Turned in Freewrite: half a page: describe the kind of music you like and why.
Half a page on P 180; Loud Music
Macbeth final
Outside REading is tomorrow. Parent signature is required, first quarter list is required, and statement of authenticity is again required.
Reminder
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Monday, January 30, 2012
Friday, January 27, 2012
Friday, January 27, 2012
Youtube Macbeth clip.
Practice for test on Monday by going over all the quotes. We also reviewed the Stratford Squares game that we played at the beginning of this unit. The questions and answers can be found on this blog on an earlier date.
Freewrite: half a page: describe the kind of music you like and why.
P 180; Loud Music. Write at least half a page on this poem. Include a short paragraph of summary. Then go in any direction that is appropriate.
Loud Music
Stephen Dobyns
My stepdaughter and I circle round and round.
You see, I like the music loud, the speakers
throbbing, jam-packing the room with sound whether
Bach or rock and roll, the volume cranked up so
each bass notes is like a hand smacking the gut.
But my stepdaughter disagrees. She is four
and likes the music decorous, pitched below
her own voice-that tenuous projection of self.
With music blasting, she feels she disappears,
is lost within the blare, which in fact I like.
But at four what she wants is self-location
and uses her voice as a porpoise uses
its sonar: to find herself in all this space.
If she had a sort of box with a peephole
and looked inside, what she'd like to see would be
herself standing there in her red pants, jacket,
yellow plastic lunch box: a proper subject
for serious study. But me, if I raised
the same box to my eye, I would wish to find
the ocean on one of those days when wind
and thick cloud make the water gray and restless
as if some creature brooded underneath,
a rocky coast with a road along the shore
where someone like me was walking and has gone.
Loud music does this, it wipes out the ego,
leaving turbulent water and winding road,
a landscape stripped of people and language-
how clear the air becomes, how sharp the colors.
Ode to Mom; we watched a powerpoint on mother's day. This was just for fun.
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Practice for test on Monday by going over all the quotes. We also reviewed the Stratford Squares game that we played at the beginning of this unit. The questions and answers can be found on this blog on an earlier date.
Freewrite: half a page: describe the kind of music you like and why.
P 180; Loud Music. Write at least half a page on this poem. Include a short paragraph of summary. Then go in any direction that is appropriate.
Loud Music
Stephen Dobyns
My stepdaughter and I circle round and round.
You see, I like the music loud, the speakers
throbbing, jam-packing the room with sound whether
Bach or rock and roll, the volume cranked up so
each bass notes is like a hand smacking the gut.
But my stepdaughter disagrees. She is four
and likes the music decorous, pitched below
her own voice-that tenuous projection of self.
With music blasting, she feels she disappears,
is lost within the blare, which in fact I like.
But at four what she wants is self-location
and uses her voice as a porpoise uses
its sonar: to find herself in all this space.
If she had a sort of box with a peephole
and looked inside, what she'd like to see would be
herself standing there in her red pants, jacket,
yellow plastic lunch box: a proper subject
for serious study. But me, if I raised
the same box to my eye, I would wish to find
the ocean on one of those days when wind
and thick cloud make the water gray and restless
as if some creature brooded underneath,
a rocky coast with a road along the shore
where someone like me was walking and has gone.
Loud music does this, it wipes out the ego,
leaving turbulent water and winding road,
a landscape stripped of people and language-
how clear the air becomes, how sharp the colors.
Ode to Mom; we watched a powerpoint on mother's day. This was just for fun.
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
ShakeOff in class
Watch more of the film if time permits.
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Watch more of the film if time permits.
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Practiced for ShakeOff which happens on Wednesday.
Watched more of the video Pulanski's "Macbeth".
Reminders:
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Watched more of the video Pulanski's "Macbeth".
Reminders:
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Monday, January 23, 2012
Monday, January 23, 2012
Video- 20 minutes
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
Each group turned in a sheet of paper with the following:
Act, scene, lines on top of page.
Double space showing the names of the people in your group and the number of lines.
At bottom, list the props and the name of your teleprompter.
Mr. McCarty here tomorrow.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
Each group turned in a sheet of paper with the following:
Act, scene, lines on top of page.
Double space showing the names of the people in your group and the number of lines.
At bottom, list the props and the name of your teleprompter.
Mr. McCarty here tomorrow.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Friday, January 20, 2012
Friday, January 20, 2012
P 852 of senior language book covers colons. We did the exercises orally in class.
Samples from ShakeOffs past were shown in an effort to spur students to greater effort.
