SHAKESPEARE HIS LIFE AND TIMES EARLY LIFE Born
SHAKESPEARE: HIS LIFE AND TIMES
EARLY LIFE Born April 23 rd 1564— Died April 23 rd 1616… he was the master of irony after all Stratford-upon-Avon Parents: John and Mary Arden Shakespeare • Mary—daughter of wealthy landowner • John—glovemaker, local politician
LOCATION OF STRATFORD-UPON-AVON
STRATFORD-ON-AVON IN SHAKESPEARE’S TIME
STRATFORD-UPON-AVON TODAY
MARRIED LIFE • Married in 1582 to Anne Hathaway, who was pregnant at the time with their first daughter • She was 26 and he was 18 • Had twins in 1585 • Sometime between 1585 -1592, he moved to London and began working in theatre
Conditions in London-BAD! • Thames River polluted with raw sewage • Trees used up for fuel • Poverty
PERSONAL HYGIENE/DISEASE • • • Bathing considered dangerous Body odor strong Childhood diseases Children often died before 5 years Small Pox Bubonic Plague
LIVING CONDITIONS • No running water • Chamber Pots • Open Sewers • Crowded
• Performed in courtyards of inns • Theater-first public theater 1576 • Daytime/open air • Limited set design • Relied on music, sound, costumes, props and great description THEATER CAREER
THEATRE • Member and later part-owner of the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, later called the King’s Men • Globe Theater built in 1599 by L. C. M. with Shakespeare as primary investor • Burned down in 1613 during one of Shakespeare’s plays
THE REBUILT GLOBE THEATER, LONDON
THE GLOBE THEATER
Clothes • One set used all year long, rarely washed • Underclothing slept in, infrequently changed • Clothes handed down from rich to poor
• All men • Female parts played by young boys • No actual kissing or hugging on stage ACTORS
Groundlings • Poor audience member • Stood around stage in “the pit” • Women not allowed (had to dress up as men to attend) • Threw rotten vegetables at bad performances
THE PLAYS 38 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare 14 comedies 10 histories 10 tragedies 4 romances Possibly wrote three others Collaborated on several others
THE POETRY • Two major poems; numerous others • 154 Sonnets
SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE • Shakespeare did NOT write in “Old English. ” • Old English is the language of Beowulf: Hwaet! We Gardena in geardagum Þeodcyninga Þrym gefrunon Hu 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!)
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 harping Ben y-founde of ferli thing… (Sir Orfeo)
SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE • Shakespeare wrote in “Early Modern English. ” • EME was not very different from “Modern English, ” except that it had some old holdovers.
SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE • Shakespeare coined many words we still use today: • Critical • Majestic • Dwindle • And quite a few phrases as well: • One fell swoop • Flesh and blood • Vanish into thin air See http: //www. wordorigins. org/histeng. htm
SHAKESPEARE’S LANGUAGE • A mix of old and very new • Rural and urban words/images • Understandable by the lowest peasant and the highest noble
Elizabethan Theatrical Conventions
A theatrical convention is a suspension of reality. v No electricity v Women forbidden to act on stage v Minimal, contemporary costumes v Minimal scenery These control the dialogue.
v Soliloquy v Aside v Blood and gore v Use of supernatural Types of speech Audience loves to be scared.
v Use of disguises/ mistaken identity v Last speaker—highest in rank (in tragedies) v Multiple murders (in tragedies) v Multiple marriages (in comedies)
- Slides: 27