’s language individually and as an ensemble; Students will physically and vocally interpret the language. Directions: 1. Ask students to choose one line from the provided list. Everyone say their line on the count of three, in unison. 2. Now, choose a POWER WORD in your line that captures the meaning of the line—a verb or noun that is juicy. Avoid prepositions and pronouns. Say that word in unison on the count of three. 3. Now, choose a gesture that communicates that power word. Perform that gesture without the word on the count of three. Imagine that the gesture was performed at an energy level of 2 or 3 (on a scale of 1-10). Now, do the gesture again at a 10! 4. Now, say the word and gesture together. 5. Repeat this process with a second power word. 6. Students have 3 minutes to rehearse their lines, memorize them, and include both gestures in their performance. 7. Get back in the circle and ask for a student volunteer. Have them stand in the middle while everyone else closes their eyes. Have the student perform their line, emphasizing the power words. Ask the other students if they could tell which the power words were, just from the sound. Then, have the student repeat the line, with the power words, while the other students watch. If time allows, have each student share their line with the power words and gestures. 8. Ask students what the gesture does to the word? Remember that you don’t ultimately need to gesture in performance, but using gesture helps you explore the richness and meaning of the power words in rehearsal. 42 Lines of Text: If music be the food of love, play on. I am sure care’s an enemy to life. I’ll confine myself no finer than I am. Many a hanging prevents a bad marriage. We will draw the curtain and show you the picture. Make me a willow cabin at your gate. Oh Time, thou must untangle this, not I. It is too hard a knot for me to untie. Youth’s a stuff will not endure. She sat like Patience on a monument, smiling at grief. Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them. This fellow is wise enough to play the fool. O world! how apt the poor are to be proud. Go, hang yourselves all! If this were played upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction. This youth that you see here I snatch’d one half out of the jaws of death. None can be called deformed by the unkind. If it thus to dream, still let me sleep! Thus the whirligig of time brings his revenges. 43 THE THREE DS: DISCLOSURE, DISCOVERY, DECISION The Three Ds will help students make choices and breathe life into your text. Shakespeare’s characters work out their monologues with the audience by: 1. Disclosing a thought 2. Discovering a thought 3. Deciding a thought Go line by line and decide which of the three Ds the character is using. Then, read the speech aloud. Try mixing it up by choosing a different or unexpected D. See what changing one of the three Ds does for the speech. Discuss how actor choices affect your understanding of the speech as an audience member. VIOLA: I left no ring with her: what means this lady? Fortune forbid my outside have not charm'd her! She made good view of me; indeed, so much, That sure methought her eyes had lost her tongue, For she did speak in starts distractedly. She loves me, sure; the cunning of her passion Invites me in this churlish messenger. None of my lord's ring! why, he sent her none. I am the man: if it be so, as 'tis, Poor lady, she were better love a dream. Disguise, I see, thou art a wickedness, Wherein the pregnant enemy does much. How easy is it for the proper-false In women's waxen hearts to set their forms! Alas, our frailty is the cause, not we! For such as we are made of, such we be. How will this fadge? my master loves her dearly; And I, poor monster, fond as much on him; And she, mistaken, seems to dote on me. 44 What will become of this? As I am man, My state is desperate for my master's love; As I am woman,--now alas the day!-What thriftless sighs shall poor Olivia breathe! O time! thou must untangle this, not I; It is too hard a knot for me to untie! 45 TWINS IN TWELFTH NIGHT Written By: Jayce Tromsness The subject of twins and separation by death may have been nearer to Shakespeare’s heart than other playwrights as he was the father of twins; Hamnet and Judith. Hamnet died at age 11 shortly before Shakespeare wrote Twelfth Night. It is arguably no coincidence that the story involves a set of twins who are separated from each other and mutually feared dead. Viola and Sebastian are each griefstricken believing their twin has perished at sea. Shakespeare, in an eerie foreshadowing, examines this same situation in Comedy of Errors where there are two sets of twins; one believing the other set is lost and presumed dead. And yet both of these plays are comedies. Why do you suppose he would portray these themes in comedies? So, while there are literally twins in Twelfth Night, could we pair other characters together as essential twins? In other words, can we learn more about the story or shed light on the themes of the play by pairing characters as “twins?” Take a look at the chart below and discuss reasons why we might pair these characters as twins. What traits do they share and what about their stories or actions make them “twins?” TWELFTH NIGHT TWINS Literal Twins Viola & Sebastian Essential Twins Olivia & Viola Malvolio & Sir Andrew Mariah & Malvolio Orsino & Viola/Cesario Sir Toby & Feste Sir Andrew & Antonio 46 ACTIVITY: 1. Recognize It: See a pair we missed? What other pairs can you make? Defend your decisions with evidence from the text and action. 