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William Shakespeare

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Title: William Shakespeare


1
William Shakespeare
1564-1616 Stratford-on-Avon - England
2
Who was he?
  • Widely regarded as the greatest writer in English
    Literature
  • Poet and dramatist
  • Wrote 37 plays comedies, histories, tragedies
  • Composed about 154 sonnets and a few poems
  • Started out as an actor

3
Life (pg. 6-9)
  • Born around April 23, 1564 3rd of 8 children
    Family lived in Stratford-on-Avon, a market town
    about 100 miles NW of London
  • Father (John) a shopkeeper. A man of considerable
    standing in Stratford. Served as Justice of the
    Peace and High Bailiff (mayor)
  • Attended grammar school, where he studied Latin,
    grammar and literature, Rhetoric (the use of
    language). No further formal education known
  • Marriage to Anne Hathaway, 8 years older than
    he, 3 children Susanna (1583), Judith and
    Hamnet (twins, 1585)

4
Stratford-upon-Avon (pg. 6-9)
5
Later life
  • 1594 - became shareholder in a company of actors
    called Lord Chamberlains Men
  • 1599 - Lord Chamberlains Co. Built Globe
    Theater where most of S. Plays were performed
  • 1599 - Actor for Lord Chamberlains Men and
    principal playwright for them
  • 1603 James I became king of England acting
    company renamed Kings Men
  • 1610 Shakespeare retired to Stratford-on-Avon
    April 2
  • 1616 died at the age of 52

6
Works
Editions of works First Quarto (1603), Second
Quarto (1604), Folio (1623)
7
Comedy (pg. 46-47)
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream
  • All's Well That Ends Well
  • As You Like It
  • Cymbeline
  • Loves Labours Lost
  • Measure for Measure
  • Much Ado About Nothing
  • Pericles, Prince of Tyre
  • The Comedy of Errors
  • The Merchant of Venice
  • The Merry Wives of Windsor
  • The Taming of the Shrew
  • The Tempest
  • Troilus and Cressida
  • Twelfth Night
  • Two Gentlemen of Verona
  • Winter's Tale

8
Tragedy (pg. 50-51)
  • Antony and Cleopatra
  • Coriolanus
  • Hamlet
  • Julius Caesar
  • King Lear
  • Macbeth
  • Othello
  • Romeo and Juliet
  • Timon of Athens
  • Titus Andronicus

9
History
  • Henry IV, part 1
  • Henry IV, part 2
  • Henry V
  • Henry VI, part 1
  • Henry VI, part 2
  • Henry VI, part 3
  • Henry VIII
  • King John
  • Richard II
  • Richard III

10
Poetry
  • A Lover's Complaint
  • Sonnets (about 154)
  • The Passionate Pilgrim
  • The Phoenix and the turtle
  • The Rape of Lucrece
  • Venus and Adonis

11
Why is he still so famous?
  • His plays portray recognizable people in
    situations we experience in our lives love,
    marriage, death, mourning, guilt, the need to
    make difficult choices, separation, reunion and
    reconciliation
  • They do so with great humanity, tolerance, and
    wisdom
  • The plays are constantly fresh and can be adapted
    to the place and time they are performed
  • Their language is wonderfully expressive and
    powerful
  • The plays help us to understand what it is to be
    human, and see the tragic or humorous
    consequences when Shakespeares characters
    encounter these problems.

12
Language
  • Used over 20,000 words in his works
  • The average writer uses 7,500
  • The English Dictionary of his time only had 500
    words.
  • Hes credited with creating 3,000 words in the
    English Oxford Dictionary
  • He was by far the most important individual
    influence on the development of the modern
    English
  • He invented lots of words that we use in our
    daily speech

13
Words invented by the Bard
  • accommodation
  • amazement
  • assassination
  • baseless
  • bloody
  • bump
  • castigate
  • changeful
  • control (noun)
  • countless
  • courtship
  • critic
  • eventful
  • exposure
  • frugal
  • generous
  • gloomy
  • hurry
  • impartial
  • indistinguishable
  • invulnerable
  • laughable
  • lonely
  • majestic

misplaced monumental obscene pious
premeditated radiance reliance road sportive
submerge suspicious
14
Elements of drama
  • 5-part dramatic structure corresponds to a plays
  • 5 acts
  • Exposition (introduction)
  • Establishes tone, setting, main characters, main
    conflict
  • Fills in events previous to play
  • Rising action
  • Series of complications for the protagonist (main
    character)
  • flowing from the main conflict

15
Elements of drama
  • Crisis or Climax
  • Turning point in story
  • Moment of choice for protagonist
  • Forces of conflict come together
  • Falling action
  • Results of protagonists decision
  • Maintains suspense
  • Resolution or Denouement
  • Conclusion of play
  • Unraveling of plot
  • May include characters deaths

16
Dramatic technique
  • Pun play on words involving
  • Word with more than one meaning
  • Words with similar sounds
  • Soliloquy
  • Speech of moderate to long length
  • Spoken by one actor alone on stage (or not heard
    by other actors)
  • Aside
  • Direct address by actor to audience
  • Not supposed to be overheard by other characters

17
Typical 16th century theatre (pg. 34-35)
  • Building
  • 3 stories Levels 1 2,
  • Backstage dressing and storage areas Level 3,
    Upper Stage could represent balcony, walls of a
    castle, bridge of a ship
  • Resembled courtyard of an inn

The Globe Theatre
18
Elizabethan Theatre
19
The Globe Theatre
20
  • Proscenium stage
  • A large platform without a curtain or a stage
    setting
  • 2 ornate pillars supported canopy
  • Stage roof (underpart of canopy)
  • called the heavens
  • elaborately painted to depict the sun, moon,
    stars, planets

21
  • Trap doors entrances and exits of ghosts area
    under stage called Hell
  • 2 large doors at back actors made entrances and
    exits in full view of audience
  • Inner stage a recess with balcony area above
  • Floor ash mixed with hazelnut shells from snacks
    audience ate during performance
  • Effect on performance plays held in afternoon
  • No roof
  • No artificial lighting
  • No scenery

22
Acting companies (pg. 42-43)
  • Developed from the medieval trade guilds
  • Were composed of
  • Only boys and men
  • Young boys performed female roles

23
Audience (pg.44-45)
  • 2000-3000 people from all walks of life
  • Well-to-do spectators sat in covered galleries
    around stage
  • Most stood in yard around platform stage
    groundlings

24
Sonnet 18
  • Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou
    art more lovely and more temperateRough winds
    do shake the darling buds of May, And summer's
    lease hath all too short a dateSometime too hot
    the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold
    complexion dimm'd And every fair from fair
    sometime declines, By chance, or nature's
    changing course un-trimm'dBut thy eternal
    summer shall not fade, Nor lose possession of
    that fair thou ow'st, Nor shall death brag thou
    wander'st in his shade,When in eternal lines to
    time thou grow'st So long as men can breathe,
    or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this
    gives life to thee
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