How Shakespeare through the Centuries Still Lives On
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How Shakespeare through the Centuries Still Lives On
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Contents
- 1 How Shakespeare through the Centuries Still Lives On
- 2 Abstract
- 3 Introduction
- 4 Section 1: Background
- 5 Section 2: Deliverable
- 6 Conclusion
- 7 References
- 8 External Links
- 9 Image Gallery
Abstract
The paragraph should give a three to five sentence abstract about your entire London HUA experience including 1) a summary of the aims of your project, 2) your prior experience with humanities and arts courses and disciplines, and 3) your major takeaways from the experience. This can and should be very similar to the paragraph you use to summarize this milestone on your Profile Page. It should contain your main Objective, so be sure to clearly state a one-sentence statement that summarizes your main objective for this milestone such as "a comparison of the text of Medieval English choral music to that of the Baroque" or it may be a question such as "to what extent did religion influence Christopher Wren's sense of design?"
Introduction
This project is about the timeless message of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. The story of Romeo and Juliet has been told around the world for hundreds of years. It is a beautiful story about two people who because of human prejudice and spite, are domed to never be together. Because this play has been timeless in its message of love and the fall of human folly, there have been many different styles and storytelling techniques for this play. London England is the home of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and many performances have been put on in London and all over the world including one recently done at the Globe Theater. A review of it can be read here.
Research of two interpretations of Romeo and Juliet can benefit with finding that Shakespeare theme and message through the ages. The research will look at the performance details, style, costumes, mood, theme and overall message that the writers & directors wanted to send through the story. Two London plays which appear very different in style and technique can be compared for an in depth research into the message of Romeo and Juliet that can be found. One interpretation of Romeo and Juliet was performed in 1867 as an opera at the Covent Gardens. Another interpretation is a 1950's style twist performance at the Garrick Theatre in 2016.
Section 1: Background
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet Story & Inspiration
Story
The plot of the play of Romeo and Juliet is about two star crossed lovers who are forbidden to be together by their families quarrel. The two families, the Capulets which is Juliet's family and the Montagues which is Romeo's family, have been quarreling for years.[1] They meet at a masquerade ball which is put on by the Capulets and it is love at first sight. They eventually decided to secretly marry and plan to run away. Sadly though Romeo ends up killing Tybalt whom is Juliet's cousin and is sent to exile. Juliet is then forced by her family to marry Paris. She decides to fake her death to escape the arranged marriage and run away with Romeo. Sadly Romeo never receives word that Juliet's death is fake and then goes to her side and poisons himself. When Juliet awakes and see's her Romeo dead she then ends her life for real. In the end, both families do reconcile but sadly at the cost of Romeo and Juliet's lives.
Inspiration
William Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet around the 1590's. Researches to this day still don't know exactly what inspired the play. Possible things that could have inspired the writing of the play are the time period, real people, and a poem.
In Elizabethan time, England was growing in arts and culture however it was still suffering from religious persecution of the Catholics.[2] When Henry VIII became the head of the English church, Catholics were then treated to either convert or die. When Mary I succeed her father after her brother Edward VI, she didn't persecute Catholics but persecuted Protestants. Then when Mary died and Elizabeth I reigned, she brought back the Protestant church and executed Catholics. It is recorded in Shakespeare history that Shakespeare's father was catholic. Now no real proof exists for Shakespeare's religion but it is a thought that he did base Romeo and Juliet on this time period event especially with the fight going on with Catholics and Protestants. Think of the names Romeo (Rome, where the Catholic church is based) and Juliet (Anglican English church of England).
Another possible inspiration is a real couple. Henry Wriothesley the 3rd Earl of Southampton was a close friend to Shakespeare at the time and was a courtier to Queen Elizabeth I. [3] His mother was Mary Browne whose father was the 1st Viscount Montagu (does this remind you of Montagues). Henry fell in love with a woman named Elizabeth Vernon who was one of Queen Elizabeth I's ladies-in-waiting. Ladies-in-waiting were no allowed to marry and an alliance between Henry and Elizabeth based on their families and roles were not favored by the queen. Henry was the ward of William Cecil and he arranged a marriage already for Henry which he refused. When Cecil died in 1598 Henry and Elizabeth were then married. This did not make the queen happy and she put them both in jail. They were eventually released and their love story ended happily with children and a natural death.
The poem "The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet" written by Arthur Brooke in 1562 is consider as another possible source for the story of Romeo and Juliet. [4]The story plot based in Verone is close to the same as Shakespeare's play. The words that Romeus speaks in the poem compared to the play is different but the poem follows the same storyline and events from Shakespeare's play.
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet at the Covent Gardens (1867)
The opera "Romeo and Juliette" by Charles Gounod was performed at the Covent Garden's on July 11 1867. [5] Adelina Patti played Juliet and Signor Mario played Romeo. The opera was a newly composed by Charles Gounod with words by J.Barbier & M.Carré and received many fantastic reviews at the time. One praising review was published in the Watson's Journal in London at the time stating that "It is impossible to speak too highly of the manner at which Roméo e Giulietta is placed upon the stage at Covent Garden Theatre". [6] This opera was a new rendition of Romeo and Juliet in 1867.
