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This video is sponsored by Incogni
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"Life's but a walking shadow,
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"a poor player.
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"That struts and frets his hour
upon the stage."
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"And then is heard no more."
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"It is a tale, told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury."
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"Signifying nothing."
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Despite being arguably
the most famous writer of all time,
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William Shakespeare is still a widely
misunderstood figure.
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Today, Shakespeare is often viewed
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as the property of the cultural elite
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and his work is often approached
out of obligation rather than desire.
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And yet Shakespeare's plays
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were written first and foremost
to entertain audiences of all kinds,
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they are full of humour,
slapstick, and clever word play
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- and have a deep simpathy
for ordinary people
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and the heartache, beauty,
joy, and pain of human life.
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They are also hugely popular
all over the world
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and have been translated
into more than 100 languages.
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Shakespeare has had more impact
on the English language and culture
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than any other writer.
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And it all started with one book,
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assembled by two
of his friends and colleagues,
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and published in 1623,
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seven years after Shakespeare's death.
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Without this book, we may have lost
so much of his work
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- as 18 out of the 36 plays
included in the first folio
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had never been published before,
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including Julia Caesar,
The Tempest, and Macbeth.
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If it were not for this book,
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Shakespeare might be considered
just another Elizabethan writer.
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Many of his plays
are about Kings or nobility,
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but Shakespeare always wrote
about the human being beneath the crown.
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Likewise, he would not want to be seen
as a one-of-a-kind "genius",
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but instead he would want us
to try and understand him as a man,
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a person with feelings, flaws
and contradictions.
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Just as his character,
Richard II wishes, when he says:
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"throw away respect, tradition,
form and ceremonious duty."
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"For you have but mistook me
all this while."
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"I live with bread like you,
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"feel want,
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"taste grief, need friends,
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"subjected.
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"How can you say to me I am a King."
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"All the world's a stage,
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"And all the men and women merely players;
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"They have their exits
and their entrances;
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"and one man in his time
plays many parts."
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William Shakespeare was born
in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon,
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then a small unexceptional town.
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William went to a grammar school
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where he learned Classics
like Ovid and Plutarch,
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whose work he would later
draw upon in his plays.
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Unlike other dramatists of his time,
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Shakespeare did not attend University.
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In 1582 William married
a farmer's daughter called Anne Hathaway.
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He was only 18 on his wedding day
while Anne was 26
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- she was also pregnant
with their first child.
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The couple had three children together,
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a daughter called Susanna,
and then twins Judith and Hamnet.
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His family would remain in Stratford
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while he moved to London
to pursue his dreams.
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And by 1592 Shakespeare was
a well-known actor on the London stage.
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Shakespeare co-founded his Theatre Company
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"The Lord Chamberlain's men"
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which would later be called
"The King's Men", in 1594,
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and began writing plays
for them to perform.
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At first he wrote
history plays and comedies.
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The London audience
flocked to the history plays
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of which there are ten
that cover English history
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from the 12th to the 16th century.
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In the same way Shakespeare's comedies
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have some dark themes
and tragic situations,
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and the tragedies have some comic moments,
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the Shakespeare history plays
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are not just about history
with a capital H.
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"Is this a dagger which I see before me?"
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They are first and foremost human dramas.
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In fact they are the source
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of some of Shakespeare's
most memorable characters,
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including the flamboyant, camp,
verbose, and vain Richard II.
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"With mine own tears I wash away my balm."
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"With mine own hands,
I give away my crown.
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"With mine own tongue
deny my sacred state."
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The fiery and impetuous
young Knight Hotspur
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"Yea, on his part I'll empty
all these veins,
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"and shed my dear blood
drop by drop on the dust."
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"But I will lift the downtrodden Mortimer
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"as high in the air
as this unthankful king."
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or the conniving
machiavellian Richard III,
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a power hungry character
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whose hunchbacked form symbolised
his crooked morality:
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"Now is the winter of our discontent
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"made glorious summer
by this son of York."
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The histories are as much about people,
their lives, relationships, and feelings,
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than they are about the story of a nation.
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Shakespeare was primarily a storyteller
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and like popular entertainment today,
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the plays sometimes
deviate from historical facts
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for the purpose of dramatic effect.
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Richard III was not the villain
Shakespeare made him out to be,
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but it suited Tudor propaganda
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- as did Shakespeare's version
of "The War of the Roses",
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and in Richard II he has the King
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the same age
as his wife Isabella of Valois,
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whereas the real Richard II was 29
when he married the 7-year-old Isabella.
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After the early histories and comedies,
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Shakespeare started
to move towards tragedies.
