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WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

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Age 18 - married Anne Hathaway - she was 26. Susanna 1583 , Hamnet & Judith 1585. The Lost Years ... Left the family's 'second best bed' to his wife, Anne ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE


1
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
  • April 23, 1564 April 23, 1616
  • Stratford-Upon-Avon

2
Hell never amount to anything
  • Not from a noble family
  • Not from a wealthy family
  • Did not continue education at University
  • Did not mentor with a senior artist
  • Did not marry into wealth or prestige
  • Acting talent only moderate
  • BUT

3
Shakespeare is the most widely read and
performed playwright IN THE WORLD
4
A FEW RELEVANT FACTS
5
Grew up in Stratford-Upon-Avon 100 miles from
London
6
  • Attended newly established public Grammar school
    - studied Greek mythology, Roman comedy, ancient
    history, rhetoric, grammar, Latin, Greek (600
    a.m./700 a.m. 500 p.m.)
  • Some ancient stories basis for his plays

7
  • Age 18 - married Anne Hathaway - she was 26
  • Susanna 1583 , Hamnet Judith 1585

8
The Lost Years
  • 1585 - 1592
  • Incomplete, contradictory, unreliable info
  • Was in London by 1592 as a writer/actor

9
1593 - Theaters closed because of the plague
10
1594 became a shareholder in the Lord
Chamberlains Men
  • Most popular acting company in London
  • Often played before court of Queen Elizabeth

11
  • Money and fame - returned to Stratford and bought
    2nd largest home in town but still lived in
    London - New Place


  • Visited family once a year

12
1599
  • Established Globe Theater
  • Polygonal
  • Outskirts of London

13
1596 son Hamnet died
  • Left bulk of his estate to Susanna and Judith
  • Left the familys second best bed to his wife,
    Anne

14
1603 - King James gave a royal license to
Shakespeare and the company
  • They are now known as The Kings Men

15
Shakespeares Legacy
  • 38 plays
  • 154 sonnets
  • 2 narrative poems
  • The greatest playwright in the English language

16
And.
  • Invented 1,700 words and phrases
  • Provides readers with a handbook for living
    through his plays - TO SEE OURSELVES, TO SEE THE
    WORLD, AND TO ACT
  • -a parallel to our world
  • -commit ourselves to action
  • -awaken our imaginations
  • -be generous and assume others are, as well
  • -speak out
  • -know when we are being manipulated
  • -express ourselves

17
So what do we have in common with Shakespeares
characters after 400 years?
  • We are all-too-human - we are flawed
  • We want the same things
  • -to feel love and compassion
  • -to be loved in return
  • -to eat, drink, sleep in peace and safety
  • -to survive in a larger world
  • -to live a life with meaning that serves the
    greater good

18
He was not of an age, but for all time.
Ben Johnson
19
ELIZABETHAN THEATER
20
  • Actors and writers were NOT very respected -
    Puritans felt they fostered immorality
  • Regulated by the Office of Revels - no
    politically or socially sensitive material
  • All parts were played by males - young boys
    played female parts

21
  • All plays during the day - 2 hours long
  • A flying flag announced the production
  • No scenery
  • No front curtain - no scene breaks
  • No period costumes - only upper-class
    Elizabethan clothing
  • Trumpet sounded 3 times to signal beginning

22
Shakespeares Theaters
23
  • Rectangular stage - 70 ft diameter - extended
    into pit
  • Stage - 5 ft above pit
  • Cover - heavens - equipment to raise and lower
    actors
  • Trapdoor - for graves / ghosts
  • Tiring house - dressing rooms

24
Commoners
  • Entrance for the pit 1penny (60cents today)
  • Around 3 sides of stage
  • Open air
  • 800 groundlings stood

25
Middle and upper class
  • 3 tiers of galleries
  • Higher levels higher entrance price
  • Best seats 1 shilling (7.00 today)
  • Galleries were covered
  • Seated _at_1500 spectators

26
Gentry
  • 12 seats were reserved for gentry
  • ON STAGE
  • Gentry often got in the way of the actors and
    certainly made obvious their opinion of the play!

27
http//www.shakespeares-globe.org/virtualtour/lowe
rgallery/
28
More like a rowdy football game than a play!
  • Groundlings talked, played cards, drank
  • Freely expressed opinion of play
  • Threw rotten fruit and vegetables at the
    actors
  • Shouted praise - or dislike
  • Gentry interacted while seated on the stage

29
QUEEN ELIZABETH
  • Supported arts and sciences
  • Actors gained respect
  • Theater performances became more and more popular

30
Shakespeare died in Stratford-Upon-Avon on April
23, 1616
He is buried in Holy Trinity Church
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