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William Shakespeare: Life and Times. The Main Details. Born 1564—died 1616 Stratford-upon-Avon Parents: John and Mary Arden Shakespeare Mary—daughter of wealthy landowner John— wealthy merchant (glove maker) and local politician. Location of Stratford-upon-Avon.
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The Main Details • Born 1564—died 1616 • Stratford-upon-Avon • Parents: John and Mary Arden Shakespeare • Mary—daughter of wealthy landowner • John— wealthy merchant (glove maker) and local politician
Location of Stratford-upon-Avon From: http://www.where-can-i-find.com/tourist-maps.html
I FINALLY get to visit Me in Stratford!! (Train station!) Aaaaand at his house
The best part? My joy… Wilt’s joy…
Love and Marriage • Married to Anne Hathaway in 1582 • Anne was 26, he was 18 3 children: Susannah, then Hamnet and Judith (twins), The youngest, Hamnet died at the age of 11
Leaving Town... Went to Londonat 21 joined a travelling company of actors Worked as an actor, a playwright, and a director
London Life in the 16th century • Poor sewer system • High crime rate • But … • 200,000 inhabitants • the cultural and political heart of England
The Plays • 37 plays firmly attributed to Shakespeare • comedies • histories • tragedies • poetry
Where the magic happened… • opened in 1599 • Was a wooden “O” shape - seated an audience of 3,000 in the open-air arena. (Today, it only seats 1,500!!!)
Who got to go? • EVERYONE!!! All classes were welcome. • “Groundlings,” paid a penny for admission, and stood on three sides of the stage for the entire production. • The wealthier got to sit in the stalls around the stage • The wealthiest were allowed to sit ON the stage or almost behind it • That’s where they were most visible • The “Box” Office
Me in front of the stage… I’m a groundling!!
Side view looking at the stalls The wealthiest sat here, because everyone could see them, and know that they paid enough money to get those seats!!
The Stage Sometimes the wealthy even sat here!
Roof of the Globe stage It’s painted like the sky and heavens because that’s what it was supposed to be...not just the roof of a stage. This is a trap door that would open to let in the special effects or angels/ gods
A rare sunny day look at the “O” • The only thatched roof building allowed in ALL of London • It was built the same way it would have been built in Shakespeare’s time: with no electrical devices or technologies
When can we go!? • Performances were given every day except Sunday • Weather permitting, of course! • Ran between 2 and 5 o’clock in the afternoon • A flag flew to signify the type of play being performed that day: black = tragedy, white = comedy, and red = history.
What was the theatre like? • Vendors offered beer, water, oranges, nuts, gingerbread and apples, all of which were occasionally thrown at the actors. • No bathrooms…you went where you were standing!! • If it rained, you got rained on! • The roles of women were played by men. • The term “dressed in drag” comes from this
The end of his life • Shakespeare did very well in London • His plays brought him fame and wealth • Returned to Stratford in 1610 • Destruction of the Globe Theatre in 1613 (the Great Fire of London) • In 1616 Shakespeare died on April 23 (his birthday!)
His Lasting Influence • LANGUAGE!!! (Hooray!) • Credited with inventing at least 1700 words and phrases we use today. • Just a few examples: • dwindle - deafening - fashionable • hurry - gossip - generous • lonely - torture - puking • amazement
thou (you) thine (your, yours) thee (you) thyself (yourself) prithee/pray (please) verily (very/truly) fie (a curse) aye/yea (yes) nay (no) anon (until later) owes (owns) morrow (day) crowkeeper (scarecrow) Minor differences