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         Shakespearean Theatre:     more books (89)
  1. Performances of Mourning in Shakespearean Theatre and Early Modern Culture (Early Modern History) by Tobias Döring, 2006-09-19
  2. A Look Inside a Shakespearean Theatre by Peter Chrisp, 1998-08-31
  3. Staging Shakespearean Theatre by Elaine Adams Novak, 2000-03
  4. John Barrymore, Shakespearean Actor (Cambridge Studies in American Theatre and Drama) by Michael A. Morrison, 1999-02-13
  5. Shakespearean Theatre Companies: Royal Shakespeare Company
  6. OUTDOOR DRAMA PICTORIAL GUIDE TO EPIC HISTORICAL DRAMA, MUSIC DRAMA, PASSION PLAYS AND SHAKESPEAREAN THEATRE IN THE USA by Mary Nordstrom, 1985
  7. Outdoor Drama: Pictorial Guide to Epic Historical Drama, Music Drama, Passion Plays and Shakespearean Theatre in the U.S.A. by Mary Nordstrom, 1985
  8. Summer Stock Theatre: Utah Shakespearean Festival, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Berkshire Theatre Festival, Westbury Music Fair
  9. Look Around a Shakespearean Theatre (Virtual History Tours) by Stewart Ross, 2007-08-23
  10. Shakespearean Playhouses A History of English Theatres from the Beginnings to the Restoration by Joseph Quincy Adams, 2009-04-26
  11. A Shakespearean Theatre by Jacqueline Morley, 2003-06-01
  12. Charting Shakespearean Waters: Text And Theatre (Angles on the English-Speaking World) by Niels Bugge Hansen, Sos Haugaard, 2005-05
  13. Lists of Theatre Characters: List of Shakespearean Characters, List of Historical Figures Dramatised by Shakespeare
  14. OUTDOOR DRAMA Pictorial Gide to Epic HIstorical Drama, Music Drama, Passion Plays and Shakespearean Theatre in the USA by Mary Nordstrom, 1985

1. Costumes & Sets In Shakespearean Theatre - The Theatres
Costumes and Sets in shakespearean theatre. THE THEATRES
http://www.btinternet.com/~steveaj/Shakespeare/costumes.htm
Online Shakespeare Contents Costumes and Sets in Shakespearean Theatre THE THEATRES Inn Yards Great Halls Outdoor theatres Indoor theatres ... Actors who played in Shakespeare's theatre The first theatres for Elizabethan drama were of two kinds and both were makeshift: the Inn-yards and Great Halls. From what we understand, despite the example of ancient Greece and Rome, there were no specially-designed buildings for presenting plays until the last quarter of the sixteenth century. Inn Yards: In mediaeval times plays were performed on carts that the players pushed around from village to village; the actors were known as 'Strolling Players' because they walked or 'strolled' round from place to place, setting up their cart as a stage in the market place or the village square. They were actors, tumblers, jugglers, all rolled into one: they performed plays, they walked on stilts, they juggled, they created slapstick scenes - anything to please, to entertain and, of course, to earn themselves not only applause but money on which to live. At the end of their performance they called upon the audience to be generous and went round with their hats collecting whatever was thrown to them. If their performance pleased the crowd they would be well rewarded; if they did badly they would not have much for supper that night. Life was pretty hard and rewards unreliable for actors.
Gradually, innkeepers learned that business improved whenever Players came to town; entertainment in those days was not easily come by and the arrival of the Players brought everyone together. Labourers and their families rubbed shoulders with farmers and foremen as they all went to watch the plays. Thus, the innkeepers began to offer the shelter of their inn-yards for performances and the Players would stand their carts at one end of the inn-yard whilst the local audience stood around to watch, buying their ale and mead and treating it very much as a festive occasion.

