Home..|..Cummings
Study
Guides..|..Shakespeare
Books..|..Shakespeare
Plays on DVD and VHS
.
..
Study
Guide Prepared by Michael J. Cummings...©
2003, 2008, 2011
Type
of Work
.......A
Midsummer Night's Dream is a stage play in
the form of a comedy.
Composition
and Publication
.
.......Shakespeare
probably wrote the play between 1594 and 1596. It
was published in 1600
and 1619 unauthorized quarto editions and then in
1623 as part of the First Folio, the
first authorized collection of Shakespeare's
plays.
Sources
.......Shakespeare
based parts of the play on The Knight's Tale,
by Geoffrey Chaucer
(1340?-1400). Chaucer's story has an entirely
different plot, but the setting
and two of the main characters—Theseus and
Hyppolyta—are the
same. Other sources Shakespeare
used include The Golden Ass, by Apuleius
(2nd Century AD); Life
of Theseus, by Plutarch (46?-120?); and
possibly
King James the
Fourth, by Robert Greene (1560?-1592). Pyramis
and Thisby, the
play within the play, is based on passages in Metamorphoses
(Book IV),
by Ovid (43 BC.-AD 17). The character Puck
appeared as Robin Goodfellow
in a 1593 play, Terrors of the Night, by
Thomas Nashe (1567-1601).
Edmund Spenser referred to a devilish sprite
called
Pook in Epithalamium.(1595),
and Shakespeare may have adopted Pook and changed
his name to Puck.
Settings
.
.......The
action takes place in Athens and nearby woods during
the age of myth in
ancient Greece. However, the play has the atmosphere
and lighthearted mood
of a land of enchantment which could be anywhere.
Although the characters
reside in the environs of Athens, many of them speak
and act like Elizabethan
Englishmen. The time of the action is June 24. In
Elizabethan England,
Midsummer Day—the feast of Saint John the
Baptist—fell on that date. It
was a time of feasting and merriment. On Midsummer
Night, fairies, hobgoblins
and witches held their festival. To dream about
Midsummer Night, therefore,
was to dream about strange creatures and strange
happenings—like those
in the play.
Characters
Protagonists:
The
Various Lovers; Puck, the Main Trickster Who
Invigorates the Plot and Informs
the Audience That the Story Is Not to be Taken
Seriously
Antagonists:
Egeus
and the Tricks and Pitfalls Facing the Lovers
.
Theseus:
Duke
of Athens. He orders lavish festivities and
merriment for his marriage
to Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons, telling her "I
will wed thee . . .
with pomp, with triumph and with revelling."
Theseus
and Hippolyta represent ideal, mature love against
which the immature love
of the other couples—including
Oberon and
Titania—is to be
measured.
Hippolyta:
Queen
of the Amazons, a race of women warriors, and a
former battlefield foe
of Theseus. She is his wife-to-be. According to
one tale in Greek mythology,
Theseus first made war on the Amazons in their
homeland on the Black Sea;
they, in turn, invaded Greece in the region of
Athens. In this tale, Theseus
marries an Amazon queen named Antiope, who is the
daughter of the war god
Ares (Mars).
Hermia:
Strong-willed young woman in love with Lysander.
She refuses to marry Demetrius,
her father's choice for her. Her father asks
Theseus to settle the dispute.
Egeus:
Hermia's father.
Lysander,
Demetrius: Young men in love with Hermia.
Helena:
Young woman in love with Demetrius.
Philostrate:
Master of the revels for Duke Theseus.
Bottom:
Weaver who plays Pyramus in the
tradesmen's play.
Peter
Quince: Carpenter who plays Thisby's father
in the tradesmen's play.
He also recites the prologue.
Snug:
Joiner (Cabinetmaker) who plays a lion in the
tradesmen's play.
Francis
Flute: Bellows-mender who plays Thisby in
the tradesmen's play..
Tom
Snout: Tinker who plays Pyramis's father.
Robin
Starveling: Tailor who plays Thisby's
mother.
Oberon:
King of the fairies.
Titania:
Queen of the fairies.
Puck
(Robin Goodfellow): Mischievous sprite who
acts on behalf of Oberon.
He can take the form of any creature or thing—hog,
bear, horse, dog, and even fire.
Peaseblossom,
Cobweb, Moth, Mustardseed: Fairies.