2. Support It: Choose a pair from the chart and list as many similarities as you can. Then list the differences between them. For example, Malvolio and Mariah both want to “marry up” in the world to better their “station.” Only Mariah is successful in this. What is it about their differences that might lead her to the happier ending? Is the author trying to make a statement in this? 3. Go Further: Choose another of Shakespeare’s plays and look for sets of essential twins. Remember to compare their similarities and also their differences. How does the play end for them based on the differences? 47 SHAKESPEAREAN BULLYING While the topic of bullying may be trendy, it certainly isn’t new. In Twelfth Night, Maria, Sir Toby, Andrew Aguecheek, Fabian, and Feste all team up to bully Malvolio. Normally, we find their treatment of Malvolio humorous—especially since Malvolio is rather mean and disagreeable. But does his surliness mean that he deserves to be humiliated, branded insane, and locked in a dungeon? These are important questions that often get overlooked among the laughter. To qualify as bullying, an act must meet three requirements: 1. Unwanted, aggressive or intentional “harm-doing” 2. Repeated behavior over a period of time 3. Involves an imbalance of power TYPES OF BULLYING: 1. Physical: Hitting, kicking, pushing, choking, etc. Any unwanted physical abuse. 2. Verbal: Name calling, threatening, taunting, malicious teasing, rumor spreading, slandering, etc. 3. Cyber: Using the internet, cell phones, online social networks, or other technology to send or post text or images intended to hurt or embarrass someone. Before the internet, this could be accomplished with written notes, newspapers, magazines, or any other print media. 4. Indirect: Social isolation, intentional exclusion, making faces, obscene gestures, manipulating relationships. This can be the hardest form of bullying to detect. 48 ACTIVITY: 1. Recognize It: Describe in your own words how Malvolio is bullied in Twelfth Night. 2. Support It: Find at least three lines of text that show the bullying. 3. Visualize It: Draw the bullying circle. Label each character as a bully, follower, supporter, passive supported, disengaged onlookers, possible defenders, etc. 4. Physicalize It: Create a tableau for each character showing the type of bullying the engage in (physical, verbal, written, indirect). 5. Go Further: Write a short story or scene about where Malvolio goes after his last line: “I’ll be revenged on the whole pack of you.” Note: Tim Crouch wrote his play I, Malvolio based on this idea. 49 AUDIENCE ETIQUETTE AND EXPERIENCING THEATRE: In today’s world of digital media, film, and television, it is important to remember that watching a play is a different experience that requires different habits and attitudes. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LIVE ENTERTAINMENT AND PRE-RECORDED, ELECTRONIC, OR OTHER MEDIA (BETWEEN THEATRE AND FILM): Audience and performer awareness and connection. They are both present. Performers feed off of the audience. One performance to the next can be very different based on the connection between performers and audience. Performance develops right here and now and is dependent on audience attention and focus. Distractions do not go unnoticed by the performers Films and other recorded media can be re-viewed if something is missed; they can be interrupted yet still viewed from start to finish. Live theatre is different. If the viewer misses something, they can’t “rewind.” ENTERING THE THEATRE AND BECOMING AN AUDIENCE MEMBER: From the moment the audience member enters, the performance elements are being presented to her through various theatrical elements. Find seat, remove coat or jacket before you sit, sit properly in seat, be aware and courteous of patrons on either side and in front or behind you. Keep your feet off the seat or seat back in front of you. Take in the set/scenery, listen to the music, read the prepared material in the program. Converse with your friends or neighbors but at a level that allows everyone else to do so as well. Conversation should stop when the lights, sound, curtain or actors change in a way that makes you aware things are about to start. You can also talk during intermission! 