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The period follows the death
of Shakespeare's 11-year-old son Hamnet,
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(the twin of Judith) who died in 1596,
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which must have been
on Shakespeare's mind
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when writing the late comedy
"Twelfth Night",
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a play about Viola and Sebastian,
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twins who were separated
during a wild storm
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but are eventually reunited.
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We can only imagine
how Shakespeare desperately wished
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his own twins could also be reunited.
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Then five years later in 1601,
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his beloved father John Shakespeare
also passed away,
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and around this time we get
one of his greatest tragedies, Hamlet,
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about a son grieving for his father.
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"I am thy father's spirit,
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"doomed for a certain term
to walk the night."
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It begins with Hamlet's declaration
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that he is experiencing a grief
that he cannot express.
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The entire play sees Hamlet
trying to verbalise
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what is going on inside his head,
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or,as he says,
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"he must unpack his heart with words".
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As a character, Hamlet is seen
as a a turning point
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towards a new level of psychological
and emotional realism in theatre,
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and its themes such as
indecision and inaction,
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the corrupting influence of power,
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and the complexities of the human psyche,
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continue to resonate
with modern audiences.
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This work was a revelation,
and after Hamlet,
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Shakespeare entered
a great middle period of his career,
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in which he wrote some of his
most monumental and powerful tragic plays,
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including King Lear and Othello.
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Othello has been described
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as "the most painfully exciting
and most terrible of these tragedies".
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It has an explosive and melodramatic plot,
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as well as a particularly
grandiose and musical poetry.
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The story tells of a racial outsider
turned military hero,
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who is tricked by the evil Iago,
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and ends up being eaten alive
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by what is referred to as
"the green-eyed monster of jealousy",
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and killing his wife Desdemona.
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The tragic Othello kills himself,
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in order to take responsibility
for killing Desdemona,
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and in his dying soliloquy recognizes
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that it is his pursuit of love
that has led to his undoing.
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"Then must you speak of one
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"that loved not wisely but too well,
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"Of one not easily jealous
but, being wrought,
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"perplexed i the extreme..."
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At the start of the Elizabethan period,
theatres were not popular,
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and actors were seen
as little more than beggars
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and writers earned even less than actors.
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But by the end of it,
theatre was thriving,
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as was Shakespeare.
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It became mass market entertainment:
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a fast-moving money-making business,
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and Shakespeare was
one of its biggest successes,
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earning more money from his work
than virtually all of his contemporaries.
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Theatre was popular with all classes.
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The "Lord's rooms" were the best seats,
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and despite seeing the back
of the actor's heads,
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they were able to hear
every word of the play
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above the noise of the audience.
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The galleries had wooden seats
but were covered in case it rained.
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The poor known as the "Groundlings",
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paid a penny to stand very close
to the action on stage.
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During the height of summer,
the Groundlings were also referred to
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as "the stinkards" for obvious reasons.
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They ate, drank, cheered and booed
during the performances,
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and demanded the play
had to entertain them
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- and Shakespeare did entertain them,
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using themes that had broad appeal
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- love, death, ambition, power, and fate.
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Mixing clever word play
and intellectual jokes
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with crude innuendos,
low humour and slapstick.
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"This is old Ninny's tomb?"
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Contrary to what many people think,
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Shakespeare had a very commercial side.
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He was a theatreowning businessman,
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and he wrote to entertain audiences
and to earn money.
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As he suggested in the epilogue
of his late play The Tempest,
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he wanted to give audiences a good time
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he wanted to please people.
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"Gentle breath of yours
my sails must fill
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"or else my project fails,
which was to please."
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In this fast-paced marketplace,
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the trend was not for writing
new plays from scratch,
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instead the norm was for playwrights
to adapt stories
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that were already well known.
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Before Shakespeare wrote his plays,
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there already existed a play
identical to Hamlet,
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and one that was
actually called "King Leir",
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both of which were written
by Thomas Kidd.
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The "Winters Tale" takes its plot
from a popular book at the time Pandosto,
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while Romeo and Juliet
was already well known in England
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from Arthur Brook's poem,
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which tells the exact same story.
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But it is what Shakespeare
does with his sources
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that makes him Shakespeare.
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For example, in the earlier version
of the Romeo and Juliet story,
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whenJuliet kisses Romeo after he has died,
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his mouth is described
as being "cold as stone",
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whereas in Shakespeare's play,
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Juliet kisses the mouth of Romeo and says:
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"Thy lips are warm."
