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The Comedy of Errors

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Title: The Comedy of Errors


1
The Comedy of Errors
2
The Comedy of Errors
  • Shakespeares earliest comedy, although the exact
    date of writing is unknown.
  • It is also his shortest play - less than half the
    size of Hamlet which has over 4,000 lines.
  • The plays premiere was at an inn in 1594, with
    its first performance at court in 1604.

3
Plautus - 254-184 B.C.
  • As with many of Shakespeares plays, he drew
    inspiration from classical tales. The plot line
    for The Comedy of Errors comes from a Roman
    comedy, Menaechmi, written by the dramatist
    Plautus.
  • Shakespeares own amendments to the plot come in
    the addition of the extra set of identical Dromio
    twins plus the fleshing out of the female
    characters in the play.

4
The Comedy of Errors
  • The Comedy of Errors is also the only play of
    Shakespeares, other than The Tempest, which sets
    the action over a single day and a single place,
    in this case the city of Ephesus.
  • The real city of Ephesus is today located in
    Turkey, with the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus one
    of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

5
Ephesus
  • In Roman times it became one of the wealthiest
    cities in the Mediterranean due to its proximity
    to the Aegean Sea, making its name and profit as
    a commercial port.
  • Shakespeare uses this stimulus to generate the
    commercial rivalry within the play between the
    two cities of Ephesus and Syracuse. It is this
    rivalry which leads the character Solinus, the
    Duke of Ephesus, to set laws forbidding merchants
    of Syracuse to trade in his city unless they pay
    a fine of 1000 marks.

6
The Comedy of Errors
  • This law has dire consequences for Egeon who, at
    the beginning of the play, is sentenced to death
    for landing illegally in Ephesus, unless the fine
    is paid before the day is out.

7
The Comedy of Errors
  • The play uses both farce and physical humor to
    portray the comedy confusion of two sets of twins
    constantly being mistaken for the other, with
    neither one being aware of the presence of their
    brother, and the play makes demands of its
    audience to keep track of the identities of the
    two sets of twins the Antipholus men and the
    Dromio men.

8
Farce
  • The word farce derives from Old French, meaning
    'stuff' or 'stuffing' and may have originated in
    the comic interludes of medieval French religious
    plays serving as light-hearted stuffing in
    between more serious drama.
  • Definition A light dramatic work in which highly
    improbable plot situations, exaggerated
    characters, and often slapstick elements are used
    for humorous effect.

9
The Comedy of Errors
  • It also has touching moments, telling the tragic
    story of a family separated for many years. So,
    within the humor of the play, we have moments of
    great emotion - combining sadness and loss with
    tender and poignant reconciliations.

10
Agree or Disagree?
  • Coincidences happen all the time.
  • Its not okay to mistreat those who work for you.
  • Promises and deals should always be kept.
  • Honor and reputation are everything.
  • Love and family heal all wounds.
  • Without trust, relationships are doomed.
  • Miracles do happen.

11
Irony
  • The use of words to express something different
    from and often opposite to their literal meaning
    Incongruity between what might be expected and
    what actually occurs.

12
3 Types of Irony
  1. Verbal saying the opposite of what one means
  2. Dramatic contrast between what the speaker says
    and what the author means when the reader knows
    something the character does not know
  3. Situational discrepancy between actual
    circumstances and those that would seem
    appropriate

13
CAST Per 3
Bugarin SOLINUS, Duke of Ephesus
Marcel EGEON, a Merchant of Syracuse
Heintz ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus
Abboud ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse
Mario DROMIO of Ephesus
Sosa DROMIO of Syracuse
Rosseel BALTHAZAR, a Merchant
Naveretti ANGELO, a Goldsmith
Diaz Merchant, Friend to Antipholus of Syracuse
Brady A Second Merchant, to whom Angelo is a debtor
Venkataraman PINCH, a Schoolmaster and a Conjurer
Whipple EMILIA/ABBESS, Wife to Egeon, an Abbess at Ephesus
Granado ADRIANA, Wife to Antipholus of Ephesus
Pedro LUCIANA, her Sister
Nakazawa LUCE, Servant to Andriana
Forst A Courtezan
  • Twin Brothers, sons to Egeon and Emilia
  • Twin Brothers, attendants on the two Antipholi

14
CAST Per 7
Eagle SOLINUS, Duke of Ephesus
Marcel EGEON, a Merchant of Syracuse
Jesse ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus
Kanishk ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse
Foote DROMIO of Ephesus
Sheridan DROMIO of Syracuse
Barker BALTHAZAR, a Merchant
Garcia ANGELO, a Goldsmith
Ben Kelly Merchant, Friend to Antipholus of Syracuse
Tu A Second Merchant, to whom Angelo is a debtor
Huttlinger PINCH, a Schoolmaster and a Conjurer
Baker EMILIA, Wife to Egeon, an Abbess at Ephesus
Bigelow ADRIANA, Wife to Antipholus of Ephesus
Bill Kelly LUCIANA, her Sister
Vu LUCE, Servant to Andriana
Muldowney A Courtezan
  • Twin Brothers, sons to Egeon and Emilia
  • Twin Brothers, attendants on the two Antipholi

15
  • Verse find the lines
  • Prose .40
  • Imagery
  • Lists
  • Repetition
  • Was ever woman in this humour wooed? Was ever
    woman in this humour won?
  • Antithesis
  • To be, or not to be
  • Soliloquy
  • Rhetoric HV
  • Character
  • Atmospherer
  • Themes

16
Characteristics of the ComediesMOVE THIS TO
Midsummer
  1. At least one heroine, more spirited than her male
    counterpart, undertakes a self-imposed mission to
    overcome conventional opposition
  2. The female roles generally outsmart the males
    either in verbal conflict or by capturing them
  3. The marital wrap-up looks only questionably
    happy, resolved for the sake of the children,
    that is, the future

17
Characteristics of the Comedies
  1. There are at least two marriageable couples one
    is more broadly comic or even farcical than the
    other
  2. At least one role is taught a lesson (Malvolio,
    Shylock, Prosperos foes)
  3. Adaptations abound outright theft from a great
    variety of sources

18
Characteristics of the Comedies
  1. The action occupies two principal settings,
    sometimes contrasted, and a few subsidiary ones
  2. A healing of social and personal wounds will
    follow from a night or nightmare, an endurance
    test or rite of passage, a social ritual or a
    mockery of one

19
Characteristics of the Comedies
  1. The playwright manipulates different levels of
    awareness, using multi-layered dramatic irony and
    often conspiracies
  2. Conflicts between generations young lovers defy
    and usually defeat paternalism

20
Characteristics of the Comedies
  1. Further impediments to marriage are sure to crop
    up
  2. An undercutting or overlaying of the comic form
    Shakespeare inherited from Plautus and Terrance

21
Characteristics of the Comedies
  1. In every comedy (but not only in the comedies) we
    find the presence of at least one fool
  2. Inconsistencies crop up when the principal roles
    alter under the impact of the plotting, to reveal
    new aspects of themselves
  3. In a Shakespearean comedy, the action typically
    opens with a previously stable action already in
    flux and now a conflict or tone of sadness rules
    the scene structure consists in creating
    favorable expectations, only to fulfill them or
    leave them unfulfilled
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