When a giant channel comments on another giant channel about a title, what does that say about our society??
@ms.rstake_12116 жыл бұрын
Wow! Is this really Ted Ed. Do a collab!
@tuskinekinase6 жыл бұрын
Hello TED-Ed, your Shakespeare videos are also amazing, please do more
@Udontkno76 жыл бұрын
yo!
@vksepe6 жыл бұрын
Honestly, Stratford is such a cute little town. I live like 20 minutes away and this title makes me chuckle imagining the NWA coming from there.
@MarkThePage6 жыл бұрын
I swear everyone in that town owns like five dogs. It's amazing.
@mrfantastic94666 жыл бұрын
Stratford is amazing, in the summer its just beautiful
@ninamarie1776 жыл бұрын
I visited Stratford about 4 years ago in summer and I loved the vibe, I really wanna go there again to just relax.
@Udontkno76 жыл бұрын
If only that vibe was in Compton lmao
@biginbabylon6 жыл бұрын
I did Richard III for many years ! Love that he’s getting more attention . Now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this son of York !
@jacklandismusic5 жыл бұрын
“A few years ago, they found Richard’s bones. In a parking lot.” Imperious Caesar, dead and turned to clay, / Might stop a hole to keep the wind away.
@Farellemoon6 жыл бұрын
You are seriously one fo the most fun host/teachers this series has. I just love the energy so dang ol' much.
@papelhojas6 жыл бұрын
I could (and did when i first found crash course) watch most of these for hours, i honestly wish every single episode of just about any topic was longer 👍✨👊
@leannuh476 жыл бұрын
This title is everything
@superdark3366 жыл бұрын
A charismatic villian with scoliosis... me irl....
@1gorli6 жыл бұрын
Ah, yes. The famous Would-I-was Shook-speared
@Calvero526 жыл бұрын
I recently got back into Shakespeare after seeing the Broadway show Something Rotten last month, fittingly the day after his birthday. The show pokes loving fun at musicals and Shakespeare and doesn't take anything seriously, such as a tap dance battle between the protagonist, Nick, and Shakespeare. Hilarious show whether you love or hate Shakespeare or musicals 😄
@chloewilliams25294 жыл бұрын
7:40 he really do be dabbing tho...
@stephaniehight27716 жыл бұрын
OK, nobody else made the joke, so I must. "They paved Richard III and put up a parking lot.">
@gazelleguy6 жыл бұрын
Was that light falling after saying Macbeth for real? Or is Yorick truly a man of infinite jest?
@BlueTyphoon76 жыл бұрын
He knew that naming the scotish play was a bad idea, yet he did so anyway
@Dinuial6 жыл бұрын
Thank you for addressing the "Shakespeare isn't Shakespeare" thing right off the bat. It started in his lifetime as elitist prejudice and the biggest reason it's still around today is people think he was the world's greatest playwright when he was, in fact, one of the world's greatest script doctors.
@audiblebeauty6 жыл бұрын
I highly recommend Looking for Richard with Al Pacino for a great dive into the character and villain, plus some general interludes on the Bard. More recently, the Hollow Crown has been an AMAZING adaptation of the history plays.
@QUARTERMASTEREMI66 жыл бұрын
@audiblebeauty Hah! - *I loved the Hollow Crown.* One brilliant series worth every minute! :)
@culwin6 жыл бұрын
SHAKE-SCENE SICK BURN!!!!
@katiegould66096 жыл бұрын
Ugh I LOVE Richard III (the play, not the guy)! There's a lot of interesting discussion about disability as a tool, either for the country to see him as unfit (and a metaphor that the kingdom is unfit) or that it's subversive in that he uses ppl's misunderstanding of him to do what he wants. Also you got the whole nature vs nurture. AND there's so much discussion of guilt and fate and power from the women I could go on for ages I mean just WOW!
@lucillem77066 жыл бұрын
I love Richard III so much, I spent 2 years studying it in my english lit class and I'll never be as passionate about any other play as I am with Richard III. Richard murdered Anne's fiancé and her father in law too though (I mean, that's the point of Anne's scene in Act I).
@keelsteacher28204 жыл бұрын
Lucille M I love Richard III as well!
@CaptainRiterraSmith6 жыл бұрын
Verily was he a worldly genius! A prolific father of tropes and words! Shakespeare, a codifier of drama!
@aperson222226 жыл бұрын
In college I wrote a paper about how subversive _Richard III_ was. A huge amount of it centered on how much less memorable Richmond was, and I argued that this is confirmed as Shakespeare's intention when he flat-out tells the audience that Richmond is a "puissant." I assumed that was just an old-timey spelling of "pissant." Nope. Much the opposite in fact.