2. Talking To William Shakespeare
acknowledgement page, Shakespeare's Answers Shakespeare's World ShakespeareanTheatre. Shakespeare has answered 55 questions about shakespearean theatre.
http://www.talkingto.co.uk/ttws/html/ttws_answ_scat.asp?CatID=394&AuthorID=10

3. The Stratford Festival Of Canada
Theatre SetUp Outdoor Shakespeare Performances The International Professional shakespearean theatre Company THEATRE SET-UP performs the plays of SHAKESPEARE with the
http://www.stratford-festival.on.ca/
This Week:
Costume Sketches
for
The Adventures of Pericles
and The King and I
Next Week:
Archival photos
of
past productions of
The Adventures of Pericles
Archived Features:
The House of Atreus

4. Ashland Southern Oregon Rogue Valley And Shakespearean Theatre
Ashland in Southern Oregon Rogue Valley and Shakespeare Festival and Shakespeareantheatre theater. Jackson County, historical towns and cities.
http://www.rogueweb.com/ashland/
Ashland Oregon Profile Page A shland is located 15 miles north of the California border on Interstate 5 at the south end of the Rogue Valley, sitting at about 2,000 feet above sea level. Mt. Ashland looms above the city to the South, 7,500 feet high, and the Cascade Range lies about 30 miles to the east. A shland offers qualities of life that many towns only dream about. Snow-capped mountain peaks, a major theater company joined by other smaller theaters, art galleries, museums and fine restaurants offer a truly picturesque setting. Ashland is a unique place, offering a ski resort in the winter, and three other distinctive seasons. With its warm summers and mild climate, Ashland is an excellent place to garden. The climate is so good, in fact, that Ashland had an active agricultural industry around the turn of the century. The Rogue Valley is still known as "pear country," and you can see trees from the old orchards around town. The climate is also conducive to growing grapes, and Ashland has two local wineries. A shland has an active and varied theatrical community. Home to the

5. Rogue Music Theatre Southern Oregon Rogue Valley
shakespearean theatre britt festival craterian theatre theater mt ashland ashlandsouthern oregon musicals entertainment jacksonville grants pass plays
http://www.rogueweb.com/roguemusic/
R ogue Music T heatre
Southern Oregon premier musical theatre production! Rogue Music Theatre
Productions of the world's most beloved and award-winning musicals. Rogue Music Theatre's productions are in the beautiful outdoor amphitheatre at Rogue Community Collage in Grants Pass, Jacksonville's Britt Festival, Medford's Craterian Theatre, and more.
Rogue Music Theatre is a non-profit, community based organization that has provided professional, full book musical theatre productions for Southern Oregon audiences since its founding in 1982. They are the only such organization between Sacramento and Portland, a season of shows in this unique American art form. Rogue Music Theatre also provides opportunities for Southern Oregon youth to work alongside veteran performers and train in musical theatre with their annual Young People's Conservatory program. FOR INFORMATION ON PLAYS AND
Rogue Music Theatre
P.O. Box 862
Grants Pass, Oregon 97526
Phone: 541-479-2559
List your web site in the directory designed to help drive more visitors
to your existing web site. See our "AD Rates" for prices and services.

6. Costumes And Sets In Shakespearean Theatre - Performances & Theatre Sets
Costumes and Sets in shakespearean theatre. Performances and theatresets. For the Globe Theatre Shakespeare wrote at least 37 plays.
http://www.btinternet.com/~steveaj/Shakespeare/performances.htm
Online Shakespeare Contents The Life and Times of William Shakespeare Costumes and Sets in Shakespearean Theatre Performances and theatre sets For the Globe Theatre Shakespeare wrote at least 37 plays. The chief sources of his plots were Plutarch's 'Parallel Lives of Illustrious Men', Raphael Holinshed's 'Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland', and some Italian novelle, or short tales. He borrowed a few plays from older dramas and from English stories. What he did with the sources is more important than the sources themselves. If his original gave him what he needed, he used it closely. If not, he changed it. The Globe Theatre - two pictures to suggest how it might have looked As mentioned, there were several stages to use during a performance: the main action took place on the main stage and, because it was surrounded on three sides by the audience, the apron stage made for an intimacy we do not get today on the conventional stage with a proscenium arch; soliloquies could appear to be spoken confidentially to the audience and on the large stage 'asides ' were less artificial than they often are today. The curtained recess at the back would be used, for instance, for the Capulets' tomb in Romeo and Juliet or for Desdemona's bedroom; the balcony, for Juliet's bedroom; and a trapdoor to the space below the stage would be Ophelia's grave.
There was no scenery or scene painting as such, but plenty of stage

