Thursday, January 23, 2014

Shakespeare Activity 1ST AND 3RD HOURS

For this blog, you need to post THREE pieces of information about THREE different topics. You will see that the NUMBER THREE has significance in the play, Macbeth, as well! The catch is you cannot post anything that has already been posted. Therefore, the sooner you complete this assignment, the easier it will be!

1. Post THREE facts/bits of information about WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE.

2. Post THREE facts/bits of information about SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS, including, but not limited
               to Macbeth. It can be about plays OR poems.

3. Post THREE facts/bits of information about the GLOBE THEATER.

PLEASE ALSO INCLUDE YOUR NAME IF IT DOESN'T COME UP AS PART OF YOUR USERNAME.

334 comments:

  1. POST 3 FACTS ABOUT SHAKESPEARE'S LIFE HERE AS A REPLY TO THIS POST. REMEMBER, NO REPEATS!!

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    1. Megan Jones
      Shakespeare had seven siblings. They were: Joan (1558); Margaret (1562); Gilbert (1566); Joan II (1569); Anne (1571); Richard (1574) and Edmund (1580).

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    2. Megan Jones:
      Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway had three children together – a son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, and two daughters, Susanna and Judith. His only granddaughter Elizabeth – daughter of Susanna – died childless in 1670. Shakespeare therefore has no descendants.

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    3. Megan Jones:
      Shakespeare wrote many more plays than the ones we know about. It’s certain that he wrote a play titled Cardenio, which has been lost, but scholars think he wrote about twenty that have gone without a trace.

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    4. Mary Fleming
      William Shakespeare married his wife, Anne Hathaway at age 18. During his lifetime he wrote 37 plays and 154 sonnets. He was also an actor who performed in many of his plays.

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    5. -Shakespeare's wife's name was Anne Hathaway
      -Shakespeare died at 52
      -Shakespeare wrote 37 plays in total

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    6. Shakespeare lived to be 52 years old.

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    7. He had seven siblings.

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    8. Shakespeare is the second most quoted writer in the English language.

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    9. Emma Patrick
      Shakespeare was baptized, he was born in April, he died in 1616

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    10. -His wife was 26 and pregnant when they married.
      -His children died childless, so he has no descendants.
      -His remains lay undisturbed because he cursed anyone who would move his body from its final resting place.

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    11. Taylor Veenstra Unlike most artists of his time, Shakespeare died a very wealthy man with a large property portfolio.

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    12. He was baptized on April 26th of 1564.

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    13. He lived in England during the renaissance.

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    14. ‘William Shakespeare’ is an anagram of ‘I am a weakish speller’.

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    15. Shakespeare has been credited by the Oxford English Dictionary with introducing almost 3,000 words to the English language.

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    16. Shakespeare put a curse on anyone who moves his body.

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    17. Though it was customary to dig up the bones from previous graves to make room for others, the remains in Shakespeare’s grave are still undisturbed.

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    18. Shakespeare's burial ground was inscribed with a curse.

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    19. His love for theatre started early as his dad would take him to traveling shows.

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    20. Shakespeare's schooling is unknown, but he was the son of an Alderman, meaning he would have gone to a parish school.

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    21. -Shakespeare seemed to be fond of one particular kind of death - suicide. In fact suicide occurs 13 times in Shakespearean plays.
      -The only thing Shakespeare left to his wife in his will was the second best bed in the house. Yes his will read, ‘“I gyve unto my wief my second best bed with the furniture”. The “furniture” refers to the linen for the bed.
      -One of Shakespeare’s relatives, William Arden, was arrested for plotting against Queen Elizabeth I.

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    23. It was illegal for women and girls to perform during Shakespeare's lifetime so all of the female parts were written for boys. It was only during the Restoration that women started to appear on the English stage.

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    24. Shakespeare never attended a university
      (my other two posts are at the bottom sorry)

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    25. Shakespeare only left his wife a bed in his will when he died.

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    26. Shakespeare was a baptist when he was born, but when he died, he was a Roman Catholic.

