These days, the house lights and stage lights go down and music plays loudly. A hundred years ago the house lights went down and a curtain went up. Four hundred years ago, people would come bounding on the stage and start talking in very loud voices. Often something spectacular would happen, like witches coming out of the floor.
the flag went up
three quatrains and a couplet
We don't know, because:We don't know which of Shakespeare's plays was his first.We don't know when most of his plays were performed for the first time.We aren't even sure which theatrical companies performed his plays before 1594.We do not know where any of his plays were performed before 1594.We can only guess at how the audience reacted to any of his plays. There were no theatre critics back then. Nobody had a theatre blog where they talked about which plays they liked or didn't like. Some people (Thomas Platter, Simon Forman, John Manningham) wrote in their diaries that they had attended one of Shakespeare's plays, but they were more interested in describing what went on in the plays than how the audience liked them. The best way of knowing whether a play was popular was whether booksellers thought it would be commercially viable to publish a copy of the script.
We do not know how Elizabethan audiences reacted to specific lines in plays. Nobody recorded that kind of information.
i dont know di pa namin kc yan pnag aaralan
the flag went up
If you don't know your audience then you'll quickly lose their interest when you start trying to motivate them to your cause. You have to get inside their heads before you can truly put them on your side.
Henry VI Part III. How do we know this? It was this play which was quoted in the bitter and satiric attack on Shakespeare by the dying Robert Greene in Greene's Groatsworth of Wit in 1592.
three quatrains and a couplet
We don't know, because:We don't know which of Shakespeare's plays was his first.We don't know when most of his plays were performed for the first time.We aren't even sure which theatrical companies performed his plays before 1594.We do not know where any of his plays were performed before 1594.We can only guess at how the audience reacted to any of his plays. There were no theatre critics back then. Nobody had a theatre blog where they talked about which plays they liked or didn't like. Some people (Thomas Platter, Simon Forman, John Manningham) wrote in their diaries that they had attended one of Shakespeare's plays, but they were more interested in describing what went on in the plays than how the audience liked them. The best way of knowing whether a play was popular was whether booksellers thought it would be commercially viable to publish a copy of the script.
One way you can establish a good relationship with your audience during a briefing is to start out by telling a joke. You can also let them know that they can ask questions at the end of your briefing.
We do not know how Elizabethan audiences reacted to specific lines in plays. Nobody recorded that kind of information.
Ethos (credibility) assures your reader or audience that you know what you are talking about.
One way you can establish a good relationship with your audience during a briefing is to start out by telling a joke. You can also let them know that they can ask questions at the end of your briefing.
One way you can establish a good relationship with your audience during a briefing is to start out by telling a joke. You can also let them know that they can ask questions at the end of your briefing.
One way you can establish a good relationship with your audience during a briefing is to start out by telling a joke. You can also let them know that they can ask questions at the end of your briefing.
One way you can establish a good relationship with your audience during a briefing is to start out by telling a joke. You can also let them know that they can ask questions at the end of your briefing.