Video- 20 minutes
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
17 lines memorized
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class
Samples from ShakeOffs past were shown in an effort to spur students to greater effort.
Video- 20 minutes
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
17 lines memorized
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Thursday. January 19, 2012
P 850 semicolons from Language book.
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
13 lines memorized
We will start watching 1972 version of the play.
.
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
13 lines memorized
We will start watching 1972 version of the play.
.
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
We did a line check to make sure that everyone knew at least 9 of their lines.
Tomorrow you need to know at least 14 lines.
We did an exercise with the word "Oh" and subtext.
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
We did a line check to make sure that everyone knew at least 9 of their lines.
Tomorrow you need to know at least 14 lines.
We did an exercise with the word "Oh" and subtext.
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Watch Scottish play. We watched part 6 of Orson Welles production as seen on youtube.
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
5 lines memorized by Tuesday beginning of class.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
5 lines memorized by Tuesday beginning of class.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Friday, January 13, 2012
Friday, January 13, 2012
The following scenes from Macbeth were covered today:
4.3 summary only lines 205; 228
5.1.1-70
5.2-4 skip
5.5.8-52
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
Tuesday beginning of class 5 lines memorized;
Wednesday beginning of class 9 lines memorized;
Thursday beginning of class 13 memorized;
Friday beginning of class 17 lines memorized.
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
4.3 summary only lines 205; 228
5.1.1-70
5.2-4 skip
5.5.8-52
Group work: No commingling; no hallway without prior permission; outside is for acting, not reading/ talking.
Tuesday beginning of class 5 lines memorized;
Wednesday beginning of class 9 lines memorized;
Thursday beginning of class 13 memorized;
Friday beginning of class 17 lines memorized.
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Macbeth
Group work
Decide on partners
Decide on scene
Tell teacher, and get script.
Count lines; cut lines, combine parts
Learn five lines by Tuesday beginning of class.
Video Watched part three of Orson Welles Macbeth from 1948. See youtube/
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class
Group work
Decide on partners
Decide on scene
Tell teacher, and get script.
Count lines; cut lines, combine parts
Learn five lines by Tuesday beginning of class.
Video Watched part three of Orson Welles Macbeth from 1948. See youtube/
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Wednesday, January 11. 2012
4.2.1-80 Macduff’s castle (Fife)
4.3 summary only
We covered all the quotes in our packet. Then we watched more of the 1948 Orson Wells "Macbeth". Watch it here:
http://youtu.be/x3ET5PnluBs
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
4.3 summary only
We covered all the quotes in our packet. Then we watched more of the 1948 Orson Wells "Macbeth". Watch it here:
http://youtu.be/x3ET5PnluBs
Video
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Tuesday, January 10 2012
Mark, discuss, hand in: When I have fears that I may cease to be (827)
3.2.1-55 “We have scorched the snake, not killed it!”
3.3.1-22 “Fly, Fleance!”
3.4.1-144 “Never shake/ Thy gory locks at me!”
3.5.32-33 We will talk our way through this: Hecate: “And you all know security/ Is mortal’s chiefest enemy”
4.1.1-155 Three apparitions
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
3.2.1-55 “We have scorched the snake, not killed it!”
3.3.1-22 “Fly, Fleance!”
3.4.1-144 “Never shake/ Thy gory locks at me!”
3.5.32-33 We will talk our way through this: Hecate: “And you all know security/ Is mortal’s chiefest enemy”
4.1.1-155 Three apparitions
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Monday, January 9, 2012
Monday, January 9, 2011
When I have fears that I may cease to be ((827) Write a full page. This is worth 20 points. First ¶ short summary. The rest of the ¶s are your choice.
When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be John Keats
When I have fears that I may cease to be
Before my pen has gleaned my teeming brain,
Before high-piled books, in charactery,
Hold like rich garners the full-ripened grain;
When I behold, upon the night’s starred face,
Huge cloudy symbols of a high romance,
And think that I may never live to trace
Their shadows, with the magic hand of chance;
And when I feel, fair creature of an hour,
That I shall never look upon thee more,
Never have relish in the fairy power
Of unreflecting love- then on the shore
Of the wide world I stand alone, and think
Till love and fame to nothingness do sink.
Act 1 quote practice
2.3. 35-140 Meet Macduff
3.1.1-140
3.2.1-55
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be John Keats
When I have fears that I may cease to be
Before my pen has gleaned my teeming brain,
Before high-piled books, in charactery,
Hold like rich garners the full-ripened grain;
When I behold, upon the night’s starred face,
Huge cloudy symbols of a high romance,
And think that I may never live to trace
Their shadows, with the magic hand of chance;
And when I feel, fair creature of an hour,
That I shall never look upon thee more,
Never have relish in the fairy power
Of unreflecting love- then on the shore
Of the wide world I stand alone, and think
Till love and fame to nothingness do sink.
