and Marist College Club of Theatre Arts assembled a wonderful cast of student actors to produce William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The cast opened the show on Thursday, October 27th, at the Nelly Goletti Theatre. The play directed by Jim Steinmeyer was a success because of its strong cast, visually pleasing costumes, and interesting set. A Midsummer Night’s Dream contains three main plots: four young lovers going into the woods, a group of actors rehearsing for a show, and the mishaps…
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A Midsummer Night's Dream Love, what if everyone had the same feelings. Would it be the same? A Midsummer Night's Dream is a play by William Shakespeare. Shakespeare had a family that consisted of 3 kids and a wife, so he lived a rather normal life. True love is rough. Sometimes when you are in love you will do some crazy things. Lysander and Hermia start out in love but cant do anything about it because Egeus, Hermia’s dad won't allow it. Since the two aren't allowed to marry they make a plan.…
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resembles life, therefore, the atmosphere that a set puts out to the audience should be one that a room in real life would present. The set design helps set the tone & style, time & period, and central image. I chose to do my scenic design on A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The time period and location for my design is around the Archaic period (c. 750–c. 500 bc) through the Hellenistic period (323–30 bc) in Athens, Greece. The time period in my scenic design is expressed by the ancient Greek architecture of…
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once they find real love it will seem pure. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, a romantic comedy from the Elizabethan era, William Shakespeare uses the motif of appearance and reality to develop the idea that one may base love solely on physical attraction and only attractive people can fall in love, when in reality true love relies on what’s on the inside and anyone can fall in love. Most humans need more than just something pretty to look at. In A Midsummer…
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It is human nature to trust our senses when coming to a conclusion, our senses have kept us alive for hundreds of thousands of years. However in William Shakespeare Renaissance era romantic comedy, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Shakespeare uses the motifs of magic and dreams to develop the theme of the differences of appearance and reality. Shakespeare uses this uncertainty to reveal how dangerous but humorous mistaken reality can be. This fantastical story uses magic to distort are views and suspend…
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Does true love exist and is it possible to find that one special person just by seeing them once? In a Midsummer Night’s dream women were married off by their father because it was thought to be the best way to find the right man, especially since women were married so young. To this day teenagers are still believed to be too young to know if they found the right person to spend the rest of their life with. Also the meaning of love is not know, the true meaning is personal no two people think of…
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they are real or not. Regardless of what those people say, William Shakespeare implies that supernatural beings on earth can interact with people surrounding them. The topic of the supernatural comes up quite often in his play “A Midsummer’s Night Dream”. The play tells of two Athenian lovers who traverse to the woods and encounter fairies and magic. The topic of the supernatural in the play is spawned from fairy kingdoms rulers, Titania and Oberon. They both display acts of magic throughout the play…
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It could be argued, that from all Shakespeare’s plays, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is most indebted to a mythic source. As a comedy, myth is rather decoratively used than seriously but still the mythical sources shouldn’t be ignored.[1] Mythological figures like Theseus, whose connections with the world of gods are close, and Hippolyta are treated as Duke of Athens and Queen of the Amazons in the play. Another similarity to the myth are the lovers lost in the wood, the name of Egeus (Aegeus) given…
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modern plays by Shakespeare and contemporaries; situate the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries within the context of the theatre of the period and contemporary cultural debates express your ideas clearly and succinctly both orally and on paper; present your written work in scholarly form. 1. 4. LECTURE PROGRAMME Each week there is a set dramatic text which is compulsory reading. Week 1: Introduction and Twelfth Night (Dr Andrew Gordon) 1. Shakespeare’s theatre of language 2…
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the recent adaptation of The Life of Pi, bring us face to face with the ethical problems involved in living together. The requirements for this course will include active class participation, very short weekly response posts, and three 5-7-page papers. Possible readings include selections from The Metamorphosis (Ovid), Gulliver’s Travels (Jonathan Swift), Leviathan (Thomas Hobbes), Frankenstein (Mary Shelley), The Descent of Man (Charles Darwin), Tess of the D’Urbervilles (Thomas Hardy), The…
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