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    27. No one really knows how Shakespeare died.

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    28. Shakespeare was buried at the Holy Trinity Church and it was believed that he put a curse on anyone who tried to move his body from that place.

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    29. Shakespeare is always referred to as an Elizabethan playwright, but as most of his most famous works were written after Elizabeth died, he was more of a Jacobean writer.

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    30. Shakespeare lived a double life. He was a famous playwright in London but in his hometown of Stratford with his family, he was a well known and highly respected businessman and property owner.

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    31. Shakespeare was said to have an extensive vocabulary; his works contained more than 30,000 different words.

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    32. Shakespeare owned 12.5% of the Globe Theatre

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    33. In 1556 Shakespeare was an official ale taster

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    34. In Shakespeare's will, he gave his wife his "second best bed".

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    35. -His tomb was inscribed with a curse
      -He died a rich man, and he gave his property to his daughter Susanna
      -Shakespeare is the second most quoted writer in the English language

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    36. -His house was called New Palace
      -Refers to birds over 600 times in his pieces combined
      -Uses the word dog and dogs over 200 times in his works
      -His tomb was inscribed with a curse

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    37. Dylann Hodgkinson:
      -80 variations of how to spell his name
      -He was a businessman
      -He used about 29,000 vocabulary words

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    38. John Hemmings and Henry Cordell helped publish 36 of Shakespeare's works.

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    39. Shakespeare's play "Cardenio" is lost and there is no record of the story anywhere.

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    40. Shakespeare and his dad created a family crest together. It is a yellow spear and shield with a latin inscription, " Not without right."

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    41. Mitchell Armstrong
      -Shakespeare died a wealthy man owning much property.
      -Shakespeare is credited with adding 3,000 words to the oxford dictionary.
      - Shakespeare wrote a play by the title of Cardenio which was lost throughout the years.

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    42. - Shakespeare spent his life living on Henley Street.
      - Shakespeare's got married to his wife at the location of Temple Gratson.
      - Shakespeare wore an earring inside his left ear.

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    43. Raine Bertelsen:

      - He gave his property to his daughter Susanna
      - He performed many of his own plays, as well as other playwrights'
      - He is the second most quoted writer in the English language

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    44. Shakespeare lived a double life. Half as an unknown playwright and the other half as a well known businessman and property owner.

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    45. Shakespeare’s original grave marker showed him holding a bag of grain. Citizens of Stratford replaced the bag with a quill in 1747.

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    46. Shakespeare was also an established actor who performed in many of his own plays as well as those of his contemporaries, such as Ben Jonson.

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    48. He lived on Henley street.

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    49. He was married at Temple Graston.

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    50. His first job was holding horses outside of theatres.

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  2. POST 3 FACTS ABOUT SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS HERE AS A REPLY TO THIS POST. REMEMBER, NO REPEATS!

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    1. Megan Jones:
      There are only two Shakespeare plays written entirely in verse: they are Richard II and King John. Many of the plays have half of the text in prose.

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    2. Megan Jones:
      Shakespeare’s shortest play, The Comedy of Errors is only a third of the length of his longest, Hamlet, which takes four hours to perform.

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    3. Megan Jones:
      Shakespeare wrote close to a tenth of the most quoted lines ever written or spoken in English. What’s more, according to the Literature Encyclopaedia, Shakespeare is the second most quoted English writer after the writers of the Bible.

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    4. Suicide occurs quite often throughout Shakespeare's plays.

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    5. Shakespeare wrote many more plays than what the public is aware about.

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    6. Shakespeare's plays were comedies, tragedies, and histories.

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    7. 18 unauthorized versions of his plays were published during his lifetime.

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    8. A lot of his works did not appear until seven years after his death, when two of his fellow actors published his work.

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    9. The play "The Comedy of Errors" is only a third of the length of his other piece "Hamlet" which takes four hours to perform.

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    10. -Shakespeare wrote 37 total plays.
      -He wrote 16 comedies
      -He also wrote 10 tragedies.