Act 1 quote practice
2.3. 35-140 Meet Macduff
3.1.1-140
3.2.1-55
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Friday, January 6, 2012
Friday, January 6, 2012
We covered the following FOUR scenes today:
1.7 Screw your courage to the sticking place
2.1 Is this the dagger
2.2 I have done the deed
2.3. 1-35 Porter Scene only first part when the porter stops talking.
If you are having problems, go to No Fear Shakespeare and see the original play and the translation side by side.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
1.7 Screw your courage to the sticking place
2.1 Is this the dagger
2.2 I have done the deed
2.3. 1-35 Porter Scene only first part when the porter stops talking.
If you are having problems, go to No Fear Shakespeare and see the original play and the translation side by side.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Pick up book "Macbeth" from the library, if you haven't
Macbeth. 1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7 Read the last part of 1.7 for tomorrow. You can find it online if you don't have the book. See what makes Lady Macbeth memorable.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Macbeth. 1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7 Read the last part of 1.7 for tomorrow. You can find it online if you don't have the book. See what makes Lady Macbeth memorable.
Wednesday, 1-25, ShakeOff in class
Friday, 1-27, ShakeOff on stage 4th period
Monday, 1-30, Macbeth final
Tuesday, 1-31, Outside Reading due
Wednesday, 2-1, lit term final, graduation letter (in-class)
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Macbeth, Act 1, scenes 1-3.
We watched three different versions.
We watched the Orson Welles 1948 version at the following site:
http://youtu.be/LzLZsts5L0c up to the 5:24 point.
We watched an animated version up to 4:25 of the following
And we watched the Patrick Stewart Macbeth performance at
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/gperf/episodes/macbeth/watch-the-full-program/1030/
up to the 14:56 point.
If you missed this, read the first three scenes and try to watch these portions of these videos.
We watched three different versions.
We watched the Orson Welles 1948 version at the following site:
http://youtu.be/LzLZsts5L0c up to the 5:24 point.
We watched an animated version up to 4:25 of the following
And we watched the Patrick Stewart Macbeth performance at
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/gperf/episodes/macbeth/watch-the-full-program/1030/
up to the 14:56 point.
If you missed this, read the first three scenes and try to watch these portions of these videos.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
I handed out packets for the Scottish play about Macbeth.
We took volunteers and did samples of three different scenarios that demonstrated some
themes from the play: greed, murder, desire to do evil things, blame.
We started doing some line tossing but we were cut short because we played "Stratford Squares". Some of the information from the game will be on the final, so here are all the questions and answers, including some bluff answers:
Below are questions for Stratford Squares, our version of Hollywood Squares. The possible bluffs written below each answer will give you some ideas on what you might want to say. Your goal is to get the contestant to believe your lie or disbelieve your correct answer. The correct answer is in bold print when possible.
1. The following words were written by Shakespeare and can be found where? Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear to dig the dust enclosed here. Blest be the man that spares these stones, and curst be he that moves my bones.
Correct answer: Shakespeare's tombstone in Stratford's Holy Trinity Church bears this inscription, said to have been written by him
Bluff answers: You might say that it was a famous line from one of his plays. Mention plays Titus Andromeda, Romeo and Juliet, The Tempest, Midsummer Night’s Dream, King Lear, Henry V. Say that you saw the play or that it is your favorite play.
2. What university did William Shakespeare attend and graduate from?
Choose Your Answer: A: Oxford, B: Cambridge, C: Glasgow, D: None
Shakespeare, one of literature's greatest figures, never attended any university.
Bluff answer: say he started at one university and finished at another. If you pick one of the other universities, say that your have always been interested in one of them and you know that they have a library with his name on it.
3) What is Shakespeare's shortest play?
Choose Your Answer: A: The Comedy of Errors, B: A Midsummer Night's Dream, C: Macbeth, D: Timon of Athens
Correct answer: Comedy of Errors with 1787 lines Macbeth is his shortest tragedy.
4) How many of Shakespeare's original manuscripts have survived?
Choose Your Answer: A: One, B: Nine, C: Thirty-Six, D: None
None of Shakespeare's original manuscripts have survived, due partly perhaps to the fact that they were written, many of them hastily, strictly for stage performance.