@agilemind62416 жыл бұрын
Yeah, "puissant" is french for powerful. And at the time public executions and bear baiting were entertainment so it makes sense that propaganda plays would be about bad-dudes getting their comeuppance rather than glorifying the current rulers.
@tuskinekinase6 жыл бұрын
It's truly amazing how Richard III and MacBeth are among my favorite characters of all theatre. The MacBeths are quite sympathetic, and though Richard was painted very, very hard in a bad light, we still can't help rooting for this magnificent bastard at various points in the play. This Shakes had a knack in writing compelling villians and antiheroes which I think all creative people could and should learn from.
@AnonymousFreakYT6 жыл бұрын
"Ale taster of the borough... and eventually mayor, An unorthodox political ascendancy." Portland, Oregon had this in the 1980s. Local bar owner Bud Clark, also famous for being the man in the trenchcoat in the "Expose Yourself to Art" poster, ran for mayor in 1984 as an independent against the incumbent mayor, and to the surprise of many political commentators, won. (Bud was the only "serious" other candidate, nobody in the political establishment wanted to run against the incumbent mayor.) Bud went on to serve two (very successful) terms, then retired back to owning his bar. (Which he still owns, and regularly presides over, in his late '80s today.)
@toluatilola64126 жыл бұрын
I go to the same school that Shakespeare went to!
@npinero16 жыл бұрын
STATIC!!! Don’t start none, won’t be none!
@aperson222226 жыл бұрын
Ale Taster of the Borough? I wish that were my job.
@MarkThePage6 жыл бұрын
I say MacBeth before every show, and they go swimmingly. I could go on for hours about Shakespeare (and Stratford-upon-Avon, which has SO MANY DOGS). The bard wanted all of his plays to do and be everything. Did you know he wrote his lines in iambic meter? Not just the poetry--all the dialogue. Iambic meter. Check it.
@UltimateKyuubiFox6 жыл бұрын
MarkThePage Iambic pentameter.
@Udontkno76 жыл бұрын
I wish I had your bravery. I just say "The Scottish Play" really softly.
@patricksratliff6 жыл бұрын
But (more sincerely) there are some notable exceptions to the use of iambic pentameter. In some plays it comes and goes without discernible explanation...although certain cases (e.g. the weird sisters use of trochaic incantation, "DOU-ble DOU-ble TOIL and TROU-ble; the contrast of Mark Antony's more (emotionally) rhetorically impactful funeral speech (in meter) with Brutus' (who gives his funeral speech in prose); the porter in Macbeth; etc.) suggest that Shakespeare continued to develop ideas as to how to apply (and also sometimes remove) functional, overarching meter for great effect. "Diction" or "lexis" is one of the core ideas of Aristotle's foundational analysis of the tragedy.
@williamwant54826 жыл бұрын
@@patricksratliff and pretty much all of twelfth night is in prose
@Groaker6 жыл бұрын
Shakespeare. The "Empire Strikes Back" of Crash Course Theater
@kimhardonniere8706 жыл бұрын
i love this community of learning that crash course creates, unfortunately, i don't live in a community of learners even though i'm in high school but i've learnt so much on world history thanks to my wonderful teachers who recomended it. Thank you !
@NoelleMar6 жыл бұрын
John Shakespeare has always cracked me up. I want to write a book about him lol. Also, heart eyes. So happy for this episode.
@Nanoubonbon6 жыл бұрын
I’m with you!!!!
@TheDamborg6 жыл бұрын
Slight correction: Richard killed Lady Anne's Husband and Father-in-law, not Father and brother.
@abi2436 жыл бұрын
Wait so a quarto is basically a bootleg?
@MarkThePage6 жыл бұрын
Yes! Scripts weren't being printed and sold, so people would see the shows and try to remember the lines and scribble everything down. Though I haven't heard of any of these bootleg scripts being used for productions. One imagines copying a Shakespeare play down the street might not go over well.
@AlKohaiMusic6 жыл бұрын
After so many years of performing it, I still love the Shakes. Mainly because I can read his plays in a variety of queer contexts. And that’s truly the think in life that makes me happiest.
@masonroman99314 жыл бұрын
Who's watching this bc there teacher said so
@NoaGloomy4 жыл бұрын
We shall forever be trapped lol
@sp4c3it554 жыл бұрын
yeah
@arijitbhattacharjee196 жыл бұрын
I love this man
@colinrast65725 жыл бұрын
!! I can't imagine a person writing plays in just a week or two.
@MKPiatkowski5 жыл бұрын
If you've already got the basics of plot and character, which he did because all his plays were based on earlier stories, you just need to decide structure and write dialogue. It can certainly be done.
@annikboyer33956 жыл бұрын
I wonder if Molière will be covered. Les fourberies de Scapin with Louis de Funès was totally genious!
