Googleplex – 1/24/10
It’s time once again to check in on what searches people have done to find themselves at Shakespeare Teacher, and to respond in the name of fun and public service. All of the following searches brought people to this site in the past week.
Probably not. Antony and Cleopatra did have three children, two boys and a girl. Cleopatra also had a child, Caesarion, from Julius Caesar. (“He plough’d her, and she cropp’d.” See how classy you sound when you quote Shakespeare?) Antony also had children from four of his wives.
After Octavius Caesar conquered Egypt (the events depicted in Shakespeare’s Antony & Cleopatra) he executed Caesarion, and gave the three children of Antony and Cleopatra to his sister Octavia. Remember (from the play) that Octavia was Antony’s last wife, so she’s now raising the children of her husband and his mistress. Little is known of the two boys, and if they had lived to adulthood, they would probably have been mentioned in sources of the time because of their parentage. It is possible they may have secretly been killed to avoid a later challenge to Octavius. But it’s also possible that they lived on and had children of their own. There’s no way to know.
The daughter of Antony and Cleopatra, named Cleopatra Selene, was married to an African king, and they had – at least – great grandchildren. Zenobia, a third century Syrian queen, claimed to be descended from this line. So it’s certainly possible that the descendants of Antony and Cleopatra are among us today. And if so, the opportunities to multiply between the 1st century and the 15th century would be massive. Therefore, we cannot rule out definitively that the Tudors are descended from Antony and Cleopatra. But could they know this for sure, let alone trace it? No. Those 1400 years weren’t exactly known for their record keeping, and there is too much motivation for people to invent a famous lineage along the way.
Margaret Tudor was Henry VIII’s older sister. She married James IV of Scotland in 1503, and a hundred years later, her great-grandson would become King of England (after Henry VIII’s line died out).
However, if you are asking about the character played by Gabrielle Anwar in The Tudors, you’re really looking for younger sister Mary Tudor. Another Mary would have probably been too confusing, so they conflated the two women into one character. Mary Tudor was the one who married an aging king only to be widowed three months later. Mary was the one who married Charles Brandon. I’ve only seen the first season of the show, so I don’t know what the character would later become, but in the first season, Margaret’s story is that of Mary Tudor.
Shakespeare had a lot of plots that centered around practical jokes. Often, they would blur the line between harmless prank and vicious revenge, but you can’t make an omelette without breaking a few eggs, am I right? Without any further ado, then, is my Top Ten list of Shakespearean pranks. Drum roll, please!
10. The Merry Wives of Windsor – I’m not a fan of this play, and I’m loathe to include it on the list of Top Ten anything. But a list of Shakespearean pranks would be incomplete without it, so here it is at #10. Suffice it to say, there are a number of pranks in this play. I’d list them, but I can’t be bothered.
9. Henry IV, Part Two – Hal and Poins disguise themselves as drawers and listen in on Falstaff’s bragging. They reveal themselves, but not before Falstaff has a chance to badmouth the Prince behind his back. The fun comes when Falstaff tries to talk his way out of it.
8. Measure for Measure – The “bed trick” and the “head trick” are serious deceptions and can hardly be considered a prank. But what about what I like to call the “fled trick”? The Duke pretends to leave Vienna, but instead stays back disguised as a friar. I guess the joke’s on Angelo. Busted!
7. Twelfth Night – Malvolio, imprisoned in darkness, recieves a visit from Sir Topas the curate. Actually, it’s Feste the jester disguising his voice. Playing both parts, Feste drives the supposed madman one step closer to real madness.
6. Much Ado about Nothing – Beatrice and Benedick’s merry war takes a surprising turn when their friends allow them to overhear conversations to make each believe the other is in love. The prank becomes self-fulfilling. “Some Cupid kills with arrows, some with traps.”
5. Henry IV, Part One – Hal and Poins pretend to go along with Falstaff’s plan to rob some travellers. But they enter in disguise after the fact and rob the robbers! They reveal their prank after Falstaff has been boasting about his encounter with the unknown thieves.
