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Published byVanessa Cross Modified over 9 years ago
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Shakespeare’s Globe
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London Theatres First London theatre built in 1576 All theatres on South Bank because theatres were… Source of “immoral acts” Helping spread Bubonic Plague
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Elizabethan Theatre All male casts Divided into companies, which were sponsored by wealthy benefactor – Ex: The King’s Men were sponsored by King James – Plays were property of acting company, not author Companies performed a different play every afternoon. No advertising - flags used as code
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Shakespeare’s Globe Built from remnants of first 1576 theatre, in 1599 (23 years after first London theatre) Shakespeare bought shares in the Globe to support its building Open-air amphitheatre No curtain! 3000 spectators - no bathrooms Beer, oranges, apples, hazelnuts Burned down in 1613
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The Globe Today
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Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare’s version written in 1594 – The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet, 1562, by Arthur Brooke – Based on old Italian poem from 1476, called Mariotto and Gianozza, by Masuccio Salernitano The same: Secret marriage; forced marriage, tragic end Different: Mariotto is caught and beheaded, and Gianozza dies of grief – Mercutio and Paris are Shakespeare’s inventions – Huge, popular, box office hit
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Shakespeare’s Life Born 1563, died 1616, in Stratford, England John Shakespeare, glovemaker, and Mary Arden Anne Hathaway (m. 1582), wife and mother of his children London 1592 - 1622
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Shakespeare is not Shakespeare The Possible “Real” Shakespeares – Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford – Francis Bacon – Queen Elizabeth – Shiek Zubayr bin William, 16th cent. Arab Shiek Reasons for Conspiracy Theories – Son of illiterate glove-maker; no portraits; bad handwriting; court knowledge; retired too early
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A Theme in Romeo & Juliet: Free Will versus Fate Why do Romeo and Juliet die? Is it free will or fate? Is it a result of the family feud, the fathers’ indifference to their children, adolescent passion, Friar Lawrence, or just bad luck? Romeo: “My mind misgives/ Some consequence yet hanging in the stars,” and later, “O, I am fortune’s fool!” Mercutio: “O, then I see Queen Mab hath been with you.”
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