Other
Fairies Attending Their King and Queen
Attendants
of Theseus and Hippolyta
....
.
Settings
.
.......The
action
takes place in Athens and nearby woods during the
age of myth in
ancient Greece. However, the play has the atmosphere
and lighthearted mood
of a land of enchantment which could be anywhere.
Although the characters
reside in the environs of Athens, many of them speak
and act like Elizabethan
Englishmen. The time of the action is June 24.
.......In
Elizabethan
England, Midsummer Day—the
feast
of Saint John the Baptist—fell on that date.
It was a time of feasting and merriment. On
Midsummer Night, fairies, hobgoblins
and witches held their festival. To dream about
Midsummer Night, therefore,
was to dream about strange creatures and strange
happenings—like
those in the play.
Plot
Summary
By
Michael J. Cummings...©
2003
.
......Only
four
days remain until the marriage of Theseus, Duke of
Athens, to Hippolyta,
Queen of the Amazons. When eager Theseus bemoans
how lazily the hours pass,
Hippolyta observes:
Four
days will quickly steep themselves in night;
Four
nights will quickly dream away the time;
And
then the moon, like to a silver
bow1
New-bent
in heaven, shall behold the night
Of
our solemnities. (1.1.9-13)
......To
prepare
for the wedding, Theseus orders his master of
revels, Philostrate,
to “Stir up the Athenian youth to merriments; /
Awake the pert and nimble
spirit of mirth” (1.1.15-16). After Philostrate
leaves to go about his
task, one of the duke’s subjects, Egeus, arrives
with a complaint about
his headstrong daughter, Hermia. With him besides
Hermia are two Athenian
youths, Lysander and Demetrius. Egeus has commanded
his daughter to marry
Demetrius, but she has vowed instead to marry
Lysander. Egeus now wants
Hermia to swear before the duke that she will marry
Demetrius or suffer
the penalty of an ancient law decreeing that a
disobedient daughter shall
either be put to death or banished. After hearing
the full complaint, Duke
Theseus reminds Hermia of her duty to obey her
father, saying, “To you
your father should be as a god” (1.1.51).
......The
duke
then warns her that if she does not change her mind
on this matter
before the new moon, he will have no choice but to
enforce the ancient
law. Hermia and Lysander decide they will steal away
to the woods the following
night, and Hermia confides the plan to her friend
Helena. Bad move. Helena
is a blabbermouth who loves the man Hermia rejected,
Demetrius. To gain
favor with him, she informs him of Hermia’s
plan.
......Meanwhile,
tradesmen
in Athens plan to put on a play as part of the
festivities celebrating
the wedding of Theseus and Hippolyta. Among them are
Bottom, a weaver;
Snout; a tinker; Snug, a joiner; Quince, a
carpenter; and Flute, a bellows-mender.
Their play is to be called The most lamentable
comedy, and most cruel death
of Pyramus and Thisby2.
Although the workmen know nothing of play-making,
they fancy themselves
great wits and great actors. When Bottom is told he
will play Pyramus,
a young man who kills himself after mistakenly
thinking his beloved Thisby
is dead, Bottom predicts he will be a hit who will
win the audience’s sympathy:
“That will ask some tears in the true performing of
it: if I do it, let
the audience look to their eyes; I will move storms.
. .” (1.2.14).
......To
avoid
the scrutiny of curious eyes, the actors decide to
rehearse in the
woods on the morrow. In the woods are fairies who
have traveled from India
to pronounce their blessing on the bed of Theseus
and Hyppolyta. But all
is not well with fairykind, for the queen of the
fairies, Titania, will
not give her husband, King Oberon, a changeling3
boy he wants as a page. Oberon and Titania argue
violently over the boy,
so violently that the forest elves take refuge in
acorn cups. But Titania
stands fast. In revenge, Oberon orders his fairy
mischief-maker, Puck,
to harvest a magical flower whose juice, when
squeezed on the eyelids of
Titania while she sleeps, will cause her to fall in
love with the first
creature she sees upon awakening, perhaps a monster.
Puck says he will
circle the earth and, within forty minutes, produce
the flower. After Puck
zooms off, Oberon relishes his dastardly scheme,
saying:
Having
once this juice,
I’ll
watch Titania when she is asleep,
And
drop the liquor of it in her eyes.
