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Much Ado About Nothing: An Overview

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 4.29
  Total Words: 1072
  Total Characters: 5502
  Number of Sentences: 62


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 17.29
  Characters per Words: 5.13


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 58.68
  Fog Scale Level: 12.03
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 9.37  

Much Ado About Nothing: An Overview


     It is a beautiful spring afternoon.  The air is full of the radiance of
freshly bloomed daisies and the energizing chill of the periodic spring breeze.
Puffy large cumulus clouds fill the azure sky with gray thunderheads looming off
in the distance.  Looking down from the clouds, one can see a gathering of
finely dressed people.  Birds flying overhead hear the murmurs of the crowd
gathered for a wedding of gentry.
     Shakespeare could never have planned the first scene of Act IV in Much
Ado About Nothing so well.  The serene sky overhead symbolizing the beauty and
joviality of the occasion; dark rain clouds looming in the distance
foreshadowing the mischief to come.  Despite his inability to control weather
patterns, Shakespeare developed marvelous scenes which he displayed in his own
theater, The Globe.  How did Shakespeare portray the emotional aspects of his
characters and their strife to his audience?  How did he direct the actors and
what did the open air stage of The Globe look like?
     Imagine yourself in London circa 1600, a short year after the completion
of the Globe Theater and perhaps a few months after the completion of the play
Much Ado About Nothing, Act IV has just begun.  Claudio and Hero are facing each
other in front of a simple, yet anciently beautiful altar, garbed in Elizabethan
costume fit for the occasion.  Hero is wearing a long white dress with trailer
and high neck which is adorned according to the fashion trends of the time.
Claudio has donned a royal looking doublet with silver trim and hose to equally
as majestic.  Sitting on either side of the couple in ancient pews, shrouded in
solemn silence, are Don Pedro the Prince of Aragon, Don John the Bastard,
Leonato, Benedick, Beatrice and the attendants of Beatrice and Hero.  Facing the
couple, positioned in between them so the audience may hear him, is Friar
Francis wearing a simple white robe and golden cross, his only posessio...

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