@dervlacunningham47702 жыл бұрын
You are absolutely fabulous
@meghuskin33836 жыл бұрын
IS OPERA NEXT???
@QUARTERMASTEREMI66 жыл бұрын
@Crash Course From _"A kingdom for my horse!"_ to Mike's *Boo Richard! Yay Richmond!* _I have got to love myself some rah-rah Tudor propaganda._ (9:37 - My favourite part by far! Mike, do keep it up! ♡)
@elfarlaur6 жыл бұрын
Richard III must have been the inspiration behind Crusader Kings II
@keep1234quiet6 жыл бұрын
wow!shakespeare told me he love this title in my dream,and he want call you...
@ben123321neb6 жыл бұрын
It's actually Stratford-upon-Avon with a lowercase 'U' - a resident
@colinrast65725 жыл бұрын
I didn't know that most of Shakespeare's plays were written collaboratively.
@jamiee73674 жыл бұрын
Not exactly "most", but a fair amount. Of the 36 plays in the first folio, 5 plays are collaborations: _Titus Andronicus_ with George Peele, _2 & 3 Henry VI_ with Christopher Marlowe(?), _Timon of Athens_ with Thomas Middleton, and _Henry VIII_ with John Fletcher. 1 play, _1 Henry VI_ is Shakespeare’s revision of an earlier play written by Thomas Nashe & 1 or 2 others (possibly Marlowe). 4 plays ( _Titus Andronicus, Measure for Measure, All's Well that Ends Well,_ & _Macbeth_ ) also appear to contain additions by Thomas Middleton. Outside the folio, _Pericles_ was written with George Wilkins, and _The Two Noble Kinsmen_ & _Cardenio_ were written with Fletcher. There's also the anonymous plays _Edward III_ & _Arden of Faversham._ _Edward III_ is definitely a collaboration between Shakespeare & at least 1 other, but their identity(s) is contested. _Arden of Faversham_ may be written by Shakespeare & Thomas Watson(?), but others dispute Shakespeare having any hand in it, let alone Watson. Shakespeare also wrote short additions for the plays _Sir Thomas More, The Spanish Tragedy,_ and possibly _A Knack to Know a Knave._ Finally, there's _Sejanus His Fall,_ by Ben Johnson & a collaborator. The play was very controversial, & accused of "Popery & Treason". Therefore, Johnson rewrote all his collaborator's parts before publication, & never mentioned who they were. Shakespeare is one of the more likely candidates for this collaborator's identity. All in all, that's: *9* definite collaborations *2* potentially collaborations *3* plays added to or revised by Shakespeare *1* play possibly added to by Shakespeare *4* Shakespeare plays revised by Middleton that's *19* in total. Quite a lot, in my opinion.
@JBTriple86 жыл бұрын
I watched A Shakespeare Episode on the Netflix of the Who Was Show i didnt know the saying My Kingdom For A Horse came from Richard III
@Meatybanky136 жыл бұрын
Can you create one about slavic gods
@janedough89976 жыл бұрын
Will you be making a video about Aphra Behn?
@oof-rr5nf6 жыл бұрын
Jane Dough Nice profile photo! Power to the aces. ✊
@lindamo90676 жыл бұрын
What happened to the Life of Pi vid from Crash Course Literature
@momosbread75074 жыл бұрын
Yoo can someone helps with a paragraph I have to do about this because I’m doing online school because of covid-19 and I’m soo confused 😣
@traceyolsen3083 ай бұрын
Have you covered the authorship question? That would be a good episode. The First Folio has sections where cryptographers have shown passages are saying Francis Bacon and Henry Neville wrote them, some other printing on The Sonnets have a code suggesting they were composed by de Vere ...some other texts that Marlow was a front for Bacon,.. and if there was another author. why put these codes into the official versions to imply these other people were responsible for them? I'm looking forward to AI channelling Shakespeare and giving us a few plays, films and documentaries about this.
@loreleibertoch68864 жыл бұрын
I have to watch this to learn about Shakespeare so I can make a tik tok about him for theatre🙃
@Ty-ux9ms4 жыл бұрын
Can somebody explain to me the different types of plays by shakespare?
@geoffreywinn40316 жыл бұрын
Educational!
@Malakalima6 жыл бұрын
Great video! I just want to point out that Richard murdered Anne's father and husband, though. Not her brother. :)
@АндрейДынин-л8т6 жыл бұрын
I want to share with you couple theories or laws of the universe 1)The speed of light is not motion speed limit for matter it is energy exchange limit. Example = no matter what two points speed is, if the difference less than speed of light they can interact\exchange energies. If difference more then speed of light points will NOT interact\exchange energies.Pass through each other without any consequences. It is a key to multiverse. 2)Energy exchange take least resistance path every time\in time, in each universe. It is in everyday life, in motion of water/air, in how people live their lives, in each atom behaves. I want to get a Nobel for it, but i am no one. Best regards Dynin A.I.
