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 Known as the English Renaissance
  (rebirth)
 England was ruled by Queen Elizabeth I,
  daughter of King Henry VIII, from 1533-
  1603.
 The Queen had a love for theater and the
  arts, so during this period, the arts (poetry,
  plays, painting, etc.) flourished.




                                                   2
Clothing/Fashion
 Certain fabrics, textures, and colors of clothing
  indicated which social class a person was a part
  of.
 If a person dressed out of his/her social class,
  they would be punished because it was against
  the law.




                                                      3
Marriages
 A woman didn’t choose
  husband.
 Marriages were usually
  arranged by the families of
  the bride and the groom in
  order for both sides to
  benefit from one another.
 Once married, women had
  practically no rights; they
  could not work outside the
  home.

                                4
Health
 Many members of a
  family, often 4-8 people,
  would live in the same
  room.
 There was no sanitation,
  no indoor plumbing, no
  concept of germs or
  sterilization.
 The streets were filled
  with waste, both human
  and animal.

                              5
 It is said that Shakespeare
    was born at Stratford-upon-
    Avon on April 23, 1564.
   He had three brothers and
    four sisters and was the
    oldest child of the family.
   He married Anne Hathaway
    in 1582: he was 18 and she
    was 26. They had 3 kids by
    the time he was 21, including
    twins (Hamnet and Judith)
   He wrote his first play
    around 1591, fifteen years
    after the opening of the first
    theatre in London (The Red
    Lion).
   Shakespeare owned two
    theaters and wrote at least 38
    plays. He was an actor before
    he was a writer.
• 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 (a cannon shot during
  Henry VIII)
London & the Theater
in Shakespeare’s Day
  The theater was the most widely available entertainment to
     which people of every class had access.
    Professional theater life was considered a fringe culture,
     existing on the margins of society. Actors were like rock stars.
    Actors were considered homeless vagabonds and, as such, were
     subject to arrest (like rock stars).
    Plays were often acted out in any space available; thus the
     income for actors and playwrights was undependable and
     rarely enough to live on.
    Wealthy aristocrats, who enjoyed drama, would support acting
     companies with their own money—actors under the care of
     these “Lords” could not be arrested for their vagrant lifestyle.
Bankside
The Entertainment District:



 Bankside London, on the Thames River, was a
  notorious area of the city.
 The Globe Theatre was situated in this area where
  people went out to drink and gamble, and where
  prostitution flourished.
 The theatre was not a symbol of high culture in those
  days, it was bawdy and violent entertainment,
  considered by many to be full of dangerous ideas and
  suggestive sexual themes.
 There were only two doors, and
    the Globe held up to 3,000
    people.
   People from all classes visited
    the theatre on a regular basis.
   Cheapest seats cost one penny;
    “groundlings” stood in the yard.
   For an extra penny, you got a
    “cushion seat” in the gallery.
   For extra money, the view was
    obstructed; however, in those
    days people didn’t go to see a
    play, they went to hear a play.
The Globe Theatre
A Reconstruction of Shakespeare’s Theater

              Built in 1996
 Both the stage and the
  heavens (the area above the
  stage) held trap doors.
 Sheep and cow blood was
  used for fight scenes. A
  small bag could be filled
  and popped at the right
  moment for the right
  effect.
 Gunpowder was used for
  musket fire and special
  controlled explosions.
 Only men and boys
 Young boys whose voices had
  not changed play women’s roles
 Would have been considered
  indecent for a woman to appear
  on stage
 38 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare
      14 comedies
      10 histories
      10 tragedies
      4 romances
 Possibly wrote three others
 Collaborated on several others
 Tragedies: The fall of a great man. Not by fatal
  “tragic” flaw, but through choice of action that puts
  him out of his comfort zone (Hamlet, King Lear,
  Macbeth).

 Comedies: Not simply comical, in the modern sense,
  but often tensions between traditional roles—male
  vs. female, poor vs. rich, old vs. young—often ending
  in marriage, the revision or restoration of tradition
  (Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night’s
  Dream, As You Like It).

 Histories: Based on the lives of English Kings (Henry
  IV, Henry V, Richard III).
 The puritans, and city authorities, did not like play
  going.
 Only the support of the King or Queen kept the
  theatre open.
 The theatre represented freedom of thought, freedom
  of expression, and openly played with gender roles and
  human sexuality.
• Shakespeare did NOT write in “Old English.”

• Old English is the language of Beowulf:
   Hwaet! We Gardena in geardagum
   Þeodcyninga Þrym gefrunon
   Hu ða æÞelingas ellen fremedon!