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This ingenious, but tiny change,
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emphasises that Romeo has just died
seconds before Juliet wakes up,
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making the kiss both more tragic,
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as well as more intimate and sensual,
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as Juliet feels with her lips
Romeo's dwindling body heat.
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Many of Shakespeare's plays
have sources from classical history
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— like Julius Caesar, Anthony and Cleopatra,
and Coriolanus,
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"I come to bury Caesar,
not to praise him" —
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while another major source for Shakespeare
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was a volume of English History
called "Holinshead's Chronicles".
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Whereas now we might feel
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that we don't want
the plot "spoiled" for us,
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most of Shakespeare's audiences knew
how the story would end up.
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In the case of Romeo and Juliet,
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we are told in the prologue
exactly what will happen:
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"A pair of star-cross'd lovers
take their life."
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Shakespeare asks you, as the audience,
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to submerge yourselves
in the "imagined world" fully,
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as in the Winter's Tale
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before a statue of Leontes'
dead wife Hermione comes to life,
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Shakespeare says to his audiences:
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"It is required you do awake your faith".
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In other words, suspend your disbelief.
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The first folio organised
Shakespeare's plays into three categories:
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Comedies, Histories and Tragedies.
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But within those categories
there is always a cross fertilisation
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of seriousness and triviality,
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darkness and light.
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It is the breadth of feelings
expressed in Shakespeare's plays
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that is so astonishing,
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and in his works we can always see
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his willingness to embrace
the contradictory aspects of life.
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In some of Shakespeare's greatest works
such as King Lear
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he creates scenes
of unbelievable tenderness and love
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as well as the darkest depths
of despair and rage.
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Or in Twelfth Night,
when a very funny prank
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which has the audience in stitches
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quickly turns
to intense psychological manipulation,
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ending with a dark promise from Malvolio:
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"I'l be revenged..."
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"on the whole pack of you."
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In Titus Andronicus,
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Shakespeare expertly weaves
gore and black humour,
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as when the main character Titus
serves Tamora,
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her own dead sons baked into a pie!
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It is so gory and violent,
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that it almost becomes perversely comic
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through the use of insane melodrama.
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"Why, there they are,
both baked in this pie."
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"Whereof their mother daintily hath fed,
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"Eating the flesh
that she herself hath bred."
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"'tis true, 'tis true!
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"Witness my knife's sharp point."
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Indeed, the bounds
of the comic and tragic genre
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were being tested in Elizabethan theatre
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and Shakespeare was at the forefront
of this theatrical revolution.
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Pioneering, particularly
in his later plays,
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the genre of "tragi-comedy",
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Shakespeare's tragi- comic way
of looking at the world,
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is best demonstrated in the Winter's Tale,
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a play where
the good-hearted man Antigonus,
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is mauled to death by a bear,
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a fundamentally tragic event,
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which becomes simultaneously comic
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when a man in a bear costume
chases Antigonus across the stage.
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It is also an opportunity for Shakespeare
to give us a rare stage Direction: '
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Exit pursued by a bear". This tragi-comic death is followed immediately by
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the discovery of a newborn child. It is a classic Shakespearean moment, in which Despair and hope rub
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shoulders, and tragedy switches suddenly into the hopefulness of comedy. In a noisy open air theatre,
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with so many distractions, Shakespeare was a master at keeping the audience engaged, and his plays show
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us the truth again and again - that life can be both silly and sorrowful, tragic and comic at the same time.
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On New Year's Eve in 1607, Shakespeare's brother Edmund died, followed by Shakespeare's
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nephew only a few months later. Both deaths occurred during a significant outbreak of
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the plague in London, when Shakespeare returned to Stratford-upon-Avon to write. Shakespeare's daughter
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Susanna, married the same year, and was soon pregnant with his first grandchild. This tumultuous
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year with its sad deaths and happy announcements, precipitated a surprising change in Shakespeare's
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career. It was around this time he turned to Magic
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His final four works: Cymbeline, The Winter's Tale, Pericles, and the Tempest, all drew on Magic.
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They are sentimental works with characters looking for a way to return home, and be reunited
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with their loved ones. In much the same way Shakespeare had, when he returned to Stratford-upon-Avon.
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Shakespeare died in 1616, aged 52. Despite the seeming suddenness of the playwright's death,
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his later plays - written years earlier - appear to be the work of a writer oddly aware of
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the imminence of his own passing. In his final solo authored play, "The Tempest", the protagonist
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Prospero, here played by a woman, is aware that he is approaching the end of his life, and plans to return home to die.
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And in "The Winter's Tale:, a world weary Camillo also makes plans to go home to die:
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And Shakespeare's bones WERE laid "there" - in his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon.
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