Performance Summary
The opera is composed in five acts and performed in french. The first act starts at the Capulet's Place at a Masquerade ball. Romeo sneaks into the ball with his friends and meets Juliet and falls for her at first sight. The second act is the balcony scene when Romeo meets Juliet and they sing their lines from Shakespeare "Juliet, Romeo, why art thou Romeo. Romeo, Is it true? Ah! then call me but "love".". The Third Act starts in the friar's cell when Romeo and Juliet secretly marry and continues with Romeo's page going to the Capulets house and draws one of their servants to combat. The combat grows by adding Romeo, Tybalt and others eventually Romeo kills Tybalt. The act ends when Romeo is then banished by the Duke. Act four is in Juliet's bedroom where Romeo visits her for the night then leaves before her father and the friar come to tell her she will marry Paris. The friar after Juliet's father leaves gives Juliet a potion to take to fake her death. She takes the potion and the friar leaves. The fifth and final act is in the Capulets tomb where Juliet is buried. Romeo enters and believing Juliet is dead consumes poison. Before the poison kills Romeo, Juliet awakes and finds her Romeo dying from the poison. They speak heartfelt words and while Romeo dies Juliet stabs herself with Romeo's dagger. Ending the opera with them both dead. [7]
Dramatic Elements
The opera opened in the the late 1800's in Paris France. The words are sung in french and the style of the opera & costumes is 18th century french aristocrat. The set was a late 18th century indoor style. Gounod did the same approach with Romeo & Juliet as he did with another one of his famous operas Faust and toned down the supporting characters in the play. The supporting characters are as is said only supporting. Juliet's nurse for example her character is taken down to the point where she is almost non existent. This is Gounod's way of emphasizing the main characters of the opera. Romeo and Juliet are either or both in every scene of the opera with entire scenes to themselves mutable times.
The music sets the theme for the opera in every act. The first act starts in a triumphant Forte with goes then to an Andante with a chorus. This is the ball scene so then the music goes back to a happy upbeat sound. The second act is performed soft and Dolce. Two scenes are in the third act and the first is Dolce music for Romeo and Juliet's music which grows to a triumphant Forte with trumpets ending the scene. The second scene is more tense and speeds up and grows louder with the chorus. This scene is the fighting scene. The forth act has a beautiful parting with Romeo and Juliet together for the first time since their marriage before romeo leaves for banishment. Then the scene goes to Juliet with her father and the Friar where the music becomes the feelings of Juliet with desperation and homelessness. The Friar with a deep bass voice gives hope to Juliet though and the scene ends slow with Juliet taking the poison. The fifth act starts with a sad and slow trumpets when Romeo finds his Juliet "dead". The scene is very dramatic and shows the passion that both Romeo and Juliet have for each other. The opera ends with sad triumphant horns emphasizing the end of timeless classic love story. [8]
style? mood? theme? costumes?
Overall Review
An opera is a style of theater performance that makes the performance of a story more dramatic and heartfelt. By drawing out all of the words in song, the viewer is more captivated and emotional about the story and characters. Gounod by making Romeo & Juliet an opera created a way of telling the story where the audience could become more emotional to the pain and loss of love. He also showed this by ending the scene not when the Montagues and Capulets reunite but when both Romeo & Juliet die. The message that Gounod wants to send through this opera is that the loss of love is real and painful.
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet at the Garrick Theatre (2016)
For the 2016 year at the Garrick Theatre in London, a premiere of Romeo and Juliet was performed with directors Kenneth Branagh and Rob Ashford. Rob Ashford was also the choreographer in this production. The performance got mixed reviews one from The Guardian theatre critic Micheal Billington saying "The whole thing is done with a speed and vigour that ensures we are never bored;.." [9] , another from The Independent arts and features writer Holly Williams saying "The pair power through with appropriately teenage high drama, but the show never plumbs the full depths of tragedy." [10]
Performance Summary
Richard Madden and Lily James played the star roles. The performance follows the same script of the original Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet but with added 1950's sayings and sounds. Like Juliet sings a jazz song while then seeing her Romeo for the first time. Mercutio is not a young man but a sarcastic and nicely dressed older guy,
(This performance summary is not done because I am waiting on the script to come.)
Dramatic Elements
The set and period the play is done in is 1950's Italy Verona. The men wear dark suits and the women wear petticoats.The scene for the mascarade ball is a piazza with white columns. Mercutio played by Derek Jacobi according to many reviews was a excellent character that that people liked. The mood throughout the play switches between ominous then cheerful. [11] The music is a jazz 1950's style. The play doesn't show great passion within the Romeo and Juliet scenes. More of an initial attraction then a growth to love from the balcony scene. The theme is romantic.
Overall Review
(obviously this is not done based on lack of script)
The message that this performance gives is that the story is timeless. With a 1950's set and time period, the story can still be told.