The
next thing then she waking looks upon,
Be
it on lion, bear, or wolf, or bull,
On
meddling monkey, or on busy ape,
She
shall pursue it with the soul of love:
And
ere I take this charm from off her sight,
As
I can take it with another herb,
I’ll
make her render up her page [the changeling] to
me. (2.1.183-192)
......After
Lysander
and Hermia escape, Demetrius wanders into fairy
territory in search
of Hermia, ignoring the lovestruck Helena who trails
after him like a lapdog.
Oberon, feeling sorry for Helena, orders Puck to
squeeze the juice of the
magic flower on the eyelids of Demetrius to make him
fall in love with
Helena. Oberon then ventures forth and squeezes
flower juice on the eyelids of Titania, who is
sleeping peacefully in a
bed of violets and thyme. Puck, meanwhile,
mistakenly squeezes flower juice
on the eyelids of Lysander while he is sleeping with
Hermia at his side.
Upon awakening, Lysander’s gaze falls upon Helena,
who is wandering in
search of Demetrius.
......Lysander
woos
her. When she flees, he pursues her. After Hermia
awakens and notices
Lysander is gone, she wanders forth in search of
him.
......As
the
tradesmen rehearse their play, they discuss having
someone play the
moon in case it is overcast on the night of the
play. And, because the
play calls for Pyramus and Thisby to talk through a
chink in the wall,
Bottom suggests someone also be recruited to play
the wall: "Some man or
other must present Wall: and let him have some
plaster, or some loam, or
some rough-cast about him, to signify wall; and let
him hold his fingers
thus,4
and through that cranny shall Pyramus. . . and
Thisby whisper" (3.1.25).
......When
Puck
happens by, he makes mischief by placing the head of
an ass on Bottom’s
shoulders. Upon seeing Bottom with his new top, the
other actors flee in
terror. Bewildered, Bottom thinks they are trying to
scare him, so he strolls
about singing a song to demonstrate his
fearlessness. The song awakens
Titania, and the flower juice makes her fall deeply
in love with Bottom,
whom she escorts away. Demetrius encounters Hermia,
who accuses him of
murdering Lysander. When she runs away, he lies down
to sleep.
......Oberon,
meanwhile,
has discovered that Puck bewitched the eyes of the
wrong man,
Lysander rather than Demetrius. So he puts flower
juice on the eyes of
Demetrius while Puck fetches Helena. When she
arrives, pursued by Lysander,
Demetrius falls in love with her.
......As
both
men compete for her attentions, she concludes that
they are only ridiculing
her. Hermia, attracted to the scene by the noise,
blames Helena for stealing
Lysander.
......The
men
go off to fight a duel. Helena, afraid of Hermia,
flees; Hermia pursues.
Oberon assigns Puck to restore order. Using magic,
he causes the four young
people to fall asleep near one another, then applies
the juice of another
flower to Lysander’s eyes to undo the previous
spell. Titania sleeps with
Bottom. Oberon, having gained possession of the
changeling boy, removes
the enchantment from Titania’s eyes.
......At
daybreak,
Theseus, Hippolyta, Egeus, and others enter the
woods to hunt.
Sounding horns, they awaken the four lovers. Egeus
again demands that Hermia
marry Demetrius. But Demetrius announces that he is
interested only in
Helena. Theseus, pleased with the outcome, sanctions
the marriage of the
two couples to coincide with his own marriage to
Hippolyta. Theseus is
amused by the activities of the lovers during their
time in the forest
and says:
Lovers
and madmen have such seething brains,
Such
shaping fantasies, that apprehend
More
than cool reason ever comprehends.
The
lunatic, the lover and the poet.
Are
of imagination all compact. (5.1.6-10)
In the
evening, during the wedding celebration, the
craftsmen put on their play,
with Snout playing Wall and Bottom enacting his tour
de force suicide scene:
Thus
die I, thus, thus, thus. [Stabs himself.]
Now
am I dead,
Now
am I fled;
My
soul is in the sky:
Tongue,
lose thy light;
Moon
take thy flight.
Now
die, die, die, die, die. [Dies.] (5.1.277-283)
......Thisby,
discovering
Pyramus dead, then kills herself. Bottom gets back
up and asks
Theseus whether he would like hear an epilogue or
see a dance. Theseus
opts for a dance, then says it is time for bed:
The
iron
tongue of midnight hath told twelve:5
Lovers,
to bed; ’tis almost fairy time.
