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William Shakespeare Background for Romeo & Juliet
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Why Study Shakespeare? Have you ever used the following words: Outbreak Hamlet Gossip Comedy of Errors Addiction Henry V Assassination Macbeth Bump Romeo and Juliet
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European Renaissance Period of artistic rebirth after the “Dark Ages” of the Medieval Period Mass creation of visual arts (paintings, sculptures, etc.) Celebration of antiquity Began in Italy in 13 th century English Renaissance began approximately 100 years later
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English Renaissance Late 1500s-1600s Literary contributions—specifically plays—most important feature of English renaissance Queen Elizabeth (1533-1603) Very well-educated and supported the arts Works written during this time are called “Elizabethan literature”
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William Shakespeare Baptized in 1564 in Stratford-Upon-Avon No actual birth records Educated at Stratford Grammar School At 18, married Anne Hathaway (who was 27) Arrived in London by 1588 Successful playwright by 1592 His wife and children stayed in Stratford
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Elizabethan Theater London was England’s theatrical center Famous playwrights included Christopher Marlowe (Edward II), Thomas Kyd (The Spanish Tragedy), and John Ford (‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore) Shakespeare was the “new kid on the block” when he arrived Protestants condemned the theater, but theater was hugely popular Theaters built on outskirts of the city The Theatre (1576), The Rose (1587), The Swan (1595), and The Globe (1599—Shakespeare helped built The Globe)
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Elizabethan Theater People who attended the plays: Merchants Lawyers Laborers Prostitutes Visitors from other countries Royalty What does this list tell you about the Elizabethan Theater scene?
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The Theatrical Experience Plays had to include something appealing for everyone Entertaining for peasants and nobility Elaborate costumes Didn’t always match with the time period Looking good more important than being realistic Women not allowed onstage; Young boys played female roles Audience members would throw things at actors if they got bored or didn’t understand what was happening
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Performing in Shakespeare’s Time Actors only had three weeks to rehearse and perform plays Because theater so popular, actors might perform 6 different plays a week As many as 4,000 lines! Plays belonged to the acting companies, not the author No original copies of Shakespeare’s plays exist today Companies performed plays for years before they were printed
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Printing Shakespeare’s Plays The first collection of Shakespeare’s work (First Folio) published in 1623, seven years after his death Actors recited lines from memory Punctuation, spelling, and word choice varies across folios Act and Scene Divisions are result of editors’ guesses Many different versions of Shakespearian works Differences in memory/editing/handwriting legibility
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Theatrical Terms Act : Divisions of theatrical piece Shakespearian plays have five acts Stage Directions : Instructions telling the actors what to do Often written in brackets so actors know not to say them Characters : Who the action of the play surrounds Soliloquy : Speech delivered by an actor onstage to themselves Monologue : Speech delivered by an actor onstage to other characters Dialogue : Conversation between two or more characters
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Theatrical Terms Tragedy : Play that ends with many characters dying Comic Relief : Humorous breaks in tragedies or dramas to make audience laugh Aside : Comment made by an actor that other characters onstage are not supposed to hear Setting : The time and place where the action of the play occurs
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Dramatic Irony When the audience knows something that the characters do not
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Foil Two characters that dramatically contrast with each other to highlight each others’ qualities
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Romeo and Juliet: The House of Montague Romeo: Son of Montague Benvolio: Nephew to Montague and Romeo’s friend Mercutio: Romeo’s best friend Balthasar: Romeo’s friend and servant Montague: Romeo’s father and head of the house Lady Montague: Romeo’s mother Friar Lawrence: Local priest and Romeo’s friend
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Romeo and Juliet: The House of Capulet Juliet: Daughter of Capulet Tybalt: Nephew to Capulet and Juliet’s cousin Nurse: Juliet’s servant and most trusted friend Paris: Young nobleman Capulet: Juliet’s father and head of the house Lady Capulet: Juliet’s mother
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Romeo and Juliet Intro. Discussion During this time, it was common for fathers to arrange marriages for their daughters Whom do you think this custom benefitted? What reaction might parents have had to their children marrying other people?
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