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William Shakespeare
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I. Life A. Childhood 1. Baptized on April 26, 1564, in Stratford-on-Avon, England 2. Suspected birthdate: April 23 or 24, 1564 3. Eldest son of John Shakespeare and Mary Arden Shakespeare
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B. Adult life 1. Married Ann Hathaway on Nov. 28, 1582 2. Had three children a. Susanna b. Hamnet c. Judith (Hamnet's twin) 3. In 1592 was established playwright in London
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4. In 1594 became a full shareholder in Lord Chamberlain's Company
5. In 1596 applied for a coat-of-arms--now considered a gentleman 6. Famous during life 7. Retired early, returned to Stratford-on-Avon 8. Died on April 23, 1616
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II. Times A. Lived during the Renaissance, or rebirth period of Europe 1. Queen Elizabeth reigned 2. Studied the Bible, Latin grammar, and classics
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B. Growth of British sea power, exploration, and scholarship
C. Effects on plays 1. Anachronism-- something out of proper time, such as the clock in Julius Caesar 2. Coupled British life with other cultures
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III. Plays A. Thirty-seven plays attributed to Shakespeare 1. Only eighteen published during his lifetime in form other than script
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2. First published collection called First Folio
a. Published in 1623 by John Hemming and Henry Condell b. Contained thirty-six plays
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B. Dates attributed by references and intelligent guessing
C. Three main categories of plays 1. Histories (king plays) 2. Tragedies 3. Comedies
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Most famous plays 1. Romeo and Juliet 2. Julius Caesar 3. Macbeth 4
Most famous plays 1. Romeo and Juliet 2. Julius Caesar 3. Macbeth 4. Hamlet
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5. King Lear 6. Othello 7. A Midsummer Night's Dream 8. Henry VIII
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IV. The Globe Theater A. Courtyard origins B. Structure 1. Eight-sided 2. Central courtyard or pit (1 penny) 3. Three tiers (2 pennies)
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4. Curtainless stage 5. Two entrances 6. Balcony 7. Heaven and hell
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C. Props 1. Elizabethan costumes 2. Sound effects D. Players 1. All men 2. Seniors also shareholders 3. Patrons a. Lord Chamberlain b. King James
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E. Audience 1. Nobility had own box 2. Poor people stood in pit (groundlings) a. Unclean and uneducated b. Pickpocketing
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c. Threw rotten tomatoes (poison) at actors if not entertained
d. Also went to nearby bear baiting & cock fighting arenas
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V. Conventions-- agreements between audience and actors that audience will accept certain things as true
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A. Blank verse--characters would speak in unrhymed iambic pentameter (5 beats of unaccented /accented syllables per line) poetry
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B. Soliloquy-- character alone on stage speaking thoughts to audience
C. Aside--remarks made to audience or characters while other characters pretend not to hear
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