4. The Tempest – Prospero uses his magic to get revenge on those who have wronged him. But the havoc only lasts the afternoon and there’s no real damage done. The whole play is one big prank.
3. A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Puck changes Bottom into an ass. And Titania, having been spiked with a love potion by Oberon, falls in love with the creature. Hilarity ensues.
2. Twelfth Night – Maria forges a letter from Olivia to Malvolio, hinting that she is in love with him. Toby, Andrew, and Fabian spy on Malvolio as he reads the letter, which tells him to come to her in an outlandish manner… and he does.
1. Othello – Iago tricks Othello into believing that his wife has been unfaithful, so he kills her. Not really a prank, you say? Check out this video.
There are a lot of good monologues for men from King Lear. To start with, you can find monologues from Lear here, from Edmund here, and Edgar here. The female characters in the play have some great speeches, but nothing I would particularly pull out as a monologue.
You may be looking for Shakespeare: The Animated Tales, a series of half-hour condensed animated versions of Shakespeare plays. But I’ve also done a lot of work with students creating animated versions of Macbeth, As You Like It, and The Tempest. And since this is Shakespeare Teacher, I’ll offer some information about how to do it.
When I did these animation projects, the students did the artwork in HyperStudio, they recorded the sound in SoundEffects, and they aligned the two in iMovie. It was frame-by-frame, which is time consuming, but HyperStudio had a card-and-stack interface that made it go much more quickly. That was quite a few years ago, though, and I do mostly video projects now. I don’t know if HyperStudio is even still around, and people use Audacity for sound recordings today. iMovie is still the best game in town if you want to coordinate frame animation.
I know a lot of people who like to use the website Scratch for student animations. The one problem with Scratch is that you can only view the animations from the Scratch website. You cannot download the movie file and post it to YouTube.
I’ve heard, particularly from Shakespeare teachers, a lot of enthusiasm surrounding Kar2ouche. I looked at it once, a long time ago, and I dismissed it because there are a lot of pre-made templates, and I wanted my students to visually interpret the characters themselves. But time being a factor, I would probably recommend it, and I’ve seen some Shakespeare projects that look really sharp. Every so often, someone asks me if I’ve heard of Kar2ouche.
Of course, if your kids are into Second Life, there has been some animated Shakespeare coming from that quarter as well. There is also stop motion photography, which can be done with a digital camera, iMovie, and a lot of patience.
I can interpret this in four ways:
1. Was Queen Elizabeth the illegitimate child of Shakespeare?
2. Was Queen Elizabeth’s illegitimate child Shakespeare?
3. Did Queen Elizabeth’s illegitimate child actually write the plays of Shakespeare?
4. Was Queen Elizabeth an illegitimate child according to Shakespeare?
Elizabeth was older than Shakespeare, so #1 is a clear No. I don’t know of any illegitimate children of Elizabeth. This seems to me to be something easier for a king to pull off than a queen. If she had gone through a pregnancy, I doubt she’d have kept the nickname “the Virgin Queen” for very long. So we can answer a No for #2 and #3 as well.
As for whether Elizabeth herself was illegitimate, that’s a fair question. It all depends on how legitimate you consider the annulment of Henry VIII and his first wife. But Shakespeare certainly wouldn’t have painted her as illegitimate. When she was alive, he wrote plays that glorified her ancestors, and long after she died, his play Henry VIII treated her birth as a moment of great hope for the future of England.
So I’m not sure what you’re asking, but the answer is probably No.
I leave the task of responding to the remaining search terms to my readers:
shakespeare reading list
headline tell us that macbeth saves Scotland
theme of religion in shakespeare’s “as you like it”
what inspired shakespeare to write king lear
how people were killed when shakespear was alive
madrid in april 2010 literature teachers
January 26th, 2010 at 12:59 am
“Much Ado About Nothing” = Undoing? Ooh, but a match!
January 26th, 2010 at 6:17 am
“Much Ado About Nothing” = Tough union had combat.