I
fear we shall out-sleep the coming morn
As
much as we this night have overwatch’d.
This
palpable-gross play hath well beguiled
The
heavy gait of night. Sweet friends, to bed.
A
fortnight hold we this solemnity,
In
nightly revels and new jollity. (5.1.322-329)
......At
midnight,
the bridal couples retire to their chambers. Oberon
and Titania
dance and sing as they bless the blissful sleepers
while Puck bids good
night to the audience.
...
.
Structure
and Language
.
.......Shakespeare
layers
the story of the marriage of Theseus and Hippolyta
upon the story
of other lovers pursuing one another in a forest
inhabited by mischievous
fairies. To these stories he adds still another: the
misadventures of a
group of tradesmen who rehearse and stage a play for
the wedding of Theseus
and Hippolyta. Shakespeare skillfully arranges all
of the story lines into
a unified whole—a kind
of symphony, with a
major theme and many recurring motifs. He even
blends ancient and Elizabethan
societies and customs into his mix.
.......The
language
of the characters likewise occurs in a mix: (1) the
verse or poetry
of the love-struck couples and (2) the homespun—and
often humorous—prose of
the bumbling tradesmen.
Examples of the verse and poetry appear below under
allusions, nature and
animal imagery, and couplets. Examples of the
tradesmen’s humorous dialogue
are the following:
That
will ask some
tears in the true performing of it: if I do it, let
the audience look to
their eyes; I will move storms. (1.2.14)
Bottom
uses hyperbole
to predict the effect of his acting on the
audience.
Nay,
faith, let not me play
a woman; I have a beard coming. (1.2.20)
Flute
speaks this line.
SNUG
Have you
the lion’s part written? pray you, if it be, give
it me, for I am slow
of study.
QUINCE
You may
do it extempore, for it is nothing but roaring.
(1.2.30-31)
Snug
and Quince discuss
Snug’s role as the lion.
Climax
.......The
play reaches its climax near the end of Act IV,
after all of the lovers
overcome their obstacles and leave for the temple
to be united in marriage.
.
.
Themes
.
Love
ultimately triumphs. Despite all the obstacles
they face, the central
characters eventually unite with the ones they love.
Love
presents pitfalls. All of the lovers encounter
mishaps before they
achieve their heart's desire—marriage to the
one they exalt above all others. As Lysander tells
Hermia in Act I, Scene
I, "The course of true love never did run smooth"
(line 134).
Appearances
are deceiving. Again and again—thanks
in part to Puckish pranks—reality wears a
deceptive mask.
Father
does not always know best. Egeus orders his
daughter Hermia to marry
a man she does not love. Hermia protests and runs
away. In the end, Egeus
is proven wrong.
Dream
the impossible dream. Bottom, Snug, Snout,
Quince and Flute—all
bumbling comic characters—fancy themselves
great actors and wits. So they put on a play. The
moral: Dare to dream
and your dream will come true—or at least
you will have fun and enjoy life.
.
.
Allusions
.
.......In
keeping with the ancient Mediterranean setting, the
characters allude often
to people, places and gods in Greek and Roman myth and
legend. Among the
allusions are the following:
Acheron
(3.2.379):
River in the Underworld (Hades).
Diana
(1.1.94): Roman
name of Artemis, goddess of the moon and the hunt.
Cupid
(1.1.175, 3.2.108)): Roman name for the Greek god of
love, Eros, who shot
arrows at humans to wound them with love.
Venus
(1.1.177, 3.2.66): Roman name for the Greek goddess
of love, Aphrodite.
She was the mother of Cupid.
Dido
(1.1.179): Dido is not referred to by name but by
the designation Carthage
queen, meaning she was the queen of the North
African country of Carthage.
She appears in Virgil’s great epic poem,
The Aeneid. Dido falls
desperately in love with The Aeneid’s
main character, Aeneas,
after he stops in Carthage on his way from Troy to
Italy. But after he
abandons her, she kills herself by falling on a
sword. At sea on his ship,
Aeneas can see Carthage glowing with the flames of
Dido’s funeral pyre.
Aeneas
(1.1.180): See Dido, above.
