|
 | Shakespeare > Scenes & Monologues | | | | |  | | MORE SCENES FROM SHAKESPEARE | | By: William Shakespeare, Michael Wilson | | Twenty cuttings for acting and directing practice. A better way to get students excited about acting Shakespeare, from a twenty-year drama instructor. Breaking Shakespeare’s plays into small, workable scenes improves students’ interest, enthusiasm, and performance. Each scene is preceded by a list of lead and supporting characters and... read more |
|
| | | | |  | | SCENES FROM SHAKESPEARE | | By: William Shakespeare, Michael Wilson | | Fifteen cuttings for the classroom. Many instructors teach Shakespeare by studying only one of his many plays, owing to time constraints. Now students are able to easily study a variety of his works and come to a more complete understanding of the world’s most famous playwright. Only scenes with small casts, between two and seven... read more |
|
| | | | |  | | SHAKESPEARE ALIVE! | | By: Rick Hamilton, Fredi Olster, William Shakespeare | | Two-minute speeches and monologues for study, audition, and performance by Fredi Olster and Rick Hamilton. "Highly recommended and unusual in many respects. First, each monologue is presented in a side-by-side format, with the original on the left, and on the right a rewording in modern English to help the actor fully understand the... read more |
|
| | | | |  | | SHAKESPEARE MONOLOGUES FOR YOUNG MEN | | By: Luke Dixon | | Fifty fresh speeches from William Shakespeare's plays, hand-picked for young people and prefaced with easy-to-use guides that explain who is speaking; where, when, and to whom; what has just happened in the play; and what the character's objectives are—everything actors need to know! |
|
| | | | |  | | SHAKESPEARE MONOLOGUES FOR YOUNG WOMEN | | By: Luke Dixon | | Fifty fresh speeches from William Shakespeare's plays, hand-picked for young women and prefaced with easy-to-use guides. Drawing on his experience as an acting and audition coach, Luke Dixon has selected fifty monologues for young women drawn from across the Shakespeare canon. |
|
|
| |
|