(Hey! We have heard of the glory of the Spear-
Danes in the old days, the kings of tribes, how
noble princes showed great courage!)
• Shakespeare did not write in “Middle English.”

• Middle English is the language of Chaucer, the
Gawain-poet, and Malory:
   We redeth oft and findeth y-write—
   And this clerkes wele it wite—
   Layes that ben in harping
   Ben y-founde of ferli thing… (Sir Orfeo)
• Shakespeare wrote in “Early Modern
English.”
• EME was not very different from
“Modern English,”
• A mix of old and very new
• Rural and urban words/images
• Understandable by the lowest
peasant and the highest noble
 Although Juliet is a fictional
  character, this actual building in
  Verona (built around the 13th
  century) is said to have been
  the home to a prominent family
  in Italy back then. The Capuleti
  was a family that actually
  existed, and some believe that
  Shakespeare based his fictional
  family, the Capulets, on them.
 Pictured here is Juliet’s
  balcony. Some couples even
  get married there today.


                                       22
 Written around 1595
 Involves two major
  families who hate each
  other
 Entire play takes place
  over 5 days
 Fate of Romeo and
  Juliet is given at the
  beginning of play


                            23
The Montagues                         The Capulets
 Romeo - first loves Rosaline;      Juliet – daughter of Capulet;
    sees Juliet and forgets             happy, innocent girl who loves
    Rosaline.                           Romeo
   Lord Montague - Romeo’s            Lord and Lady Capulet - Juliet’s
    father                              parents
   Lady Montague - Romeo’s            Tybalt - Juliet’s cousin; likes to
    mother                              fight
   Benvolio - nephew of Montague      Nurse - Juliet’s nanny and
    and friend of Romeo                 friend
   Balthasar - servant of Romeo       Peter - servant to the Nurse
   Abram - servant of Montague;       Sampson and Gregory –
    enjoys fighting with Capulets       servants

                                                                             24
•Prince Escalus - ruler of Verona; tired of the
fighting in the city and threatens anyone who
disturbs the peace with death
•Mercutio - relative of the prince and friend of
Romeo (sides with Montague); serves as comic
relief
•Friar Laurence - a Franciscan priest; helps
Romeo and Juliet; good man
•Friar John - another Franciscan priest
•Count Paris - a young nobleman and relative of
the prince (sides with Capulet); Juliet’s parents
arrange for her to marry him
“All the world 's a stage,
And all the men and women
merely players.”

So…..

        Let’s dramatize
        Shakespeare!!!