Ariadne
(2.1.84):
Daughter of King Minos of Crete. She gave Theseus a
thread that enabled
him to find his way out of the labyrinth, a maze
constructed to house the
Minotaur, a creature with the head of a bull and the
body of a man.
Neptune
(2.1.131):
Roman name of Poseidon, god of the sea.
Apollo and
Daphne (2.1.239):
Apollo—god of poetry, music, medicine, and the
sun—pursued the nymph Daphne,
daughter of a river god. After she prayed for a way
to escape Apollo, her
father changed her into a laurel tree. Apollo later
used the leaves of
the laurel in wreaths with which victors of various
contests were crowned.
Hercules
(4.1.98):
Greek demigod known for his feats of strength.
Cadmus
(4.1.98):
Son of the king of Phoenicia and founder of the
Greek city of Thebes.
Jove
(5.1.181): One
of two Roman names for Zeus, the king of the
Olympian gods. The other Roman
name is Jupiter.
.......Following
is an example of a passage, spoken by Hermia, alluding
to figures of myth
and legend from the list above. The allusions are to
Cupid (second line),
Venus (fourth line), Dido (sixth line, referred to as
Carthage queen),
and Aeneas (seventh line, referred to as
Troyan).
My
good Lysander!
I swear to
thee, by Cupid’s
strongest bow,
By his best
arrow with the
golden head,
By the
simplicity of Venus’
doves,
By that
which knitteth souls
and prospers loves,
And by that
fire which burn’d
the Carthage queen,
When the
false Troyan [false
Trojan, Aeneas] under sail
was seen,
By all the
vows that ever
men have broke,
In number
more than ever
women spoke,
In that
same place thou
hast appointed me,
To-morrow
truly will I meet
with thee. (1.1.174-184)
Nature
and Animal Imagery
.......Nature
and animal imagery also abounds in the play,
helping to maintain the “enchanted
forest” atmosphere. Oberon’s description of the
place where Titania sleeps
is an example of this imagery:
I
know a bank where the wild thyme blows,
Where
oxlips and the nodding violet grows,
Quite
over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
With
sweet musk-roses and with eglantine:
There
sleeps Titania sometime of the night,
Lull'd
in these flowers with dances and delight;
And
there the snake throws her enamell'd skin,
Weed
wide enough to wrap a fairy in. (2.1.259-266)
The song
of the fairies is another example. It emphasizes the
spooky creatures that
inhabit the forest.
You
spotted snakes with double tongue,
Thorny
hedgehogs, be not seen;
Newts
and blind-worms, do no wrong,
Come
not near our fairy queen.
Philomel,6
with melody
Sing
in our sweet lullaby;
Lulla,
lulla, lullaby, lulla, lulla, lullaby:
Never
harm,
Nor
spell nor charm,
Come
our lovely lady nigh;
So,
good night, with lullaby.
Weaving
spiders, come not here;
Hence,
you long-legg'd spinners, hence!
Beetles
black, approach not near;
Worm
nor snail, do no offence. (2.2.12)
Use
of Couplets
.......Sometimes
characters speak in couplets. (A couplet consists
of two successive lines
with end rhyme). Here are two examples:
Captain
of our fairy band,
Helena
is here at hand;
And
the youth, mistook by me,
Pleading
for a lover's fee.
Shall
we their fond pageant see?
Lord,
what fools these mortals be! (Puck:
3.2.116-121)
Now,
until the break of day,
Through
this house each
fairy stray.
To the
best bride-bed will
we,
Which by
us shall blessed
be;
And the
issue there create
Ever
shall be fortunate.
(Oberon: 5.2.33-38)
The lovers
also sometimes speak in couplets, but their imagery
is frequently overwrought
as Shakespeare mocks their quixotic wooing. An
example of intentionally
sugared rhymes is the following passage spoken by
Demetrius upon awakening:
O
Helena, goddess, nymph, perfect, divine!
To
what, my love, shall I compare thine eyne?
Crystal
is muddy. O, how ripe in show
Thy
lips, those kissing cherries, tempting grow!
That
pure congealed white, high Taurus snow,
Fann'd
with the eastern wind, turns to a crow
When
thou hold'st up thy hand: O, let me kiss
This
princess of pure white, this seal of bliss!
(3.2.144-151)
Figures of
Speech
.......Among
examples of figures of speech in the play are the
following. For definitions
of figures of speech, see Literary
Terms.