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    11. -Shakespeare's plays had 13 suicides
      -Shakespeare has added nearly 3000 words to the English language
      -Shakespeare's sonnets were not published until 1609

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    12. The globe theater is 11 meters tall, its in London as of today, and the original Globe theater stood in Southwark London

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    13. Shakespeare never published his own plays, they were all published by his fellow actors.

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    14. Racism pops up frequently in Shakespeare's plays.

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    16. -Shakespeare wrote historical plays that are not as well known.
      -The female role in his plays were played by young boys, because it was illegal for women to perform.
      -A play called Cardenio which was written by Shakespeare has been completely lost with no record of its story anywhere.

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    17. Shakespeare wrote a total of 154 sonnets.

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    18. Through his work there is over 600 references to birds.

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    19. In his play “Romeo and Juliet,” the word love appears 150 times.

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    20. His last play was "The Two Noble Kinsmen." It is thought to have been written in 1613 when he was 49 years old.

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    24. 15 of Shakespeare's plays had been performed by 1597

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    25. - One of Shakespeare’s plays has been completely lost to history. There is evidence that he wrote a play called Cardenio which was performed in England, but no known copy of the play exists.

      - It was illegal for women and girls to perform in the theater in Shakespeare’s lifetime so all the female parts were written for boys.

      - Few people realize that aside from writing 37 plays and composing 154 sonnets, Shakespeare was also an established actor who performed in many of his own plays as well as those of his contemporaries, such as Ben Jonson.

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    26. Shakespeare performed in many of his own plays

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    27. Shakespeare wrote "King John" the same year his son died.

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    28. Shakespeare has over 200 references to dogs in his work (my other comment is down below)

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    29. Shakespeare is credited with coining a lot of familiar phrases in the English language through the incorporation of these words in his plays. Some examples include the words, "fashionable", "sanctimonious", "eyeball", "lackluster", etc.

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    30. 59 - The number of references to the river Avon in Shakespeare's works.

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    31. There was 60 different species of birds referenced in Shakespeare's plays

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    32. Shakespeare coined the phrase "the beast with two backs" in his works.

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    33. 108 - The number of plants alluded to in Shakespeare's plays.

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    34. He wrote Romeo and Juliet when he was around 30 years old.

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    35. It is believed that Shakespeare has copied several plays from different authors, though he has received the credit for many of the plays.

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    37. Shakespeare's plays began being printed in 1594.

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    38. None of Shakespeare's actual manuscripts survived, so the printed texts of his plays are the only source of what he originally wrote.

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    42. The first performance of Macbeth was in April 1611.

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    43. Shakespeare popularized the term "wild goose chase" in Romeo and Juliet.

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    44. Shakespeare popularized the term "fashionable" in Troilus and Cressida.

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    45. Macbeth was written to impress King James.

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    46. - He wrote Romeo and Juliet at age 30
      - Racism pops up frequently in his works
      - Sonnets were published in 1609 without his permission

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    47. Dylann Hodgkinson:
      -Shakespeare’s play, Macbeth, takes place over a year whereas in reality, Macbeth ruled for 17 years.
      -The role of Macbeth is 719 lines long, only half the length of Hamlet.
      -The only play of Shakespeare's that mentions the word a rhinoceros is Macbeth.

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    49. His first 26 works were aimed at aristocratic, young man who did not want to marry.

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    50. Sonnets 127-152 are directed at a dark woman and how Bard has mixed feelings for her.

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    51. Mitchell Armstrong
      -Many of Shakespeare’s plays are based on others’ earlier plays, histories, and poems. This was common practice at that time.
      -Juliet and Paris – in Shakespeare’s time, the father DID have the right to decide whom his daughter married – marriage was a business agreement
      -Romeo and Juliet is the first play about romantic love, and contains the first romantic stage kiss.

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    52. -His plays began to be printed in 1594
      -Some believe that Queen Elizabeth wrote some of his plays
      -Shakespeare never really spelled his name correctly in his works. He would always write "Shakespe".