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Shakespeare

  • 1.
  • 2.  Known as the English Renaissance (rebirth)  England was ruled by Queen Elizabeth I, daughter of King Henry VIII, from 1533- 1603.  The Queen had a love for theater and the arts, so during this period, the arts (poetry, plays, painting, etc.) flourished. 2
  • 3. Clothing/Fashion  Certain fabrics, textures, and colors of clothing indicated which social class a person was a part of.  If a person dressed out of his/her social class, they would be punished because it was against the law. 3
  • 4. Marriages  A woman didn’t choose husband.  Marriages were usually arranged by the families of the bride and the groom in order for both sides to benefit from one another.  Once married, women had practically no rights; they could not work outside the home. 4
  • 5. Health  Many members of a family, often 4-8 people, would live in the same room.  There was no sanitation, no indoor plumbing, no concept of germs or sterilization.  The streets were filled with waste, both human and animal. 5
  • 6.  It is said that Shakespeare was born at Stratford-upon- Avon on April 23, 1564.  He had three brothers and four sisters and was the oldest child of the family.  He married Anne Hathaway in 1582: he was 18 and she was 26. They had 3 kids by the time he was 21, including twins (Hamnet and Judith)  He wrote his first play around 1591, fifteen years after the opening of the first theatre in London (The Red Lion).  Shakespeare owned two theaters and wrote at least 38 plays. He was an actor before he was a writer.
  • 7.
  • 8. • 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 (a cannon shot during Henry VIII)
  • 9. London & the Theater in Shakespeare’s Day  The theater was the most widely available entertainment to which people of every class had access.  Professional theater life was considered a fringe culture, existing on the margins of society. Actors were like rock stars.  Actors were considered homeless vagabonds and, as such, were subject to arrest (like rock stars).  Plays were often acted out in any space available; thus the income for actors and playwrights was undependable and rarely enough to live on.  Wealthy aristocrats, who enjoyed drama, would support acting companies with their own money—actors under the care of these “Lords” could not be arrested for their vagrant lifestyle.
  • 10. Bankside The Entertainment District:  Bankside London, on the Thames River, was a notorious area of the city.  The Globe Theatre was situated in this area where people went out to drink and gamble, and where prostitution flourished.  The theatre was not a symbol of high culture in those days, it was bawdy and violent entertainment, considered by many to be full of dangerous ideas and suggestive sexual themes.
  • 11.  There were only two doors, and the Globe held up to 3,000 people.  People from all classes visited the theatre on a regular basis.  Cheapest seats cost one penny; “groundlings” stood in the yard.  For an extra penny, you got a “cushion seat” in the gallery.  For extra money, the view was obstructed; however, in those days people didn’t go to see a play, they went to hear a play.
  • 12. The Globe Theatre A Reconstruction of Shakespeare’s Theater Built in 1996
  • 13.  Both the stage and the heavens (the area above the stage) held trap doors.  Sheep and cow blood was used for fight scenes. A small bag could be filled and popped at the right moment for the right effect.  Gunpowder was used for musket fire and special controlled explosions.
  • 14.  Only men and boys  Young boys whose voices had not changed play women’s roles  Would have been considered indecent for a woman to appear on stage
  • 15.  38 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare  14 comedies  10 histories  10 tragedies  4 romances  Possibly wrote three others  Collaborated on several others
  • 16.  Tragedies: The fall of a great man. Not by fatal “tragic” flaw, but through choice of action that puts him out of his comfort zone (Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth).  Comedies: Not simply comical, in the modern sense, but often tensions between traditional roles—male vs. female, poor vs. rich, old vs. young—often ending in marriage, the revision or restoration of tradition (Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, As You Like It).  Histories: Based on the lives of English Kings (Henry IV, Henry V, Richard III).
  • 17.  The puritans, and city authorities, did not like play going.  Only the support of the King or Queen kept the theatre open.  The theatre represented freedom of thought, freedom of expression, and openly played with gender roles and human sexuality.
  • 18. • Shakespeare did NOT write in “Old English.” • Old English is the language of Beowulf: Hwaet! We Gardena in geardagum Þeodcyninga Þrym gefrunon Hu ða æÞelingas ellen fremedon! (Hey! We have heard of the glory of the Spear- Danes in the old days, the kings of tribes, how noble princes showed great courage!)
  • 19. • Shakespeare did not write in “Middle English.” • Middle English is the language of Chaucer, the Gawain-poet, and Malory: We redeth oft and findeth y-write— And this clerkes wele it wite— Layes that ben in harping Ben y-founde of ferli thing… (Sir Orfeo)
  • 20. • Shakespeare wrote in “Early Modern English.” • EME was not very different from “Modern English,”
  • 21. • A mix of old and very new • Rural and urban words/images • Understandable by the lowest peasant and the highest noble
  • 22.  Although Juliet is a fictional character, this actual building in Verona (built around the 13th century) is said to have been the home to a prominent family in Italy back then. The Capuleti was a family that actually existed, and some believe that Shakespeare based his fictional family, the Capulets, on them.  Pictured here is Juliet’s balcony. Some couples even get married there today. 22
  • 23.  Written around 1595  Involves two major families who hate each other  Entire play takes place over 5 days  Fate of Romeo and Juliet is given at the beginning of play 23
  • 24. The Montagues The Capulets  Romeo - first loves Rosaline;  Juliet – daughter of Capulet; sees Juliet and forgets happy, innocent girl who loves Rosaline. Romeo  Lord Montague - Romeo’s  Lord and Lady Capulet - Juliet’s father parents  Lady Montague - Romeo’s  Tybalt - Juliet’s cousin; likes to mother fight  Benvolio - nephew of Montague  Nurse - Juliet’s nanny and and friend of Romeo friend  Balthasar - servant of Romeo  Peter - servant to the Nurse  Abram - servant of Montague;  Sampson and Gregory – enjoys fighting with Capulets servants 24
  • 25. •Prince Escalus - ruler of Verona; tired of the fighting in the city and threatens anyone who disturbs the peace with death •Mercutio - relative of the prince and friend of Romeo (sides with Montague); serves as comic relief •Friar Laurence - a Franciscan priest; helps Romeo and Juliet; good man •Friar John - another Franciscan priest •Count Paris - a young nobleman and relative of the prince (sides with Capulet); Juliet’s parents arrange for her to marry him
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  • 27. “All the world 's a stage, And all the men and women merely players.” So….. Let’s dramatize Shakespeare!!!