Alliteration
Turn
melancholy forth
to
funerals;
The pale
companion
is not for our
pomp. (1.1.17-18)
Fair Hermia,
look you
arm yourself
To
fit
your
fancies
to
your
father’s
will. (1.1.122-123)
No
night
is now with
hymn or carol blest. (2.1.106)
Hoary-headed
frosts
Fall
in the fresh
lap of the crimson rose.
(2.1.111-112)
Anaphora
But
I will wed thee
in another key,
With
pomp, with
triumph, and with
revelling. (1.1.21-22)
So
will I grow, so
live, so
die, my lord. (1.1.84)
Over
hill, over
dale,
Thorough
bush, thorough
brier,
Over
park, over
pale,
Thorough
flood, thorough
fire. (2.1.4-7)
I’ll
lead you about a round,
Through
bog, through
bush, through
brake, through
brier:
Sometime
a horse I’ll be, sometime
a hound.
(3.1.53-55)
Metaphor
Pluck
the wings from painted butterflies
To fan the
moonbeams from
his sleeping eyes. (3.1.101-102)
Comparison
of moonbeams
to a physical object that a current of air moves
Thou
lead them thus,
Till o’er
their brows death-counterfeiting
sleep
With
leaden legs and batty
wings doth creep. (3.2.385-387)
Comparison
sleep to a
winged creature
the
eastern gate, all fiery-red,
Opening
on Neptune with
fair blessed beams,
Turns
into yellow gold his
salt green streams. (3.2.413-415)
Comparison
of dawn to
a fiery gate, comparsion of the ocean to yellow
gold
Oxymoron
I
never heard
So musical
a discord, such
sweet
thunder. (4.1.103-104)
Personification
The
moon methinks,
looks with a watery eye; 116
And when
she weeps, weeps
every little flower. (3.1.116-117)
Comparison
of the moon
to a person
Personification,
Simile
Four
happy days bring in
Another
moon; but O! methinks
how slow
This old
moon wanes; she
lingers my desires,
Like to a
step-dame, or
a dowager
Long
withering out a young
man’s revenue. (1.1.4-8)
Comparison
of the moon
to a woman (personification).
A simile
occurs when
the comparison uses like.
Simile
The
moon, like to a silver bow
New-bent in
heaven. (1.1.11-12)
Comparison
of the moon
to a silver bow
The
starry welkin cover
thou anon
With
drooping fog as black
as Acheron (3.2.378-379)
Comparsion
of the blackness
of the fog to that of Acheron, a river in Hades
Character
Habitats
.......Shakespeare's
plays frequently present characters in settings
far removed from urban
centers. However, they generally are creatures of
the city, the court,
the vibrant life where people throng. Consider the
following observation:
Shakespeare's
characters are . . . dubious of rusticity.
Valentine [in The Two Gentlemen
of Verona] does not rejoice in his woodland
life as head of an outlaw
band; the lovers of A [Midsummer Night's]
Dream find their woodland
adventure unnerving, and mountain life seems rude
to the characters in
Cymbeline
who are forced to endure it. Although Florizel [in
The Winter's Tale]
dreams of spending his life with Perdita in a
cottage, she knows that pastoral
bliss is only a dream; true content lies in
Leontes' court, to which all
the characters . . . return. Even Prospero [in The
Tempest], who
has no great desire to see Milan again, knows that
he and Miranda must
leave their island, which is as much prison as
refuge to them. Although
critics can idealize the pastoral experiences of
Shakespeare's characters
as renewing contacts with nature, that experience
is often somewhat harrowing.—Shakespeare's
Comedies From Roman Farce to Romantic Mystery.
Newark: U of Delaware,
1986 (Page 144).
Study
Questions and Essay Topics
-
When
Hermia’s father opposes
her choice of husbands, Duke Theseus tells her not
to go against her father’s
wishes, saying, “To you ....your
father should
be as a god.” Is Theseus right?
-
The play
ends with a triple
wedding. Do you believe those getting married will
stay married?
-
Write an
informative essay focusing
on what a typical wedding was like in
Shakespeare’s day.
-
Puck’s
magic spells cause several
characters to fall in love with the wrong persons.
Are there “magic spells”
in real life that affect people this way?