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    53. Shakespeare's first play, "Henry VI Part One" was written was he was 25 years old.

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    54. - The name "Macbeth", the name of the main character in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth", means "son of life" in Gaelic.

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    55. Raine Bertelsen:

      - Two of Shakespeare’s plays, Hamlet and Much Ado About Nothing, have been translated into Klingon
      - Shakespeare never actually published any of his plays, they're all published under the name ‘The First Folio’
      - An outbreak of the plague in Europe resulted in all London theatres being closed between 1592 and 1594. Shakespeare began to write poetry because of this.

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    56. Richard II and King John are the only two of his plays written entirely in verse

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    57. Shakespeare’s shortest play, The Comedy of Errors is only a third of the length of his longest, Hamlet

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    58. Two of Shakespeare’s plays, Hamlet and Much Ado About Nothing, have been translated into Klingon

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    59. Racism pops up frequently in his work.

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    60. It was rumored that many of Shakespeare's famous works were copied from other artists.

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    61. The last play shakespeare ever wrote was Two Noble Kinsmen.

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  3. POST 3 FACTS ABOUT THE GLOBE THEATER HERE AS A REPLY TO THIS POST. REMEMBER, NO REPEATS!

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    2. Megan Jones:
      Part of the stage was called the “apron stage” – a rectangular platform that thrust out amongst the audience into the pit.

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    3. Megan Jones:
      A crest above the main entrance to The Globe Theatre was inscribed with motto “Totus mundus agit histrionem” – Latin for “The whole world is a playhouse”.

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    4. Megan Jones:
      The Globe was generally considered to be a circular building, however when a small part of the theatre’s foundations were uncovered the late 1980’s it seems that the building was actually a polygon of 20 sides.

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    5. There were no woman that acted in the plays that were performed at the theatre.

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    6. There was an area at the base of the stage called "the pit", which is where people stood who only payed a penny to watch the play.

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    7. The Puritans brought an end to the theatre in 1642.

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    8. The colored flags outside the theater represented the type of play that would be showing that day.

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    9. The colored flags outside the theater represented the type of play that would be showing that day.

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    10. It was built in 1599.

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    11. No one was hurt when the theater burned down.

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    12. -The theater is located in London, England.
      -The theater can hold 3000 people
      -The play being performed that day would be advertised by waving a flag over the theater

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    13. The globe was 36 inches (11 m) tall.

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    14. At the base of the stage was an area called “the pit” which held “the groundlings”; people who paid a penny to stand and watch a performance.

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    15. At the base of the stage was an area called “the pit” which held “the groundlings”; people who paid a penny to stand and watch a performance.

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    16. Female roles were played by young boys as theatre stages were considered too risque a place for ladies.

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    17. The Puritans brought an end to The Globe Theatre in 1642 with an order suppressing all stage plays.

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    18. The Globe Theater had a 1500 plus audience capacity. Up to 3000 people would flock to the theater and its grounds.

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    19. Different colored flags were used to advertise the themes of plays which were to be performed at the Globe Theatre. A black flag indicated a tragedy, a white flag indicated a comedy and a red flag indicated a History

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    20. There was no heating in the Globe theatre. Plays were performed in the summer months and transferred to the indoor playhouses during the winter.

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    21. -The lead content in stage makeup led to many early deaths in the young boy actors.
      -A modern reconstructed theatre, "Shakespeare's Globe", was built in 1997
      -The theatre was owned by 6 different men who were actors and shareholders.

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    22. all three of my comments are at the bottom of the page sorry

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    23. - The make-up used by men to look like women led to many early deaths due to the high lead content in the make-up.
      - Serious outbreaks of the Bubonic plague caused more than three closures of the Globe theater, as a precaution to protect from
      disease.
      - The Globe was built in a similar style to the Coliseum, but on a smaller scale - other Elizabethan Theatres followed this style of architecture which were called amphitheatres.

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    24. The Globe Theater was demolished by the Puritans.