5. Who dies first, Romeo or Juliet or Paris?
Choose Your Answer: A: Romeo, B: Juliet, C: Paris D: Two of them die at exactly the same time.
Paris dies outside the tomb of Juliet before Romeo goes in to find Juiet.Bluff it any way you want. Maybe you can say that there is no Paris in this play.
6) What was the name of Shakespeare's only son?
Choose Your Answer: A: Hubert, B: Hamnet, C: Humphrey, D: Horatio
Shakespeare's only son, Hamnet, was born approximately two years after his parents married. He died in childhood, at the age of 11, in 1596, and was buried at Stratford. Hamnet had a twin sister named Judith who lived into adulthood. The poet and dramatist William D'Avenant (1606-68) was rumored to be the illegitimate son of Shakespeare, but there is no proof to substantiate this claim.
7. At the end of Romeo and Juliet, the Montagues say they will erect a statue of Juliet. Can such a statue be seen in the city of Verona “where we lay our scene”?
Yes or no.
Possible bluff by saying you have visited Verona and you have either seen the statue or haven’t seen it. You could also say that it had been taken down because too many people had been touching the breast of the statue.
8) How many of Shakespeare's plays were published during his lifetime?
Choose Your Answer: A: Two, B: 15, C: 36, D: 37 E. None
Correct answer: None of Shakespeare's plays were published during his lifetime--he wrote them, apparently, only to be performed. Fortunately, two of his fellow actors, John Heminge and Henry Condell, gathered 36 of Shakespeare's plays and published them in 1623 in a collection that has come to be known as The First Folio. This collection is the source from which all published Shakespearean plays are derived.
9) What was the name of Shakespeare's wife?
Choose Your Answer:
A: Helena,Hayes B: Mary C: Anne,Hathaway D: Rosaline Montressor E. Juliet Lewis
Correct answer: In 1582, at the age of eighteen, William Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway who was seven or eight years older than the young playwright. That was before she wore Prada.
10) What actor first created the roles of Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Richard III?
Choose Your Answer: A: James Burbage, B: Richard Burbage, C: Cuthbert Burbage, D: Edward Alleyn
Richard Burbage, the son of theatrical entrepreneur James Burbage, was one of the most famous actors of his day. He was the first actor to play many of Shakespeare's most famous parts, including Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Richard III. He remained a member of the Chamberlain's Men (later the King's Men) until his death in 1619. Possible bluff: Who the heck cares? Then pick one.
11) Which role is Shakespeare said to have played in the original production of Hamlet?
Choose Your Answer: A: Hamlet, B: Laertes, C: The Gravedigger, D: The Ghost
Shakespeare is said to have played the Ghost in the original production of Hamlet.
12. The Black Plague that struck England during Shakespeare's lifetime around 1603 killed how many people?
300, 3300, 33,000 300,000. 3 million?
Shakespeare lived through the Black Death, an epidemic of bubonic plague that killed over 33,000 people in
London in 1603 and later returned in 1608. The plague was spread by fleas and rats.
13. The story of Pocahontas story is an adaptation of which Shakespeare play?
Taming of the Shrew, Midsummer Nights Dream, The Tempest, Titus Andronicus
Shakespeare’s plays have been adapted into all sorts of different contexts including the Pocahontas story: American Charlotte Barnes, for example, adapted The Tempest in her 1844 play The Forest Princess, which retells the story of Pocahontas and Captain John Smith.
14 What was the date of Shakespeare's birth, exactly?
April 23, 1564
Possibly bluff by keeping the April 23rd, but changing the year. Say that you have always remembered it because it was the same day of the year as your birthday
15. Shakespeare was born in a town called Stratford on Avon, or sometimes called Stratford Upon Avon. What is Avon?
A county? A mountain? A lake? A river?
16 How old was Shakespeare when he got married? 18
17. How old was Shakespeare's wife Anne when they got married? 26 years old.
18. How old was Shakespeare when he became a father?
He was 19 years old.
19. At the age of twenty, after two years of marriage, how many children did Shakespeare have?
Three. At 19 he became a father; at 20 he became the father of twins. They had no more children.
20 Which of the following was not the name of one of Shakespeare's three children? Susanna; William, Junior; Hamnet, Judith
21. Mr. Stanford Williams lives in California and he says that he is a living descendant of William Shakespeare. Could this be true or need it be false?
The answer is false because there are no living descendants today. To bluff :you might say false because no descendants of Shakespeare can receive royalties from his plays if they live outside England.
Or you could bluff by saying true because his family changed their last name because of all the people who would bug them for artifacts of their famous ancestor, even in America.