50 ATTENTION AND FOCUS: Live entertainment/theatre requires a different level and type of attention or focus. From entering the theatre to the final curtain, clues and elements relating to the performance, the story, and the themes are being presented and should not be missed due to distraction or inattentiveness. Plays tend to accelerate as the story unfolds. Your attention needs to stay with them and increase as the story unfolds in order to really get the most out of the experience. Avoid outside distractions by turning off cell phones, refraining from conversing with friends or texting during the performance, and waiting to use the restrooms for intermission or after the show. You may cause you to miss key elements of the story and inhibit your enjoyment of the play and it will be distracting to other audience members and the performers as well. START TO FINISH: Plays may begin with a recorded or live speech before the show. This is the formal beginning of the performance and is often indicated by a lowering in level of the “house” lights (the lights over the audience) and a change in lights on the show curtain or set. At this point you should be quiet and attentive. The play will usually begin when the house lights dim completely and lights come up full on the set or the curtain rises to reveal the set and/or characters. Plays are traditionally divided into acts which are in turn separated by scenes. There may or may not be intermissions (breaks in the story for you to visit the lobby and/or restrooms) between acts. These may last ten to fifteen minutes. The number of intermissions will be indicated in your program and/or during the pre-show speech. It is 51 acceptable and encouraged to applaud at the end of an act. Normally applause between scenes is discouraged. You should always applaud at the end of the play and while the performers take their bows (called curtain call). While talking during a performance is discouraged, it is acceptable to laugh or react to moments that are funny or engaging. This also depends on the type of show (for example in a children’s show, the performers may want the audience to interact and converse with them more than in a play for older children and adults). EXPECT TO WORK HARDER AND EXPERIENCE MORE: The live theatre asks more of an audience in terms of attention, focus, and thought. This is a good thing. It makes you work a little harder and asks more questions than you may be used to but that’s because the theatre’s origins and traditions are rooted in societal rituals that brought communities together in order to discuss important social issues. Plays were not intended to be purely entertaining – though many are in the modern theatre. A performance doesn’t end with the curtain coming down or the lights fading to black; discussions and reflection after the performance are part of the live theatre experience. More succinctly put – don’t you love it when someone tells you a story? And don’t you want to make sure you catch it all? ALL THIS WORK – WHAT’S IT REALLY FOR? Shakespeare, and other live theatre is well, is not performed and produced to make the audience feel alienated. It’s about connection; it’s about humanity, and about what we recognize in our own lives as well. You may find yourself laughing, crying, nodding your head in agreement, or turning away in disgust. All those on stage and those who have contributed to the play are seeking connection with you. They love the story they are telling, find it compelling and useful in some way, and hope to relay that to you. All work aside – let yourself experience it! 52 SOURCE/REFERENCE TEXTS: The Actor’s Guide to Performing Shakespeare. Madd Harold. Lone Eagle Publishing Company, 2002. All the Words on Stage. Louis Scheeder and Shane Ann Younts. Smith and Kraus, 2002. Shakespeare After All. Marjorie Garber. Anchor Books, 2004 The Shakespeare Miscellany. David Crystal and Ben Crystal. Penguin Books, London, England, 2005. Speak the Speech: Shakespeare’s Monologues Illuminated. Rhona Silverbush and Sami Plotkin. Faber and Faber,2002. WEBSITES AND ARTICLES: Shakespeare’s Words, www.shakespeareswords.com – this is the official David and Ben Crystal website, with the complete works with glossary, themes and motifs, allusions, and much, much more. Folger Shakespeare Library, www.folger.edu – Replete with lesson plans, a teachers’ blog, and information about Folger programming and collections. British Library, http://www.bl.uk/treasures/shakespearehtml - Extensive information on the background, production and publication history, and quartos of Shakespeare’s plays MIT Shakespeare, http://shakespeare.mit.edu/twelfth_night/full.html— full text of Twelfth Night (and all of Shakespeare’s plays) online 53