-
Hippolyta,
bethrothed to Theseus,
is the queen of the Amazons, who play prominent
roles in various stories
in Greek mythology. Who were the Amazons?
-
German
composer Felix Mendelssohn
(1809-1847) wrote music based on the themes in A
Midsummer Night’s Dream.
One of these compositions inspired by
Shakespeare’s play accompanies a
ceremony performed tens of thousands of times in
churches throughout the
world every year. What is this ceremony? What is
the composition?
-
Write an
essay focusing on one
of the themes of the play.
Notes
1.
Moon
. . . bow: New moon, crescent-shaped.
2.
Thisby:
Thisbe, the lover of Pyramus. Both were
Babylonians were the subject of
a story by the Roman poet Ovid (AD 43 BC-17) in
his Metamorphoses.
When Pyramus thinks a lion has killed Thisbe, he
kills himself. Thisbe
is still alive, however. But when she discovers
the body of Pyramus, she
also kills herself.
3.
Changeling:
Child whom fairies substitute for another.
4.
Fingers
thus: Held apart, in a V shape, to represent
the chink.
5.
The
iron tongue . . . twelve: The clapper of a
bell strikes midnight.
6.
Philomel:
nightingale.
Plays
on DVD (or VHS)
..
| Play |
Director |
Actors |
| Antony
and
Cleopatra (1974) |
Trevor
Nunn, John Schoffield |
Richard
Johnson, Janet Suzman |
| Antony
and
Cleopatra |
BBC
Production |
Jane
Lapotaire |
| As
You
Like It (2010) |
Thea
Sharrock |
Jack
Laskey, Naomi Frederick |
| As
You
Like It (1937) |
Paul
Czinner |
Henry
Ainley, Felix Aylmer |
| The
Comedy
of Errors |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
| Coriolanus |
BBC
Production |
Alan
Howard, Irene Worth |
| Cymbeline |
Elijah
Moshinsky |
Claire
Bloom, Richard Johnson, Helen Mirren |
| Gift
Box:
The Comedies |
BBC
Production |
Various |
| Gift
Box:
The Histories |
BBC
Production |
Various |
| Gift
Box:
The Tragedies |
BBC
Production |
Various |
| Hamlet
(1948) |
Laurence
Olivier |
Laurence
Olivier, Jean Simmons |
| Hamlet
(1990) |
Kevin
Kline |
Kevin
Kline |
| Hamlet(1991) |
Franco
Zeffirelli |
Mel
Gibson, Glenn Close |
| Hamlet
(1996) |
Kenneth
Branagh |
Kenneth
Branagh, |
| Hamlet
(2009) |
Gregory
Doran |
David
Tennant, Patrick Stewart,
Penny Downie |
| Hamlet
(1964) |
John
Gielgud, Bill Colleran |
Richard
Burton, Hume Cronyn |
| Hamlet
(1964) |
Grigori
Kozintsev |
Innokenti
Smoktunovsky |
| Hamlet
(2000) |
Cambpell
Scott, Eric Simonson |
Campbell
Scott, Blair Brown |
| Henry
V (1989) |
Kenneth
Branagh |
Kenneth
Branaugh, Derek Jacobi |
| Henry
V( 1946) |
Laurence
Olivier |
Leslie
Banks, Felix Aylmer |
| Henry
VI
Part I |
BBC
Production |
Peter
Benson, Trevor Peacock |
| Henry
VI
Part II |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
| Henry
VI
Part III |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
| Henry
VIII |
BBC
Production |
John
Stride, Claire Bloom, Julian Glover |
| Julius
Caesar |
BBC
Production |
Richard
Pasco, Keith Michell |
| Julius
Caesar (1950) |
David
Bradley |
Charlton
Heston |
| Julius
Caesar (1953) |
Joseph
L. Mankiewicz |
Marlon
Brando, James Mason |
| Julius
Caesar (1970) |
Stuart
Burge |
Charlton
Heston, Jason Robards |
| King
John |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
| King
Lear (1970) |
Grigori
Kozintsev |
Yuri