January 26th, 2010 at 10:53 am
After the fact, I did my own search for “shakespeare practical jokes” out of curiosity. I came across this post from the Shakespeare Geek from about four months ago. In the post, he mentions my #3, #5, and #6 above, plus a really good one from All’s Well that I forgot about. (Dammit!)
And then in the comments, I cite “my favorite” prank as one that I didn’t even list above. It’s also from Twelfth Night: “Toby incites a sword fight between Andrew and Cesario, neither of whom really want to fight. He also convinces each of them that the other is a fierce and deadly opponent.”
I guess I overlooked this, because the play was already the only play to make the list twice. But this prank certainly belongs with the others. (Dammit!)
So I crown Twelfth Night the King of Shakespearean Prank Plays! Now I just need a group of kids to make a video about it…
January 27th, 2010 at 2:30 am
Hello all here…, I found you people interested in Shakespeare. I am reading a book Shakespeare’s Truth by Rex Richards having lots of secret and a murder mystery. If you enjoy books by people like Dan Brown, John Grisham, Ken Follett, Bernard Cornwell, and you want a page turner with serious food for thought… I’m pretty sure you’ll enjoy reading Shakespeare’s Truth!.
I have posted the amazon link for the book details.
January 27th, 2010 at 7:18 am
Welcome, Volga!
Thanks for your contribution to the “Shakespeare reading list.”
January 27th, 2010 at 10:56 am
Picking up on Volga’s post – I’ve also read Shakespeare’s Truth and she misses some interesting points from the book. It starts with one of the scenarios you paint above – Queen Elisabeth I giving birth to an illegitimate child. The relevence of that to Shakespeare is dealt with in the book. The interesting thing is that although Shakepeare’s Truth is fiction it’s based on years of academic research by the author’s father into the Shakespeare authorship question. So I suppose it does what the best well researched conspiracy thrillers can do – make people consider something they might not have thought about. In this case – was Shakespeare who we think he was.
It’s also a great read by the way!
January 27th, 2010 at 10:28 pm
Ah, so this relates to more than one item on the list. Welcome, Amoratado!
I think that the book you describe would be of great interest to many readers of this blog. Thanks for the tip!
January 28th, 2010 at 8:45 am
Thanks Bill for your welcome!
Replying back to Amoratado – yes I missed many points in my previous comments because I was at start of the book but now I am finished with that so I can tell much about that. Well you said very true about the book.
Book involves a secret birth in the English Royal Family hidden for hundreds of years, a shocking Royal death and kidnap in the modern day, a secret society, rivalry between the police and army, a race against time to find a missing treasure, and a love story.
I loved the book and won’t be able to put it down and completed that in a day. I appreciate the academic research by the author’s father for the secrets revealed in this book.
Good work by the author and his father.
February 1st, 2010 at 5:50 am
Volga and Amoratado – I am a big fan of Shakespeare and his work. I like read his plays and always try to get time to watch movies based his plays.
Both of your talks made me to take a look on the book you are talking about. I have read the PDF available on the side but I am facing problem to purchase that book online as I am not a UK based. Please provide me some alternative solutions if any one of you know. I found you people active on this topic so thought to ask you first otherwise will contact directly to Rex.
Klaus
February 1st, 2010 at 8:05 am
Amazon UK won’t deliver outside the UK?
When I went to the site, it advertised “Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery,” but if you’re willing to pay for shipping, they should be able to send it to you wherever you are.
Welcome, Klaus! I hope you enjoy the rest of the site; there’s a lot here that a fan of Shakespeare can enjoy.
February 1st, 2010 at 10:43 am
Hi Klaus
if Amazon won’t deliver outside the UK you can buy as an e-book. The link to Lulu is the author’s website http://www.rexrichards.com
Good luck!
February 2nd, 2010 at 4:26 am
Hello Klaus
Yes Amoratado is right. I am also not from UK, so I bought that book as an e-book from the link redirected by author’s site. For your reference I am giving link’s URL here too http://www.lulu.com/product/e-book/shakespeares-truth-ebook/5972416 .
You can buy that book from here.
Volga