Instructional Video11:49
Crash Course

English Theater After Shakespeare: Crash Course Theater #17

12th - Higher Ed
This week on Crash Course Theater, Shakespeare is dead. Long live Shakespeare. Well, long live English theater, anyway. Actually, it's about to get banned. Anyway, we're discussing where English theater went post-1616. We'll talk about...
Instructional Video11:33
Crash Course

The Rise of Melodrama: Crash Course Theater #28

12th - Higher Ed
At the turn of the 18th century, audience were ready to go over the top, and get some really, really dramatic theater in their lives. Like, a dog dueling a man type of dramatic. In London, only two theaters were licensed, but...
Instructional Video10:51
Crash Course

Straight Outta Stratford-Upon-Avon - Shakespeare's Early Days: Crash Course Theater #14

12th - Higher Ed
This is the story of how a young Englishman named William Shakespeare stormed London's theater scene in the late 16th century, and wrote a bunch of plays and poems that have had pretty good staying power. We'll learn about Shakespeare's...
Instructional Video12:53
Crash Course

Where Did Theater Go? Crash Course Theater #18

12th - Higher Ed
The English Theater survived a lot of pushback from various powers that be, but in the 17th century, it had to go into hiding, from PURITANS. Let's take a look at how the English Civil War, Charles I's beheading, and the Restoration of...
Instructional Video12:17
Crash Course

The English Renaissance and NOT Shakespeare: Crash Course Theater #13

12th - Higher Ed
The Renaissance came to England late, thanks to a Hundred Years War that ran long and lasted 116 years, and then a civil war to decide who would be the royal family. BUT after all that, with the Tudors (relatively) securely installed on...
Instructional Video11:29
Crash Course

Shakespeare's Tragedies and an Acting Lesson: Crash Course Theater #15

12th - Higher Ed
Shakespeare's tragedies...were tragic. But they had some jokes. They also changed the way tragedies were written. Characters like Hamlet, Macbeth, and King Lear had tragic outcomes, but they were sympathetic characters in a lot of ways....
Instructional Video0:50
Curated Video

A Midsummer Night's Dream 1.1 Performance: Lysander Lines 99-110

6th - Higher Ed
This video features a performance from "A Midsummer Night's Dream" where Lysander passionately argues his right to marry Hermia, contrasting his love and status with Demetrius's. The performance highlights Lysander's eloquence and...