Shakespearean ComedyRussell & Russell, 1962 - 417 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 147
... stage direction before the second scene of the Prologue - ' Enter aloft the Drunkard with attendants . . . and Lord ' - shows that Shakespeare meant this scene to be played on the balcony , leaving the main stage free for The Taming of ...
... stage direction before the second scene of the Prologue - ' Enter aloft the Drunkard with attendants . . . and Lord ' - shows that Shakespeare meant this scene to be played on the balcony , leaving the main stage free for The Taming of ...
Página 250
... stage . It opens with two grooms strewing rushes ; the Company wants the stage to look fresh and clean , for they are about to put on the best show possible . And that should be rather a good show . Some years later at the Globe their ...
... stage . It opens with two grooms strewing rushes ; the Company wants the stage to look fresh and clean , for they are about to put on the best show possible . And that should be rather a good show . Some years later at the Globe their ...
Página 305
... stage perform- ance . One of the characteristics of the Folio text is the fullness and specific character of the stage directions . This would seem to show that the manuscript had been carefully annotated for performance , and it seems ...
... stage perform- ance . One of the characteristics of the Folio text is the fullness and specific character of the stage directions . This would seem to show that the manuscript had been carefully annotated for performance , and it seems ...
Contenido
THE MEDIEVAL BACKGROUND | 3 |
THE IMPACT OF THE RENAISSANCE | 37 |
THE NEW COMEDY | 53 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
action actor Antony appears audience called chronicle play Cleopatra Clown comic characters Coriolanus Court Cressida Cymbeline daughter death Devil dialogue disguised dramatic early Elizabethan English comedy fact Falstaff father figure Folio follows Fool Greene's Hamlet hand hero humor husband Interlude Jester jests John Juliet King Henry lady later laugh Lear London Lord Love's Labour's Lost lover Lyly Lyly's Macbeth marriage master Measure for Measure Merry Wives Midsummer Night's Dream mistress mocking Morals old play Othello passion performance perhaps Pericles Plautus playwright plot Plutarch poet Polonius present Prince prose Queen realistic Richard Richard II role Romeo Romeo and Juliet satiric says scene seems servant Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's company Shakespeare's plays Shakespearean comedy Shrew song speare speare's speech story tale theater theme tion tragedy tragic Troilus Troilus and Cressida true Twelfth Night verse Vice wife Winter's Tale words wrote young