22 How many plays did Shakespeare write?
He wrote 37.
23 Of Shakespeare’s 37 plays, 14 were comedies, 11 were histories, and 12 were tragedies. True or False?
True. Bluff by saying false, “Most of his plays were tragedies, just think about it;”
or trick by being honest and say true: that most people think his tragedies outnumber his comedies because so many of the tragedies are covered in school.
24. How old was Shakespeare when he died? Answer: 52. He died in 1616.
25. Shakespeare’s father was a respected member of the community of Stratford on Avon,. He was a public official, landowner, and a businessman. His business was making and selling a particular item of clothing worn by both men and women. What was it?
Answer: gloves.
Possible bluffs: shoes, hats, socks, scarves, ear muffs.
26. Was William wealthy or poor when he died?
He was wealthy. Bluff by saying he lost his money when the plague ravaged the population and none went to the theatre for fear of contagion.
27 In the famous line “Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou, Romeo?” what does wherefore mean? why, how, where , for what reason?
Most people think it means ‘where are you,Romeo?’, but it actually means ‘why are you Romeo?’ You might bluff by saying you were in the play in ninth grade ao you had to learn this scene.
28. In the theater during Shakepeare’s time, certain people were known by the name of groundlings. Why?
True answer: Groundlings stood on the ground in front of the stage to watch the play. They paid the lowest ticket price and were known for their drinking and rowdy behavior.
Possible bluff: Groundlings were the people who took care of the grounds and set up everything for the plays. Today we might call them roadies.
29. Without rounding, and in years, how old is Juliet when the play with her name begins?
True answer, she is 13; she will be fourteen in a few weeks, so the answer is 13.Her birthday was July 31st, we can tell from the play.
Bluff: Most people know that she was only fourteen and that people got married young back then.
30. The play “Romeo and Juliet” involves a feud between two families, the Montagues and the Capulets. From which family is Juliet?
True answer: the Capulets.
31. How many sonnets did Shakespeare write, not counting those within plays?
True answer: 154.
Possible Bluff: Say he wrote one for every year of his life: 52.
32. Who was queen of England during most of William’s life?
Was it Queen Mary,II, Queen Anne, Queen Latifa, Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, trick question, King Henry VIII
33. Who was the King in the later years of Shakespeare’s life?
King Henry ViIII, King James, King Edward, King Kong, King Richard III,, King Lear?
You might bluff on this by giving the correct answer but saying that Lebron James is called King James because of this.
34. Romeo and Juliet takes about two hours to perform. How much time transpires i the play? Is it four hours, four days, four weeks, four months or four years?
You might add to your bluff by saying that you were in the play in eighth grade.
35. Which Shakespeare play is so popular that it is probably being performed somewhere on stage at this very moment?
Hamlet is the correct answer. Other possible bluffs are Romeo and Juliet (who hasn’t seen it?) Macbeth , Much Ado About Nothing (there is much ado about this play), King Lear
36. In Shakespeare’ day, a city wall ran around three sides of London. What was on the fourth side?
The River Thames. Other bluffs might be a lake, a moat, a cliff down to the sea, a hill, Buckingham Palace. You might bluff by saying you were there two years ago and that your answer is still on the fourth side of the city.
37. Today we typically eat dinner with a knife,e a fork, and a spoon; in Shakespeare’s day, one of these had only just been invented and was not in common use.
Correct answer is fork. It had been invented in Italy and was not commonly used in England at this time.
Possible bluff: This is a trick question. All three utensils were in common use at this time, but only the King was allowed to use a knife at the dinner table. Say you did a report on it in seventh grade.
38. Were flush toilets in existence in Shakespeare's day?
Yes, but most people used a chamber pot. Bluff by saying that the flush toilet was not invented until years late by John Crapper.
39. Bullbaiting, bearbaiting, and “the horse and ape” were sports involving animal fights on which men would bet. What animal is involved in each of these sports?
Correct answer: Dog.
Bluff: Bears were used in all of these, but they were just different versions of the same game. For example, bullbaiting was just a male bear.
40, If you were to pass through the south gate of the London Bridge in Shakepseare’s day, why wouldn't you want to look up?
You would see several poles sticking up into the air with the good chance of shriveled heads of those people executed for high treason.
Possible bluffs: It was the naughty lady part of town,
People through the contents of their chamber pots out the window.
It was considered unlucky because that is where Anne Boleyn lost her head.
41. Women who were accused of witchcraft were strapped to a ducking stool and plunged into water. How would you know if they were not a witch?
