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Published byVivian Edwards Modified over 9 years ago
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Well-known Facts about William Shakespeare 1563-1616 Widely regarded as the greatest writer in English literature Plays have been translated into many languages, musicals, ballets, and movies Born Stratford-upon-Avon Well-to-do, affluent while alive Parents were John and Mary Arden Shakespeare – middle class family Mary—daughter of wealthy landowner John—glovemaker, local politician Most quoted author, other than the Bible
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His Education Attended Stratford Grammar School. Studied Latin and ancient texts. Translated Latin to English and English to Latin. He was never discovered by any of his teachers. All of the teachers of his school were Oxford graduates.
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Personal Facts Teen father: married pregnant 26 year old Anne Hathaway when he was 18 Worked as an actor Left wife and children for London stage career Father of daughter, Susanna, and twins, Hamnet and Judith
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The Plays 38 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare 14 comedies 10 histories 10 tragedies 4 romances Possibly wrote and collaborated on several others Authored 154 sonnets
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Shakespeare’s Language Shakespeare coined many words we still use today: –Cruelhearted, The Two Gentlemen of Verona –Eyesore, The Taming of the Shrew –Quarrelsome, As You Like It –Dwindle, Macbeth And quite a few phrases as well: –“Eaten out of house and home” Henry IV –“Cruel to be kind” Hamlet –“Knock, knock! Who’s there?” Macbeth –“Too much of a good thing” As You Like It –“Neither a borrower nor a lender be” Hamlet –“To thine own self be true” Hamlet –“A tower of strength” Richard III
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Shakespeare’s Language A mix of old and very new Rural and urban words/images Understandable by the lowest peasant and the highest noble
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Theater in London Courtyard surrounded by three levels of galleries Daytime/open air/roofless No artificial lighting Limited set design Relied on music, sound, costumes, props and great description
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Theatre Career Member and later part-owner of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, later called the King’s Men Globe Theater built in 1599 by L.C.M. with Shakespeare as primary investor Burned down in 1613 during one of Shakespeare’s plays
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The Globe Theater Built across the Thames- “Wrong side of town” 1500 plus audience capacity Built in similar style to the Coliseum, called an amphitheatre Color coding was used to advertise the type of play to be performed - a black flag meant a tragedy, white flag a comedy, and red flag a history. Penny admission
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Theatrical Conventions (A theatrical convention is a suspension of reality) No lighting Women forbidden to act on stage Elaborate costumes Props were few, but important Minimal scenery Information given in dialogue.
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Theatrical Conventions (continued) Blood and gore Use of supernatural Use of disguises/mistaken identity Multiple deaths (in tragedies)
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Personal hygiene/health Bathing considered dangerous Body odor strong Childhood diseases Children often died before 5 years Small Pox Bubonic Plague
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Living Conditions Conditions in London were not pleasant. Homes of the poor were small and dirty Overcrowding and unemployment were major problems. No running water, Chamber Pots
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London 1600 Open gutters, raw sewage, and rotting garbage was common in most major cities of the time. Unsanitary conditions caused the outbreak of the Bubonic Plague (black death) Bubonic was rampant from 1563 to 1603. 1592 the plague hit London hard and the theatres were closed down. During this time, Shakespeare wrote most of his poetry.
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Clothes One set used all year long, rarely washed Underclothing slept in, infrequently changed Clothes handed down from rich to poor
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Actors All men Female parts played by young boys whose voices had not changed. No actual kissing or hugging on stage
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The Audience Wealthy got benches Poor audience members were called “groundlings and stood around stage in “the pit” Women not allowed (had to dress up as men to attend) Much more interaction between actors and audience than today
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“Romeo and Juliet” Tragedy Written in 1595 Set in Verona, Italy Themes: parental control vs. rebellious teens; fate vs. freewill; impulsive behavior vs. self-control, love vs. hate.
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Motifs A motif is a recurring subject, theme, idea, etc., esp. in a literary, artistic, or musical work. Light and dark Time Fate
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Play’s source Borrowed from a poem by Author Brooke-1562 The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Iuliet Shakespeare gave story new life and beauty
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Queen Elizabeth Daughter of King Henry VIII and Ann Boleyn (2nd of 6 wives) Henry had Ann beheaded for “treason” Younger sister of “Bloody Mary.” “Virgin Queen?”
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The Renaissance 1400-1700 “Rebirth” of arts, culture, science Discovery of “New World” Copernicus: Sun-centered Universe (1543) King Henry VIII = renaissance man (ideal) Reformation of Catholic Church
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Things to think about… What would you do if your parents did not approve of someone you were dating? How important is the opinion of your family in decisions that you make? Does violence solve problems?
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