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Shakespeare: His Life and Times

Shakespeare: His Life and Times

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Shakespeare: His Life and Times. 3 Little Pigs…Shakespeare Style!!!. Why study Shakespeare?. Chances are, you’ve quoted Shakespeare without even knowing it! Have you ever said the following. “in a pickle”. “It’s Greek to me.”. “Too much of a good thing.”. “as luck would have it”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Shakespeare: His Life and Times

Page 2: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

3 Little Pigs…Shakespeare Style!!!

Page 3: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Why study Shakespeare?

Chances are, you’ve quoted Shakespeare without even knowing it!

Have you ever said the following...

Page 4: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

“in a pickle”

“It’s Greek to me.”

“Too much of a good thing.”

Page 5: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

“as luck would have it”“good riddance”

“dead as a door-nail”

“foul play”

Page 6: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

“a laughing stock”“an eyesore”

“send me packing”

“without rhyme or reason”

Page 7: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Even today, Shakespeare lives on.

We can relate to his tales of love, hatred, revenge, courage, trust and deception.

So much of our world today has been influenced by Shakespeare.

Page 8: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

My Early Life- A Mystery?????

Born April 23 or 26 1564- died April 26, 1616

Stratford-upon-Avon 3rd of 8 children Parents: John and Mary Arden

Shakespeare• Mary—daughter of wealthy landowner• John—glove maker, local politician

Page 9: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Stratford-on-Avon in Shakespeare’s Time

Page 10: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Stratford-upon-Avon Today

Page 11: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

From: http://perso.wanadoo.fr/danielle.esposito/

Shakespeare’s Birthplace

Page 12: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

• Probably attended King’s New School in Stratford

• Educated in:• Rhetoric• Logic• History• Latin

But was he actually educated????

Education

Page 13: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

From: http://perso.wanadoo.fr/danielle.esposito/

King’s New School

Page 14: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

• Married in 1582 to Anne Hathaway, who was pregnant at the time with their first daughter

• Had twins in 1585• Sometime between 1585-1592, he moved

to London and began working in theatre.• Poet• Playwright• Actor

Married Life

Page 15: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

From: http://perso.wanadoo.fr/danielle.esposito/

Anne Hathaway’s Cottage

Page 16: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

1590’s Queen Elizabeth I

ruled English explorers

were crossing the ocean to the New World

And travelers coming to England LOVED watching plays...

Page 17: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

The Playwrights... Christopher

Marlowe Thomas Kyd And William

Shakespeare was the original “New Kid on the Block”

Page 18: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

The Theatres...The Theatre,

built in 1576

The Rose, built in

1587 (London’s first “Bankside” theatre)

The Swan, 1595

The Globe (Shakespeare helped construct in 1598-1599)

Page 19: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

About the theatres•Protestants condemned the plays

•Theatres were on the outskirts of London--away from the authorities

•People who attended the theatres included:

-merchants

-lawyers

-laborers

-prostitutes

-visitors from other countries

-nobility & royalty

Page 20: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

•No lighting•No scenery--Just a curtain•Could hold around 2,000 people

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• most expensive seats were directly behind the stage

• people sitting there could only see the actors from behind

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• Member and later part-owner of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men under Queen Elizabeth I

• Globe Theater built in 1599 by L.C.M. with Shakespeare as primary investor

• Later called the King’s Men under King James I• Burned down in 1613 during one of

Shakespeare’s plays• What happened between 1593-1594 to theater

companies?

Theatre Career

Page 23: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

The Rebuilt Globe Theater, London

Page 24: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

The Plays 38 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare

14 comedies Ex. Alls Well That Ends Well, As You Like

It, The Taming of the Shrew 10 histories

Henry IV, Henry V10 tragedies

Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet4 romances

The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale

Page 25: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

• 154 Sonnets• Numerous other poems

• Got his ideas from all over!

The Poetry

Page 26: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Shakespeare’s Language

• Shakespeare did NOT write in “Old English.”

• Old English is the language of Beowulf:Hwaet! We Gardena in geardagum Þeodcyninga Þrym gefrunonHu 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!)

Page 27: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Shakespeare’s Language

• 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 harpingBen y-founde of ferli thing… (Sir Orfeo)

Page 28: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Shakespeare’s Language

• Shakespeare wrote in “Early Modern English.”

• EME was not very different from “Modern English,”

Page 29: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Shakespeare’s Language• A mix of old and very new• Rural and urban words/images• Understandable by the lowest peasant and

the highest noble

How many words did he use?30,000

How many words do we use today?6,000-15,000

Page 30: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Love of the Language

In Shakespeare’s time, everyone loved the English language.

There were no grammar rules, punctuation keys, OR spelling!

The language was evolving and everyday new words were being made up.

Shakespeare’s language reflects this freedom and experimentation.

Page 31: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Iambic Pentameter Is a sound pattern IAMB: one unaccented (or

unstressed) syllable with one accented syllable

It’s like a heartbeat: ba-bum, ba-bum, ba-bum

Five “ba-bum”s in a row make one line of iambic pentameter (10-syllable lines)

Example: he WENT to TOWN toDAY to BUY a CAR

OR: In SOOTH / I KNOW / not WHY / I AM / so SAD

Page 32: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Why go to all the TROUBLE??? Using iambic

pentameter kept things moving in the play (like a drum beat)

It made the words & play more interesting

It helped the actors remember their lines (like a song)

Page 33: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

When Shakespeare set his words to iambic

pentameter it is compared to the birth

of

rock-n-roll: a mixing of old styles

and new sounds.

Page 34: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

•In Shakespeare’s time, you only had one copy of a play, and after you wrote it for the acting company, you no longer owned it! •Scripts were thrown out when they were no longer wanted or needed.

•NO copies of Shakespeare’s plays in his own handwriting have survived. The only known evidence of anything in his handwriting is his signature (shown above) on the play Sir Thomas More that Shakespeare might have written.

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“Quartos” Small books of published

plays were called “quartos.” The first published works of

Shakespeare’s vary considerably

Scholars believe these are faulty versions, calling them “bad quartos.”

Page 36: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

The first full collection of Shakespeare’s work was published in 1623, seven years after his death.

It was called “First Folio” It contained 36 plays

(compiled by John Heminge and Henry Condell--friends and fellow actors of Shakespeare’s)

Page 37: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Elizabethan Theatrical

Conventions

Page 38: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Acting The actors were all men; young boys (age

12-14) played the female parts They were considered “shareholders” and

owned stock or shares in the play texts, costumes, and props

Their pay depended on admission sales Actors only had about 3 weeks to practice

a new play In one week, the troupes may perform 6

different plays (as many as 4,000 lines!)

Page 39: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

A theatrical convention is a suspension of reality.

No electricity Women forbidden

to act on stage Minimal, contemporary

costumes Minimal scenery

These control the dialogue.

Page 40: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Audience loves to be scared.

Soliloquy Aside Types of speech

Blood Use of supernatural

Page 41: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

Use of disguises/

mistaken identity

Multiple marriages

(in comedies)

Multiple murders

(in tragedies)

Last speaker—highest in

rank (in tragedies)

Page 42: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

“All the world 's a stage, And all the men and women merely players.”

So…..

Let’s dramatize Shakespeare!!!

Page 43: Shakespeare:  His Life and Times

"Good Friends, for Jesus' sake forbear, To dig the bones enclosed here! Blest be the man that spares these stones, And curst be he that moves my bones."

Shakespeare’s Epitaph…