Shakespearean Characterization: A Guide for Actors and Students

Shakespearean Characterization: A Guide for Actors and Students

by Leslie O'Dell
Shakespearean Characterization: A Guide for Actors and Students

Shakespearean Characterization: A Guide for Actors and Students

by Leslie O'Dell

Hardcover

$83.00 
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Overview

Shakespeare's plays were written some four hundred years ago, and while his characters are enduring, they are also alien. In grappling with the text of his plays, the modern actor must bring Shakespeare's Renaissance characters to life for a modern audience. And while it is difficult enough for twentieth-century spectators to make sense of the plays, it is also hard for modern actors to understand the Elizabethan world that created the personalities so vividly sketched in Shakespeare's texts. This reference is a convenient and practical guide for actors faced with the task of playing Shakespeare's characters.

The volume begins with an overview of Elizabethan theatrical conventions, including the training of actors. It then looks at the dramatic tradition of personification, which Shakespeare's world inherited from the medieval stage. Later chapters give special attention to how language reveals character and to the social and cultural contexts of the Renaissance. Throughout, the emphasis is on how to translate Shakespeare's text into action on the stage. While the volume contains much useful information, that information is presented to meet the special needs of theater professionals.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313311444
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/30/2001
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

LESLIE O'DELL is Associate Professor of Theatre and English at Wilfrid Laurier University and Text Consultant for the Stratford Festival in Ontario.

Table of Contents

Bringing Shakespeare to the Modern Stage
The Conditions of Rehearsal and Performance
Theatrical Conventions
The Theatrical Traditions of Personification
A Character's Language
Moving Metaphors
The Power of the Word
The Fallacy of Universality

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