Alternative Shakespeare Auditions for WomenPsychology Press, 1997 - 120 pàgines Auditioners often complain of seeing the same speeches over and over again. Director, Simon Dunmore, has seen well over ten thousand audition speeches performed, and has drawn on his experience to select and edit a new collection of fascinating, fresh and unusual audition speeches from Shakespeare's plays. This book brings together fifty speeches for women from plays frequently ignored such as Coriolanus, Pericles and Love's Labours Lost. It also includes good, but over-looked speeches from the more popular plays such as Diana from All's Well That Ends Well, Perdita from The Winter's Tale and Hero from Much Ado About Nothing. Each speech is accompanied by a character description, brief explanation of the context, and notes on obscure words, phrases and references - all written from the viewpoint of the auditioning actor. |
Continguts
The Lives and Times of Shakespeares People | 7 |
Act 1 Scene 3 | 25 |
Diana from Alls Well That Ends Well Act 4 Scene 2 22 | 43 |
Lady Gray from Henry VI part 3 Act 4 Scene 4 46 | 62 |
Mistress Ford from The Merry Wives of Windsor | 68 |
Act 3 Scene 1 | 74 |
Act 4 Scene 3 | 108 |
Bibliography | 120 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
actors Andronicus Angelo Anne Boleyn Anthony Burgess Antipholus Antony Ariel audience audition auditioners Beatrice Bertram Bolingbroke brother burgonet Calphurnia character Cleopatra construct this speech Countess Cressida daughter dead dear Dionyza doth Duchess of Gloucester Duchess of York Duke editions Edward Eleanor Cobham Elizabeth Woodville Elizabethan Emilia England eyes Falstaff flowers Gaunt give grief groaning hath heart heaven Helena Henry VI Hermione Herne the hunter historical honour Humphrey husband Isabel Juliet Julius Caesar Katherine of Aragon King Henry Lady Capulet Lady Gray lines live look lord Marina marriage married Mistress Quickly Mote mother never noble Pandarus Pericles Phoebus pity play Proteus Queen Elizabeth revenge Richard Richard II Roman Scene Shakespeare sigh Silvia sons soul speak swear sweet talk Tamora tears thee thine thou throne Titus Troilus Valentine verse Virgilia Volumnia whilst wife woman women words write young