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    26. Originally, Shakespeare and his company built two Globe Theaters. One burnt down within two hours of being built.

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    27. The Globe Theater was used for not only plays, but gambling and immoral purposes.

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    28. The reconstruction of Shakespeare's Globe was not the idea of London's mayor, or the government. It was the idea of an American actor, Sam Wanamaker.

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    29. The Globe Theater was demolished by Puritans on April 15th, 1644 by landowner Sir Matthew Brend who wrecked the playhouse and then built tenement houses on the site.

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    30. Shakespeare's Globe had to have special permission to have a thatched roof - there has been a law against thatched buildings in London since the Great Fire in 1666.

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    31. Different colored flags were hung outside the theater each performance day to let people know the theme and message of the play that was going to be performed.

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    32. The first performance at the reconstructed Globe (in 1993) was in German. It was performed while the theater was still being built.

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    33. On June 29, 1613 during the performance of Henry the Eighth, a theatrical cannon misfired which ignited the wooden structure.

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    34. When The Globe Theatre burnt down in 1613, it took less than two hours to burn down completely.

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    35. The Globe Theatre was considered a circular building, but when uncovered in the late 1980's it was actually a polygon of 20 sides.

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    36. Since copyrighting did not exist yet people people from other theatre group would be sent to the Globe Theatre to spy on Shakespeare plays.

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    37. The term "box office" was coined at the Globe Theatre.

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    38. Dyann Hodgkinson:
      - the globe was built by Peter Smith
      - located on the South bank of London's River
      - no one was injured in the Great Fire except for a man with burning trousers

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    39. Over 1000 oak trees were used to build the Globe Theater.

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    40. All of the plaster on the walls was made of a mixture of materials, including goat hair.

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    41. The Globe had to have special permission to have a thatched roof because it was against the law in London.

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    42. "the tiring house" was a room where the actors get dressed up and have their make up put on....it's like going back stage.

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    43. -The Globe was 3 stories high
      - In the Globe there were really no props. This is where acts were performed, the people who performed here never really used props. The Globe was a place where the actors had to use their imagination.
      -The cost of entry in the Globe was open to the modest fee of just one penny. Which was roughly 10% of a workers daily wage.

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    44. Raine Bertelsen:

      - The original Globe Theatre caught fire in 1613 during a performance of Henry VIII, when a cannon set light to the thatched roof.
      - The Globe Theatre was built in 1599 in Southwark on the south bank of London’s River Thames by Richard Burbage.
      - Shakespeare was a shareholder who owned 12.5% of The Globe Theatre.

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    45. Mitchell Armstrong
      -No one was hurt during the burning of the Globe theater except for the man who's pants caught on fire and was put out with a beer.
      - A crest above the main entrance to The Globe Theater was inscribed with motto “Totus mundus agit histrionem” – Latin for “The whole world is a playhouse”.
      - William Shakespeare was a shareholder who owned 12.5% of The Globe Theater.

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    46. Color coded flags were used outside the theatre to advertise the type of play to be performed. A red flag for a history play, white for a comedy play and black for a tragedy play.

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    47. The only 'injury' in the burning down of the theater was a man whose pants caught on fire. But it was put out by a bottle of beer.

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    48. William Shakespeare was a shareholder who owned 12.5% of The Globe Theatre.

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    49. In 1997 a third version and faithful reconstruction of The Globe Theatre was built as “Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre”, close to the original site in Southwark.

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    50. The Globe was generally considered to be a circular building, however when a small part of the theatre’s foundations were uncovered the late 1980’s it seems that the building was actually a polygon of 20 sides.

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  4. Globe theater:
    The most expensive seats were the highest up in the theater.

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  5. Shakespeare's work:
    all of the female role were played by men

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  6. Globe Theater:
    built in 1599

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  7. Globe theater:
    was burnt down and rebuilt in 1614

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  8. About Shakespeare:
    He was buried in the holy trinity church, and wrote a poem cursing anyone who dares to move his body because he wanted to be left alone and in peace, and his bones have been untouched ever since.