If they were drowned, they were not a witch. If they survived, they were a witch so they would be executed.
42. At the beginning of a play, Romeo is in love with whom?
Rosaline.
Of course the obvious bluff is to say Juliet.
43. The Bard's will gave most of his property to Susanna, his first child, and not to his wife Anne Hathaway. Instead his loyal wife infamously received his "second-best bed". Why did she not get the best bed?
The Bard's second best bed wasn’t so bad, it was his marriage bed; his best bed was for guests.
Bluff by saying that he didn’t give his best bed because she was having an affair with someone named Susanna and she was given the best bed.
44. Even though Romeo and Juliet commit suicide, Shakespeare was morally against it and only had one suicide occur in any of his other 36 plays. True or false?
Suicide occurs an unlucky thirteen times in Shakespeare’s plays. It occurs in Romeo and Juliet where both Romeo and Juliet commit suicide, in Julius Caesar where both Cassius and Brutus die by consensual stabbing, as well as Brutus’ wife Portia, in Othello where Othello stabs himself, in Hamlet where Ophelia is said to have "drowned" in suspicious circumstances, in Macbeth when Lady Macbeth dies, and finally in Antony and Cleopatra where suicide occurs an astounding five times (Mark Antony, Cleopatra, Charmian, Iras and Eros).
We took volunteers and did samples of three different scenarios that demonstrated some
themes from the play: greed, murder, desire to do evil things, blame.
We started doing some line tossing but we were cut short because we played "Stratford Squares". Some of the information from the game will be on the final, so here are all the questions and answers, including some bluff answers:
Below are questions for Stratford Squares, our version of Hollywood Squares. The possible bluffs written below each answer will give you some ideas on what you might want to say. Your goal is to get the contestant to believe your lie or disbelieve your correct answer. The correct answer is in bold print when possible.
1. The following words were written by Shakespeare and can be found where? Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear to dig the dust enclosed here. Blest be the man that spares these stones, and curst be he that moves my bones.
Correct answer: Shakespeare's tombstone in Stratford's Holy Trinity Church bears this inscription, said to have been written by him
Bluff answers: You might say that it was a famous line from one of his plays. Mention plays Titus Andromeda, Romeo and Juliet, The Tempest, Midsummer Night’s Dream, King Lear, Henry V. Say that you saw the play or that it is your favorite play.
2. What university did William Shakespeare attend and graduate from?
Choose Your Answer: A: Oxford, B: Cambridge, C: Glasgow, D: None
Shakespeare, one of literature's greatest figures, never attended any university.
Bluff answer: say he started at one university and finished at another. If you pick one of the other universities, say that your have always been interested in one of them and you know that they have a library with his name on it.
3) What is Shakespeare's shortest play?
Choose Your Answer: A: The Comedy of Errors, B: A Midsummer Night's Dream, C: Macbeth, D: Timon of Athens
Correct answer: Comedy of Errors with 1787 lines Macbeth is his shortest tragedy.
4) How many of Shakespeare's original manuscripts have survived?
Choose Your Answer: A: One, B: Nine, C: Thirty-Six, D: None
None of Shakespeare's original manuscripts have survived, due partly perhaps to the fact that they were written, many of them hastily, strictly for stage performance.
5. Who dies first, Romeo or Juliet or Paris?
Choose Your Answer: A: Romeo, B: Juliet, C: Paris D: Two of them die at exactly the same time.
Paris dies outside the tomb of Juliet before Romeo goes in to find Juiet.Bluff it any way you want. Maybe you can say that there is no Paris in this play.
6) What was the name of Shakespeare's only son?
Choose Your Answer: A: Hubert, B: Hamnet, C: Humphrey, D: Horatio
Shakespeare's only son, Hamnet, was born approximately two years after his parents married. He died in childhood, at the age of 11, in 1596, and was buried at Stratford. Hamnet had a twin sister named Judith who lived into adulthood. The poet and dramatist William D'Avenant (1606-68) was rumored to be the illegitimate son of Shakespeare, but there is no proof to substantiate this claim.
7. At the end of Romeo and Juliet, the Montagues say they will erect a statue of Juliet. Can such a statue be seen in the city of Verona “where we lay our scene”?
Yes or no.
Possible bluff by saying you have visited Verona and you have either seen the statue or haven’t seen it. You could also say that it had been taken down because too many people had been touching the breast of the statue.
8) How many of Shakespeare's plays were published during his lifetime?
