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    • Image courtesy of npr.org

      npr.org

      • In Shakespeare's time, plays were usually performed in natural daylight. A handful of indoor theatres used candlelight. There was no electricity so there was no stage lighting as we understand it. Nowadays, plays are generally performed inside, using sophisticated computer technology and variable lighting rigs.
      www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/zpvkhv4/revision/4
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  2. Playwrights in Shakespeare's time used language to describe 'special effects' much of the time; but acting companies could also produce very dramatic special effects. Thunder and lightning filled the theatre for storms.

  3. Appia, Adolph Artaud, Antonin Bowdler, Thomas Brecht, Bertolt Brook, Peter Brunelleschi, Filippo candlelight Chiaroscuro Cibber, Colly Craig, Edward Gordon Doctor Faustus Elizabethan stage “the Family Shakespeare” Florence footlight gas light Globe (playhouse) Hamlet Henry VI, Part 3 Jones, Inigo King Lear light lighting lighting Design ...

  4. Learn about what it was like to put on a performance in Shakespeare’s day without the use of fancy props, staging or even being able to use women on stage.

  5. Dec 13, 2017 · Their book, Shakespeare’s Theatre and the Effects of Performance, offers copious examples of just how playwrights did this: fireworks hissing and shooting across the stage, fake blood, fake body parts, disguises, paint on the walls and on the actors’ faces, the smell of blood and death, and worse.

  6. When the stage lights came up the audience was confronted with an elaborate, detailed set – the sumptuous library of the Earl. There was oak paneling, huge, filled bookshelves, a big mahogany desk, antique chairs, Persian carpets and traditional fabric sofas.

  7. They also offer a more intimate setting with the use of artificial light. Shakespeare’s company planned for years to operate its own indoor theater, a goal that was finally achieved in 1609 when the Burbages took over London’s Blackfriars theater.

  8. Defining spaces in eighteenth-century Shakespeare illustration. Shakespeare, Vol. 9, Issue. 2, p. 149.

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