Yarvet |
| King
Lear (1971) |
Peter
Brook |
Cyril
Cusack, Susan Engel |
| King
Lear (1974) |
Edwin
Sherin |
James
Earl Jones |
| King
Lear (1976) |
Tony
Davenall |
Patrick
Mower, Ann Lynn |
| King
Lear (1984) |
Michael
Elliott |
Laurence
Olivier, Colin Blakely |
| King
Lear (1997) |
Richard
Eyre |
Ian
Holm |
| Love's
Labour's
Lost (2000) |
Kenneth
Branagh |
Kenneth
Branagh, Alicia Silverstone |
| Love's
Labour's
Lost |
BBC
Production) |
Not
Listed |
| Macbeth
(1978) |
Philip
Casson |
Ian
McKellen, Judy Dench |
| Macbeth |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
| The
Merchant
of Venice |
BBC
Production |
Warren
Mitchell, Gemma Jones |
| The
Merchant
of Venice (2001) |
Christ
Hunt, Trevor Nunn |
David
Bamber, Peter De Jersey |
| The
Merchant
of Venice (1973) |
John
Sichel |
Laurence
Olivier, Joan Plowright |
| The
Merry
Wives of Windsor (1970) |
Not
Listed |
Leon
Charles, Gloria Grahame |
| A
Midsummer Night's Dream (1996) |
Adrian
Noble |
Lindsay
Duncan, Alex Jennings |
| A
Midsummer Night's Dream (1999) |
Michael
Hoffman |
Kevin
Kline, Michelle Pfeiffer |
| Much
Ado
About Nothing (1993) |
Kenneth
Branaugh |
Branaugh,
Emma Thompson |
| Much
Ado
About Nothing (1973) |
Nick
Havinga |
Sam
Waterston, F. Murray Abraham |
| Othello
(2005) |
Janet
Suzman |
Richard
Haines, John Kaki |
| Othello
(1990) |
Trevor
Nunn |
Ian
McKellen, Michael Grandage |
| Othello
(1965) |
Stuart
Burge |
Laurence
Olivier, Frank Finlay |
| Othello
(1955) |
Orson
Welles |
Orson
Welles |
| Othello
(1983) |
Franklin
Melton |
Peter
MacLean, Bob Hoskins, Jenny Agutter |
| Ran
(1985)
Japanese Version of King Lear |
Akira
Kurosawa |
Tatsuya
Nakadai, Akira Terao |
| Richard
II (2001) |
John
Farrell |
Matte
Osian, Kadina de Elejalde |
| Richard
III (1912) |
André
Calmettes, James Keane |
Robert
Gemp, Frederick Warde |
| Richard
III - Criterion Collection
(1956) |
Laurence
Olivier |
Laurence
Olivier, Ralph Richardson |
| Richard
III (1995) |
Richard
Loncraine |
Ian
McKellen, Annette Bening |
| Richard
III |
BBC
Production |
Ron
Cook, Brian Protheroe, Michael Byrne |
| Romeo
and
Juliet (1968) |
Franco
Zeffirelli |
Leonard
Whiting, Olivia Hussey |
| Romeo
and
Juliet (1996) |
Baz
Luhrmann |
Leonardo
DiCaprio, Claire Danes |
| Romeo
and
Juliet (1976) |
Joan
Kemp-Welch |
Christopher
Neame, Ann Hasson |
| Romeo
and
Juliet |
BBC
Production |
John
Gielgud, Rebecca Saire, Patrick Ryecart |
| The
Taming
of the Shrew |
Franco
Zeffirelli |
Elizabeth
Taylor, Richard Burton |
| The
Taming
of the Shrew |
Kirk
Browning |
Raye
Birk, Earl Boen, Ron Boussom |
| The
Taming
of The Shrew |
Not
Listed |
Franklin
Seales, Karen Austin |
| The
Tempest |
Paul
Mazursky |
John
Cassavetes, Gena Rowlands |
| The
Tempest (1998) |
Jack
Bender |
Peter
Fonda, John Glover, Harold Perrineau, |
| Throne
of
Blood (1961) Macbeth in
Japan |
Akira
Kurosawa |
Toshirô
Mifune,
Isuzu Yamada |
| Twelfth
Night (1996) |
Trevor
Nunn |
Helena
Bonham Carter |
| Twelfth
Night |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
| The
Two
Gentlemen of Verona |
BBC
Production |
John
Hudson, Joanne Pearce |
| The
Winter's
Tale (2005) |
Greg
Doran |
Royal
Shakespeare Company |
| The
Winter's
Tale |
BBC
Production |
Not
Listed |
|