Choose Your Answer: A: Two, B: 15, C: 36, D: 37 E. None
Correct answer: None of Shakespeare's plays were published during his lifetime--he wrote them, apparently, only to be performed. Fortunately, two of his fellow actors, John Heminge and Henry Condell, gathered 36 of Shakespeare's plays and published them in 1623 in a collection that has come to be known as The First Folio. This collection is the source from which all published Shakespearean plays are derived.
9) What was the name of Shakespeare's wife?
Choose Your Answer:
A: Helena,Hayes B: Mary C: Anne,Hathaway D: Rosaline Montressor E. Juliet Lewis
Correct answer: In 1582, at the age of eighteen, William Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway who was seven or eight years older than the young playwright. That was before she wore Prada.
10) What actor first created the roles of Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Richard III?
Choose Your Answer: A: James Burbage, B: Richard Burbage, C: Cuthbert Burbage, D: Edward Alleyn
Richard Burbage, the son of theatrical entrepreneur James Burbage, was one of the most famous actors of his day. He was the first actor to play many of Shakespeare's most famous parts, including Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Richard III. He remained a member of the Chamberlain's Men (later the King's Men) until his death in 1619. Possible bluff: Who the heck cares? Then pick one.
11) Which role is Shakespeare said to have played in the original production of Hamlet?
Choose Your Answer: A: Hamlet, B: Laertes, C: The Gravedigger, D: The Ghost
Shakespeare is said to have played the Ghost in the original production of Hamlet.
12. The Black Plague that struck England during Shakespeare's lifetime around 1603 killed how many people?
300, 3300, 33,000 300,000. 3 million?
Shakespeare lived through the Black Death, an epidemic of bubonic plague that killed over 33,000 people in
London in 1603 and later returned in 1608. The plague was spread by fleas and rats.
13. The story of Pocahontas story is an adaptation of which Shakespeare play?
Taming of the Shrew, Midsummer Nights Dream, The Tempest, Titus Andronicus
Shakespeare’s plays have been adapted into all sorts of different contexts including the Pocahontas story: American Charlotte Barnes, for example, adapted The Tempest in her 1844 play The Forest Princess, which retells the story of Pocahontas and Captain John Smith.
14 What was the date of Shakespeare's birth, exactly?
April 23, 1564
Possibly bluff by keeping the April 23rd, but changing the year. Say that you have always remembered it because it was the same day of the year as your birthday
15. Shakespeare was born in a town called Stratford on Avon, or sometimes called Stratford Upon Avon. What is Avon?
A county? A mountain? A lake? A river?
16 How old was Shakespeare when he got married? 18
17. How old was Shakespeare's wife Anne when they got married? 26 years old.
18. How old was Shakespeare when he became a father?
He was 19 years old.
19. At the age of twenty, after two years of marriage, how many children did Shakespeare have?
Three. At 19 he became a father; at 20 he became the father of twins. They had no more children.
20 Which of the following was not the name of one of Shakespeare's three children? Susanna; William, Junior; Hamnet, Judith
21. Mr. Stanford Williams lives in California and he says that he is a living descendant of William Shakespeare. Could this be true or need it be false?
The answer is false because there are no living descendants today. To bluff :you might say false because no descendants of Shakespeare can receive royalties from his plays if they live outside England.
Or you could bluff by saying true because his family changed their last name because of all the people who would bug them for artifacts of their famous ancestor, even in America.
22 How many plays did Shakespeare write?
He wrote 37.
23 Of Shakespeare’s 37 plays, 14 were comedies, 11 were histories, and 12 were tragedies. True or False?
True. Bluff by saying false, “Most of his plays were tragedies, just think about it;”
or trick by being honest and say true: that most people think his tragedies outnumber his comedies because so many of the tragedies are covered in school.
24. How old was Shakespeare when he died? Answer: 52. He died in 1616.
25. Shakespeare’s father was a respected member of the community of Stratford on Avon,. He was a public official, landowner, and a businessman. His business was making and selling a particular item of clothing worn by both men and women. What was it?
Answer: gloves.
Possible bluffs: shoes, hats, socks, scarves, ear muffs.
26. Was William wealthy or poor when he died?
He was wealthy. Bluff by saying he lost his money when the plague ravaged the population and none went to the theatre for fear of contagion.
27 In the famous line “Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou, Romeo?” what does wherefore mean? why, how, where , for what reason?
Most people think it means ‘where are you,Romeo?’, but it actually means ‘why are you Romeo?’ You might bluff by saying you were in the play in ninth grade ao you had to learn this scene.
