Jacobean Stagecraft- Notes And Queries
Apr. 9th, 2012 12:34 pm1. An Elizabethan audience would have been full of people who carried weapons and knew how to use them. I assume the fighting on stage would have had to have been fairly realistic to please them.
2. How many bodies could Shakespeare muster to form his armies and mobs?
3. The Tempest has a scene in which a banquet is made to vanish "with a quaint device". I'd love to know how that was done. Slightly later a bunch of nymphs and reapers perform a dance and then "to a strange, hollow, and confused noise, they heavily vanish". "Heavily vanish": what on earth does that mean?
2. How many bodies could Shakespeare muster to form his armies and mobs?
3. The Tempest has a scene in which a banquet is made to vanish "with a quaint device". I'd love to know how that was done. Slightly later a bunch of nymphs and reapers perform a dance and then "to a strange, hollow, and confused noise, they heavily vanish". "Heavily vanish": what on earth does that mean?
no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 11:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 12:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 12:19 pm (UTC)As for mobs and armies, I believe the answer is 'not many' it was more about a few actors and then creating the effect of more using drums etc than having a lot of people on stage. Lots of plays use the audience to good effect for crowd scenes, though, and have actors emerge from the audience so that the crowd becomes part of the effect.
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Date: 2012-04-09 12:36 pm (UTC)So, we conjure up a host with noise not numbers. That makes sense. I like the idea that they made use of the audience.
Come, come. This won't do.
Date: 2012-04-09 02:52 pm (UTC)Re: Come, come. This won't do.
Date: 2012-04-09 04:01 pm (UTC)There are other so-called "vanishings" in the Tempest- including that of a banquet "with a quaint device". It seems to me they'd developed a way of making things disappear in full view of the audience and were having fun with it.
That there is a distinction between vanishing & exeunt, I don't deny.
Date: 2012-04-09 04:23 pm (UTC)But I cd of course be wrong.
Re: That there is a distinction between vanishing & exeunt, I don't deny.
Date: 2012-04-09 05:50 pm (UTC)Oh, THERE'S a question.
Date: 2012-04-09 07:43 pm (UTC)Too many choices, really.
Re: Oh, THERE'S a question.
Date: 2012-04-09 09:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 06:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 07:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 07:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-09 07:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-10 11:51 pm (UTC)You have a table, with a fake banquet built into the tabletop as a single piece. The entire tabletop spins, flipping upside down, with the reverse side being an empty table. You can make the food appear and disappear at will by spinning the tabletop around.
Stage fencing masters could also work as real martial arts instructors, too. The sword-swap in the Hamlet/Laertes fight requires a pretty well-known disarm counter to work: you lock and grapple blades, then twist it out of your opponent's hand -- but it leaves your own blade vulnerable to a similar twist if the opponent knows how to do it, but at least you've got your grappled sword in a good position to wield it, and vice-versa. It's actually a pretty slick exchange done well.
Shakespeare's company could be stripped to 13 actors for his touring crew, but usually had a few more than that. For crowd scenes, they likely dropped costumes on their stagehands, money collectors, and possibly even locals. Say, maybe, twenty-plus bodies?
no subject
Date: 2012-04-11 08:21 am (UTC)Twenty people on a small stage is quite a crowd.