Section 2: Deliverable
(this is not started since I don't have all of my research in for this milestone)
The overall comparison of both plays.
In this section, provide your contribution, creative element, assessment, or observation with regard to your background research. This could be a new derivative work based on previous research, or some parallel to other events. In this section, describe the relationship between your background review and your deliverable; make the connection between the two clear.
The Similarities
Performance
performance where? did they have same characters?
Dramatic Elements
similarities in style? mood? theme? costumes?
The Differences
Performance
performance where? did they not have same characters?
Dramatic Elements
differences in style? mood? theme? costumes?
Conclusion
same message in both performances even though they are done differently in different time periods.
In this section, provide a summary or recap of your work, as well as potential areas of further inquiry (for yourself, future students, or other researchers).
References
1. Billington, M. (2016, May 26). Romeo and Juliet review – Branagh gives tragedy a touch of la dolce vita. Retrieved May 10, 2017, from https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2016/may/26/romeo-and-juliet-review-branagh-lily-james-richard-madden-garrick-theatre
2.
3. Shakespeare, W. (n.d.). Romeo and Juliet Synopsis. Retrieved May 11, 2017, from https://www.playshakespeare.com/romeo-and-juliet/synopsis
4. Schajer, D. B. (1970, January 01). Shakespeare Solved. Retrieved May 11, 2017, from http://shakespearesolved.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/the-real-romeo-and-juliet.html
5. Brooke, Arthur. BROOKE'S 'ROMEUS AND JULIET' BEING THE ORIGINAL OF SHAKESPEARE'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET' NEWLY EDITED BY J. J. MUNRO. Ed. J.J. Munro. New York: Duffield and Company; London: Chatto & Windus, 1908.
6. Gounod's "Romeo and Juliet" (1867). The American Art Journal (1866-1867), 7(5), 68-69. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.wpi.edu/stable/25307047
7. Wyndham, Henry Saxe. (1906). The annals of Covent Garden Theatre from 1732 to 1897. London : Chatto & Windus
8. Barbier, J., Carré, M., Gounod, C., Shakespeare, W., Sapio, R., Pollack, O., & Moody-Manners Opera Company. (1912). Romeo & Juliet: Opera in five acts. Hull: White & Farrell.
9.
External Links
If appropriate, add an external links section
Image Gallery
If appropriate, add an image gallery
- ↑ Shakespeare, W. (n.d.). Romeo and Juliet Synopsis. Retrieved May 11, 2017, from https://www.playshakespeare.com/romeo-and-juliet/synopsis
- ↑ Romeo and Juliet Historical Context. (2009, December 05). Retrieved May 12, 2017, from https://shakespearestudy.wordpress.com/plays/romeo-and-juliet-historical-context/
- ↑ Schajer, D. B. (1970, January 01). Shakespeare Solved. Retrieved May 11, 2017, from http://shakespearesolved.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/the-real-romeo-and-juliet.html
- ↑ Brooke, Arthur. BROOKE'S 'ROMEUS AND JULIET' BEING THE ORIGINAL OF SHAKESPEARE'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET' NEWLY EDITED BY J. J. MUNRO. Ed. J.J. Munro. New York: Duffield and Company; London: Chatto & Windus, 1908.
- ↑ Wyndham, Henry Saxe. (1906). The annals of Covent Garden Theatre from 1732 to 1897. London : Chatto & Windus
- ↑ Gounod's Romeo and Juliet. (1867). Watson's Art Journal, 7(16), 244-246. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.wpi.edu/stable/20647340
- ↑ Barbier, J., Carré, M., Gounod, C., Shakespeare, W., Sapio, R., Pollack, O., & Moody-Manners Opera Company. (1912). Romeo & Juliet: Opera in five acts. Hull: White & Farrell.
- ↑ Gounod, C., Barbier, J., Carré, M., Baker, T., Henderson, W. J., & Shakespeare, W. (1925). Romeo and Juliet: Opera in five acts. New York: G. Schirmer.
- ↑ Billington, M. (2016, May 26). Romeo and Juliet review – Branagh gives tragedy a touch of la dolce vita. Retrieved May 12, 2017, from https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2016/may/26/romeo-and-juliet-review-branagh-lily-james-richard-madden-garrick-theatre
- ↑ Williams, H. (2016, May 25). Romeo and Juliet, The Garrick Theatre, London: Teenage high drama, but Kenneth Branagh's show never plumbs the full depths of tragedy. Retrieved May 12, 2017, from http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/reviews/romeo-and-juliet-the-garrick-theatre-london-teenage-high-drama-but-kenneth-branagh-s-show-never-a7049321.html
- ↑ Cavendish, D. (2016, May 25). Romeo and Juliet, Garrick, review: 'Lily James's Juliet saves the night' Retrieved May 12, 2017, from http://www.telegraph.co.uk/theatre/what-to-see/romeo-and-juliet-garrick-review-richard-madden-is-a-maddeningly/