William Shakespeare:
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Transcript William Shakespeare:
William
Shakespeare:
Life in the Elizabethan Theater
How much do you Already Know?
True or False:
1.
2.
3.
The Elizabethans were superstitious and
believed the future of a person’s life was
determined by the placement of the stars at
that person’s birth.
Before coming to London, Shakespeare
married an older woman who was already
pregnant.
William Shakespeare attended Oxford
University where he spent years perfecting his
writing.
4. Shakespeare wrote over 150 sonnets and 38
plays.
5. When Romeo and Juliet was first performed in
1595, Juliet was played by a young boy.
6. Shakespeare’s plays came straight from his
imagination.
7. Shakespeare’s theater, The Globe, burned down
in 1613 and was not open again until 1997.
How’d you do?! Let’s see…
Elizabethan Times:
Beliefs About the Universe
Elizabethans believed that the earth was the
center of the universe and fixed firmly in place.
Seven planets– the moon, Mercury, Venus, the
sun, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn– rotated around
the earth
Astrologers thought they could predict future
events by knowing the conjunction of stars, and
the future course of a person’s life could be
known ahead of time by knowing the
placement of the stars at that person’s birth
(astrology).
What do you think?
Do
we have similar beliefs today?
What
role will fate and predictions
play in Romeo and Juliet?
“The Father of English”
William Shakespeare was born on April
23, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon.
He was born into a modest life; his
family could not afford to send him to
university.
He was married to Anne Hathaway on
November 28, 1582. William was 18
and Anne was 26—and pregnant.
Their first daughter, Susanna, was born
on May 26, 1583. The couple later had
twins, Hamnet and Judith; Hamnet
died in childhood at the age of 11.
Shakespeare’s Birthplace:
Stratford-Upon-Avon
“Father of English”… continued
He wrote his first play when he was 25 years
old.
He wrote approximately 38 plays and 154
sonnets in his lifetime.
Many of his plays are comments on the royal
society or reflective of his concerns regarding
fatherhood.
He died in 1616 at the age of 52, most likely
on his birthday.
He never published any of his plays. We only
read them today because his actors recorded
his work as a posthumous dedication to him.
OTHER FUN FACTS
William Shakespeare’s nickname: The Bard
All of Shakespeare’s 38 plays have been
made into films
Shakespeare created approximately 2,000
words throughout his career, including
lonely, champion, hint, tranquil, and zany
About Shakespeare’s Plays
Shakespeare’s plays are divided into 3 categories:
HISTORIES
Henry IV, V, and VI, and Richard III.
COMEDIES
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Much Ado About
Nothing, and As You Like It.
TRAGEDIES
Hamlet, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear,
and Othello
About Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy about two young “starcrossed” lovers in Verona, Italy.
The plot of the play is revealed by the Prologue.
All of Shakespeare’s tragedies are in five acts, and
ends with the deaths of the main characters.
Act I: Exposition
ACT II: Rising Action, complications
ACT III: Crisis, Turning Point
ACT IV: Falling Action
ACT V: Resolution
Attending Shakespeare’s Theater
Shakespeare’s plays
were performed at the
Globe Theatre in
London.
The theater was round
and covered only the
outside galleriesmany playgoers got
wet in the frequent
London rains.
Attending Shakespeare’s Theater
Almost half of the
theater-goers stood
on the ground and
were called
“groundlings.”
People paying higher
prices got seats in the
galleries for their
money and a roof to
keep off the rain.
Attending Shakespeare’s Theater
No one went to the theater at nightthe stage was in the middle of the
audience and was lit by the sun.
No women or girls acted in the playsboys played all female parts
There was no scenery, few props, and
only costumes that the actors
provided for themselves.
The Globe Theatre: Old and New
In 1613, the old Globe
Theatre burned to the
ground after being set on
fire by a spark from a canon
during a performance of
Henry VIII.
Image: Shakespeare’s Globe
Reconstruction on a replica
of the original Globe
Theatre began in 1993 and
was completed in 1996.
Queen Elizabeth II
officially opened the Globe
in May of 1997.
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If you could be any animal, which animal would
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Feel free to use imaginary animals, like unicorns,
dragons, or El Chupacabra.
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