28. In the theater during Shakepeare’s time, certain people were known by the name of groundlings. Why?
True answer: Groundlings stood on the ground in front of the stage to watch the play. They paid the lowest ticket price and were known for their drinking and rowdy behavior.
Possible bluff: Groundlings were the people who took care of the grounds and set up everything for the plays. Today we might call them roadies.
29. Without rounding, and in years, how old is Juliet when the play with her name begins?
True answer, she is 13; she will be fourteen in a few weeks, so the answer is 13.Her birthday was July 31st, we can tell from the play.
Bluff: Most people know that she was only fourteen and that people got married young back then.
30. The play “Romeo and Juliet” involves a feud between two families, the Montagues and the Capulets. From which family is Juliet?
True answer: the Capulets.
31. How many sonnets did Shakespeare write, not counting those within plays?
True answer: 154.
Possible Bluff: Say he wrote one for every year of his life: 52.
32. Who was queen of England during most of William’s life?
Was it Queen Mary,II, Queen Anne, Queen Latifa, Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, trick question, King Henry VIII
33. Who was the King in the later years of Shakespeare’s life?
King Henry ViIII, King James, King Edward, King Kong, King Richard III,, King Lear?
You might bluff on this by giving the correct answer but saying that Lebron James is called King James because of this.
34. Romeo and Juliet takes about two hours to perform. How much time transpires i the play? Is it four hours, four days, four weeks, four months or four years?
You might add to your bluff by saying that you were in the play in eighth grade.
35. Which Shakespeare play is so popular that it is probably being performed somewhere on stage at this very moment?
Hamlet is the correct answer. Other possible bluffs are Romeo and Juliet (who hasn’t seen it?) Macbeth , Much Ado About Nothing (there is much ado about this play), King Lear
36. In Shakespeare’ day, a city wall ran around three sides of London. What was on the fourth side?
The River Thames. Other bluffs might be a lake, a moat, a cliff down to the sea, a hill, Buckingham Palace. You might bluff by saying you were there two years ago and that your answer is still on the fourth side of the city.
37. Today we typically eat dinner with a knife,e a fork, and a spoon; in Shakespeare’s day, one of these had only just been invented and was not in common use.
Correct answer is fork. It had been invented in Italy and was not commonly used in England at this time.
Possible bluff: This is a trick question. All three utensils were in common use at this time, but only the King was allowed to use a knife at the dinner table. Say you did a report on it in seventh grade.
38. Were flush toilets in existence in Shakespeare's day?
Yes, but most people used a chamber pot. Bluff by saying that the flush toilet was not invented until years late by John Crapper.
39. Bullbaiting, bearbaiting, and “the horse and ape” were sports involving animal fights on which men would bet. What animal is involved in each of these sports?
Correct answer: Dog.
Bluff: Bears were used in all of these, but they were just different versions of the same game. For example, bullbaiting was just a male bear.
40, If you were to pass through the south gate of the London Bridge in Shakepseare’s day, why wouldn't you want to look up?
You would see several poles sticking up into the air with the good chance of shriveled heads of those people executed for high treason.
Possible bluffs: It was the naughty lady part of town,
People through the contents of their chamber pots out the window.
It was considered unlucky because that is where Anne Boleyn lost her head.
41. Women who were accused of witchcraft were strapped to a ducking stool and plunged into water. How would you know if they were not a witch?
If they were drowned, they were not a witch. If they survived, they were a witch so they would be executed.
42. At the beginning of a play, Romeo is in love with whom?
Rosaline.
Of course the obvious bluff is to say Juliet.
43. The Bard's will gave most of his property to Susanna, his first child, and not to his wife Anne Hathaway. Instead his loyal wife infamously received his "second-best bed". Why did she not get the best bed?
The Bard's second best bed wasn’t so bad, it was his marriage bed; his best bed was for guests.
Bluff by saying that he didn’t give his best bed because she was having an affair with someone named Susanna and she was given the best bed.
44. Even though Romeo and Juliet commit suicide, Shakespeare was morally against it and only had one suicide occur in any of his other 36 plays. True or false?
Suicide occurs an unlucky thirteen times in Shakespeare’s plays. It occurs in Romeo and Juliet where both Romeo and Juliet commit suicide, in Julius Caesar where both Cassius and Brutus die by consensual stabbing, as well as Brutus’ wife Portia, in Othello where Othello stabs himself, in Hamlet where Ophelia is said to have "drowned" in suspicious circumstances, in Macbeth when Lady Macbeth dies, and finally in Antony and Cleopatra where suicide occurs an astounding five times (Mark Antony, Cleopatra, Charmian, Iras and Eros).
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