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  9. About Shakespeare:
    Many people seem to forget that beyond being a full time writer and caregiver for his children, Shakespeare also filled in his busy schedule with writing his own plays and performing them at the Globe Theatre.

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  10. About Shakespeare:
    Shakespeare and his wife, Anne Hathaway, had three children together, Hamnet, Susanna, and Judith. His only granddaughter, daughter of Susanna, died childless in 1670, therefore leaving Shakespeare with no descendants.

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  11. Shakespeare's Works:
    During his life, Shakespeare wrote a total of 37 plays, and 154 sonnets. The last play he did was when he was 49 years old.

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  12. Shakespeare's Works:
    ”The Comedy of Errors” is Shakespeare's shortest play with a total of 1770 lines long.

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  13. Shakespeare's Works:
    He wrote roughly one and a half plays between 1589 and 1616. This shows how much time and thought he puts into his pieces, and also shows his busy schedule around writing like taking care of his children and writing part time plays for the Globe Theatre.

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  14. Globe Theatre:
    The timber for the globe theatre was actually reused wood from “The Theatre” - an earlier theatre owned by Richards Burbage’s father.

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  15. Globe Theatre:
    William Shakespeare was a shareholder who owned 12.5% of the Globe Theatre. As a young writer, Shakespeare bought shares in the theatre and benefitted financially as his popularity grew.

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  16. Globe Theater:
    Color coded flags were used outside of the theatre to advertise the type of play to be performed - red flag for a history play, white for a comedy play, and black for a tragedy play.

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  17. -The globe Theater was burned down in 1614 because of a cannon going off during a play.
    -the cheapest seats were on the ground, the people who bought them were called groundings.
    -the theater is still an active theater which presents many plays a year, usually Shakespeare.

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  18. The motto of the Globe Theatre was totus mundus agit histrionem (all the world's a stage).

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  19. Shakespeare fact:
    his wife was 26 when shakespeare was only 18

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  20. Shakespeare:
    he allegedly died at the age of 52 on his birthday April 23

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  21. Globe Theatre- The wood used to build the theatre was re used wood from The Theatre, a different theatre.

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  22. The Globe Theatre was able to hold 3,000 people

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  23. The Globe Theatre was actually a polygon of 20 sides.

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  24. "Shakespeare" was spelled 80 different ways, including "Shaxpere" and "Shaxberd."

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  25. While most people regularly use about 2,000 words, Shakespeare used more than 25,000 in his writing

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  26. Nobody knows Shakespeare's actual birthday

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  27. Shakespeares work: During his life, Shakespeare wrote 37 plays and 154 sonnets! This means an average 1.5 plays a year since he first started writing in 1589.

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  28. Shakespeares work: His last play The Two Noble Kinsmen is reckoned to have been written in 1613 when he was 49 years old.

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  29. Shakespeares work: Apart from writing his numerous plays and sonnets, Shakespeare was also an actor who performed many of his own plays as well as those of other playwrights.

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  30. John Shakespeare suffered financial loss and ceased to play a part in local government.

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  31. William lived through the Black Death.

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  32. William never published any of his plays.

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  33. The Globe was built in a similar style to the Coliseum, but on a smaller scale - other Elizabethan Theatres followed this style of architecture - they were called amphitheatres.

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  34. Elizabethan theatres were also used for bear baiting, gambling and for immoral purposes.

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  35. 1596 London's authorities banned the public presentation of plays and all theatres within the city limits of London. All theaters located in the City were forced to move to the South side of the River Thames

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  36. His nicknames include the “Bard of Avon” and “Swan of Avon.”

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  37. Mitchell Armstrong
    -No one was hurt during the burning of the Globe theater except for the man who's pants caught on fire and was put out with a beer.
    - A crest above the main entrance to The Globe Theater was inscribed with motto “Totus mundus agit histrionem” – Latin for “The whole world is a playhouse”.
    - William Shakespeare was a shareholder who owned 12.5% of The Globe Theater.

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