Shakespeare performance

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GIVEAWAY! 🩰 Romeo and Juliet was choreographed by BalletMet’s Artistic Director Edwaard Liang and is back for the first time since 2016! (partner) The ballet will be performed April 26-28 at the Ohio Theatre alongside the Columbus Symphony Orchestra With Rossen Milanov conducting. ❤️ Inspired by Sergei Prokofiev’s score, Romeo and Juliet sets William Shakespeare’s most well-known and beloved play to dance! The action-packed, visually stunning ballet will feature sword fights, a grand ball,... Romeo And Juliet National Theatre, Romeo And Juliet Ballet Aesthetic, Romeo And Juliet Set Design, Romeo And Juliet Setting, Romeo And Juliet Theatre, Shakespeare Performance, James Farrow, Romeo And Juliet Play, Romeo And Juliet Ballet

GIVEAWAY! 🩰 Romeo and Juliet was choreographed by BalletMet’s Artistic Director Edwaard Liang and is back for the first time since 2016! (partner) The ballet will be performed April 26-28 at the Ohio Theatre alongside the Columbus Symphony Orchestra With Rossen Milanov conducting. ❤️ Inspired by Sergei Prokofiev’s score, Romeo and Juliet sets William Shakespeare’s most well-known and beloved play to dance! The action-packed, visually stunning ballet will feature sword fights, a grand…

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Breaking the fourth wall was common in Elizabethan theatre, specifically in Shakespeare's works. Shakespeare employs tactics of this in nearly all of his plays, from character asides, to monologues, even to epilogues. Epilogues in certain plays such as The Tempest, As You Like It, the song at the end of Twelfth Night and more demonstrate an awareness that the spell of the show is broken, that "our play is done" (Twelfth Night 5.1.394), to remind the audience the play  isn't real. ~Alyssa Cok... Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Words, Elizabethan Era, Shakespeare In Love, Shakespeare Plays, Midsummer Nights Dream, Moyen Age, Logo Illustration, William Shakespeare

Breaking the fourth wall was common in Elizabethan theatre, specifically in Shakespeare's works. Shakespeare employs tactics of this in nearly all of his plays, from character asides, to monologues, even to epilogues. Epilogues in certain plays such as The Tempest, As You Like It, the song at the end of Twelfth Night and more demonstrate an awareness that the spell of the show is broken, that "our play is done" (Twelfth Night 5.1.394), to remind the audience the play isn't real. ~Alyssa…

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