7. Southern Ontario Tourism - Shakespearean Theatre & Countryside Charm
shakespearean theatre Countryside Charm Map - Detailed A tug chugs out of PortBurwell harbour on its way to the pickerel fishing grounds in Lake Erie.
http://www.soto.on.ca/southernontario.asp?xsotoarea=2

8. Southern Ontario Tourism - Southern Ontario - Theatre / Culture
Come Back November in Stratford shakespearean theatre CountrysideCharm Stratford, Celebrate cuisine, art and culture three
http://www.soto.on.ca/results1.asp?xsotoarea=0&xtype=5

9. Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre
Due to temporary technical difficulties, the site has moved. If yourbrowser doesn't transfer you automatically in 5 seconds, please
http://www.theatersites.com/sistcompany/
Due to temporary technical difficulties, the site has moved. If your browser doesn't transfer you automatically in 5 seconds, please click here: http://www.lunacat.net/sistcompany/

10. Shakespeare Society - Shakespearean Theatre Productions
The Adobe Theatre Company www.adobe.org. Aquila Theatre Company www.aquilatheatre.com. NewPerspectives Theatre Company www.newperspectivestheatre.org.
http://www.shakespearesociety.org/links.htm
(email us)
THE SHAKESPEARE SOCIETY
2002-2003 PRODUCTION BULLETIN
The Shakespeare Society Website features selected Shakespeare productions in addition to helpful links to theatres. For details on current or future productions by companies listed here visit their Websites. SHAKESPEARE IN NEW YORK CITY These companies most frequently produce Shakespeare’s plays and related programming for audiences of all ages. The Acting Company
www.theactingcompany.org
(click on tour intinerary)
The Acting Shakespeare Company
www.actingshakespeare.org

The Adobe Theatre Company
www.adobe.org

Aquila Theatre Company
www.aquilatheatre.com

Classic Stage Company www.classicstage.org Genesis Repertory Ensemble www.genesisrep.org Judith Shakespeare www.judithshakespeare.org Kings County Shakespeare www.kingscountyshakespeare.org New Perspectives Theatre Company www.newperspectivestheatre.org

11. Community Connection: Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Co., Inc.
Staten Island shakespearean theatre Co., Inc. The Staten Island ShakespeareanTheatre Who? The Staten Island Shakespearean is a
http://community.silive.com/cc/SISTCO
Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Co., Inc. The Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre: Who?
The Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Co. is a voluntary, not for profit, community theatre company. 2002-2003 marks the 28th year of the company's production of high quality entertainment at reasonable ticket prices.
The Company produces primarily contemporary drama and comedy, with classics by the Bard.
Twice yearly musically based productions are produced as well. See our notice in the news section
Joseph Loffredo
Phone:
Fax:

12. Community Connection: Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Co., Inc.
Staten Island shakespearean theatre Co., Inc. December 27, 2002 HAPPYHOLIDAYS! The Board of Directors of the Staten Island Shakespearean
http://community.silive.com/cc/SISTCO?display=news

13. Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre
Staten Island shakespearean theatre Presents Wit by Margaret Edson Opening NightSeptember 21 nd , 2001 at 800pm 460 Brielle Ave., Staten Island, NY For
http://www.lunacat.net/sistcompany/main.htm
Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre
Presents:
Wit

by Margaret Edson

Opening Night: September 21 nd , 2001 at 8:00pm

460 Brielle Ave., Staten Island, NY
For more info. Email us at sistcompa@webtv.net PRODUCTION CALENDAR
WHO WE ARE
(Our History) PAST PERFORMANCES AUDITION INFO WHO'S WHO CONTACT US HOW TO GET THERE?
(Directions) SUPPORT S.I.S.T.
Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Co., Inc. Designed by Lunacat.net s="na";c="na";j="na";f=""+escape(document.referrer)

14. Lexington Shakespeare Festival, Inc.
An outdoor summer shakespearean theatre that has served the Central Kentucky community since 1982.
http://www.lexingtonshakespeare.org/
With special support from the University of Kentucky Department of Theatre
News: Cast lists are now posted. Thanks to all those who auditioned! Please join us this July for the 22nd annual Lexington Shakespeare Festival at the Arboretum.
Audition Information
Volunteer with the Festival University of Kentucky Department of Theatre
info@lexingtonshakespeare.org
var site="s11lexingtonshakespeare"

15. Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre - Support S.I.S.T.Company
Simply print out the form and send it to us at Staten Island ShakespeareanTheatre Inc. 157 Prescott Avenue Staten Island, NY 10306.
http://www.lunacat.net/sistcompany/support.htm
Support The Staten Island Shakespearean
Theatre Company Be a part of our exciting 27 th season

Your support is appreciated and needed this season more than ever. Become a member, a patron, a sponsor, an angel, place an ad in our playbill or treat yourself (or a friend) to a great T-shirt . We appreciate your generosity. Simply print out the form and send it to us at:
Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Inc.
157 Prescott Avenue
Staten Island, NY 10306
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP

$2 discount off door admission plus program credit SILVER SEASON PATRON
Seven admissions prefered reserved seating with reservations plus program credit SEASON SPONSOR
fourteen admissions to be used in any combination, program credit, and reserved seating. ANNIVERSARY ANGEL
($100 donation, tax deductible) Same benefits as Season Sponsor plus one free admission to all fundraising events and complimentary S.I. Shakespearean Theatre T-shirt. Production Schedule Who We Are/Our History Past Performances Audition Info ... Home Staten Island Shakespearean Theatre Co., Inc. 460 Brielle Avenue, Staten Island, New York

16. Shakespearean Theatre Vocabulary: Darkness, Ghosts And Vanishing
1. GENERAL HEADING Video and Film Analysis. 2. TITLE OF EXERCISE ShakespeareanTheatre Vocabulary Darkness, Ghosts and Vanishing .
http://www.tamut.edu/english/folgerhp/Recipes/8shthvoc.html
1. GENERAL HEADING: Video and Film Analysis 2. TITLE OF EXERCISE: "Shakespearean Theatre Vocabulary: Darkness, Ghosts and Vanishing" 3. GOALS: To explore the theatrical possibilities for communicating darkness and vanishing on Shakespeare's stage. 4. NUMBER OF STUDENTS: Any number of students. 5. EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES: VCR; videotapes and scripts of scenes in which darkness is dramatically important, or in which ghosts vanish from the scene. Alan Dessen's handout cited the suggestions for darkness in the stage directions of Heywood's The Iron Age , and Tailor's The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl ; the editorial variants of accounting for the movements of Demetrius and Lysander as they miss each other in the dark wood in 3.2 of A Midsummer Night's Dream ; and the stage directions for the ghosts in Richards' Messalina , Goffe's The Raging Turk 1 Hieronimo , and 5.3 of Shakespeare's Richard III . He provided videotapes of the ghost sequence (5.3) in Jane Howell's BBC video of Richard III and of the Puck-Demetrius-Lysander chase (3.2) in Peter Hall's video of A Midsummer Night's Dream 6. CLASS TIME NEEDED: 45 - 90 minutes.

17. AUDITIONS: The Shakespeare Generation, A Youth Shakespearean Theatre Company, Pr
undecided productions! The Shakespeare Generation is a youth Shakespeareantheatre company founded in January of 2000. Since then
http://www.shakespearegeneration.com/index.shtml
Navigate Site Latest News Who/what/why? History of the SG Contact Us Previous Shows The Taming of the Shrew Romeo and Juliet Twelfth Night The Summer Shakespeare Festival As You Like It Much Ado About Nothing The Merchant of Venice
clara raubertas
. logo by sarah thomas. Auditions!
Audition for the Shakespeare Generation's spring production of The Comedy of Errors

Auditions will be held at St. Peter's Lutheran Church in Shepherdstown, WV at 4 pm on Saturday, February 15 and Sunday, February 16. No prepared piece or previous experience is required, and all roles are available to actors under the age of twenty-one. The production will be performed in the end of April at the Shepherdstown Train Station and will be a full-length adaptation, directed by Laurel Hackley and produced by LeClair Windle. For more information, email the group at shakespearegeneration@stargate.net or contact Laurel at 301-432-2257 or LeClair at 304-728-6728.

18. The Shakespeare Generation: A Youth Shakespearean Theatre Company
enter.
http://www.shakespearegeneration.com/

19. The Shakespeare Generation: A Youth Shakespearean Theatre Company
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20. Doris Lechner: Shakespearean Theatre - Its Origin, Its Development And Its Influ
Translate this page Folie 86 von 160.
http://www.petersgasse.asn-graz.ac.at/fba/sld086.htm

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