Transcript File
INTRODUCTION
TO
WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE
ABOUT
THE
MAN
Born April 1564, died April 1616
Wrote 37 plays
Wrote over 150 sonnets
Director, Producer, Actor, poet,
playwright
TYPES
OF
PLAYS
Shakespeare wrote:
•Comedies - light and amusing, usually
with a happy ending revolving around love
•Tragedies –serious dramas with
disastrous endings
•Histories – involve events or persons
from the past
ABOUT
COMEDY
• The main action is about love
• The lovers must overcome obstacles and
misunderstandings
• Eventually united in harmonious union (wedding)
• Twelfth Night has 3 couples
• Frequently contains elements of the improbable,
fantastic, supernatural or miraculous
• Sometimes contains a philosophical aspect
involving issues and themes
THE
THEATRE
The Globe Theatre:
•Open
ceiling
•Three
•
stories
high
No artificial lighting
Plays were shown during daylight hours only
THE
AUDIENCE
Wealthy people got to sit on benches
The poor
(called “groundlings”)
had to stand and watch
from the courtyard
There was much more
audience participation
than today
THE
ACTORS
Only men and boys
Young boys whose
voices had not changed
played the women’s
roles
It would have been
indecent for a woman to
appear on stage
THEATRICAL
TERMS
Act: a unit of action, or sequence of
incidents
Scene: A unit of place and time (setting)
Action: The sequence of events between
the introduction and the conclusion of a
play
Climax: The point at which the rising
action begins falling towards a resolution.
In Shakespeare usually in Act 3
SHAKESPEARE’S
WORDS
Obsolete words: Words that were once
common to the English language but are
now out of general use.
Example: Thou wilt perish presently.
Archaic words: Words that were once
common to the English language but are
now considered old-fashioned and rarely
used.
Example: Thou shalt pierce yonder quat with a sharpened rood.
*ACTIVITY*