All Semblative a Woman's Part?: Studies in the Staging of and Audience Response to Boy Actors in Sexual Disguise in the Elizabethan Theatre 1580-1615H. Gras, 1991 - 583 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 281
... final match with a newly discovered Lady Veramour . Lamira , whom he finally does marry , at first does not show much interest in Montaigne ( cf. 3.3.133ff . ) . Moreover , she is continually matched to Amiens , whom she herself admits ...
... final match with a newly discovered Lady Veramour . Lamira , whom he finally does marry , at first does not show much interest in Montaigne ( cf. 3.3.133ff . ) . Moreover , she is continually matched to Amiens , whom she herself admits ...
Página 283
... final Act of As You Like It ) . Only in the final scene , 5.4 , is all cleared up . There are , however , two versions of this scene , one in a manuscript dating from about 1625 and another in the Beaumont and Fletcher folio of 1647 ...
... final Act of As You Like It ) . Only in the final scene , 5.4 , is all cleared up . There are , however , two versions of this scene , one in a manuscript dating from about 1625 and another in the Beaumont and Fletcher folio of 1647 ...
Página 292
... final line in that scene ( or miss the clue Cesario drops there ) , from that moment on playing with the image as one might with that of the rabbit and the duck . A playwright can help the audience penetrate a disguise by creating a ...
... final line in that scene ( or miss the clue Cesario drops there ) , from that moment on playing with the image as one might with that of the rabbit and the duck . A playwright can help the audience penetrate a disguise by creating a ...
Términos y frases comunes
action actor acts actually alludes ambiguous appears aspects audience awareness beauty becomes behaviour boy actor called Chapter character clear compared connected considered contains context course desire developed device direct discussed display effect elements Elizabethan English enters erotic example explain expressed female feminine final follows friendship Ganymede give given homosexual idea implies indicate instance interest interpretation joke Jonson kind Lady latter lines lover male marriage meaning mind Moreover nature object original particularly passion performance person play players possible present probably reason references reflect regards relationship remark Renaissance response role satire says scene seems sense sexual disguise Shakespeare shows situation social sodomy spectator stage story stress suggests symbolic taken theatre theatrical thinks thought tradition true turn Twelfth Night wants wife wish woman women wooing young