@TaliaOutwrong6 жыл бұрын
Hence forth using that definition for quartos as my definition for zines.
@Charles-nm1zx6 жыл бұрын
What happen to #15?
@alexiswelsh58216 жыл бұрын
Saw you on Seeker plus yesterday.
@RedJet-bq6fq5 жыл бұрын
I don’t get what’s so funny about the tile. Can someone explain? Thanks
@infinityzombi62875 жыл бұрын
I guess because of the reference to a movie called "straight-outta-compton".
@journie_6 жыл бұрын
will this series be covering ballet?
@davidshi4516 жыл бұрын
What I've always wondered is, how does Shakespeare compare to other playwrights at the time?
@Woesteinvuir4 жыл бұрын
Heads and shoulders above his contemporaries. There are lots of other good writers, and several of them wrote masterpieces, but none of them are masterpieces in the same way Shakespeare's are - works of great and piercing insight into the human condition.
@satansamael6666 жыл бұрын
Will we cover PT. Barnum and Jenny Lind???
@ivanpb19836 жыл бұрын
Here's an idea!
@colinrast65725 жыл бұрын
I didn't know that Richard the 3rd had been portrayed as having a hunchback.
@jeffreybernath66276 жыл бұрын
*pushes up his glasses by the bridge* I think you mean "once more UNTO the breach?" Guys? Really? Okay, you get a pass for the lolz gotten from "I am no longer perfectly comfortable saying 'MacBeth.'"
@mememan22934 жыл бұрын
whos here from schools right now
@vanikestewart85786 жыл бұрын
so Willy Shacks's brother is in the 27 club
@Epinardscaramel6 жыл бұрын
The playlist "theatre" hasn't been updated in a while, I didn't know there were new episodes :O
@kelleymcmorris74306 жыл бұрын
Insurrections: don't start none, won't be none
@mamoonaakhunzada49304 жыл бұрын
same here
@BeastOfTraal6 жыл бұрын
"Queen Alexandra and Murray"
@LordMephistoteles6 жыл бұрын
awwwww too short when it was beginning to turn into the interesting stuff
@moniion74156 жыл бұрын
Now that I know about Richard's play, I realize how off Shakespeare was with the whole thing. Read Philippa Gregory's series on the 'Cousins' War.'
@stephaniehight27716 жыл бұрын
Philippa Gregory?! Really?!
@nikolalol-vb3sj6 жыл бұрын
Can you make 'crash course egyptology' pleaseeee?!?!?!
@lucasgelati6 жыл бұрын
Seems you are on this side of the Edward III debacle then!
@Luboman4116 жыл бұрын
This is a great synopsis and all, but a question still digs at me about Shakespeare and whether or not he was the true author of all his plays--a lot of the great plays of his later years happen in Italy. And he gets a lot right about Verona, Venice, Padua, Messina and Rome. How is it possible that he could get these Italian cities right but he was too poor to have left England? And why his infatuation with Italy instead of France (which is more natural fit for an Elizabethan Englishman) or Greece or another nation? Christopher Marlowe spent a lot of time in Italy which is what leads me to believe that there was some collaboration between the two...
@canadmexi6 жыл бұрын
Luboman411 Have you ever seen the BHH video on Anonymous? When I read your comment, I was thinking "Shakespeare is posh dude, because poors can't art good.".
@agilemind62416 жыл бұрын
Probably like modern authors he asked other people to read his plays to check for errors or for suggestions especially when writing about things he didn't have first hand knowledge of. It's pretty uncommon for any kind of writing to spring fully formed and perfect from the brain of one person working alone, any number of people - friends, family, actors, publishers - could have looked the manuscripts over and helped correct small details.
@jamiee73674 жыл бұрын
It's not that hard to imagine Shakespeare knowing what he did about Italy without having to go there. For one he could gleam information from the source materials. Several of the plots for his plays set in Italy come from Italian novels & stories that were translated into English. There's also his connections to John Florio, who could've provided him with ample knowledge on Italian culture & language, and there's Will Kempe, an actor in the Lord Chamberlain's men who had actually been to Italy. Basically, Shakespeare read stuff about Italy & asked some friends who knew more. It isn't so impossible. And even then, he still gets things wrong. One example that comes to mind is in The Taming of the Shrew, where Shakespeare mistakenly places Padua in Lombardy, when it's actually in Veneto.
@bellringer9294 жыл бұрын
does Richard really offer to give his 'kingdom for a horse' ? that seems brave of him
@pogchampweak4 жыл бұрын
what are the 5 main points i kinda need it lmfao
@patricksratliff6 жыл бұрын
Once more UNTO the breach though...
@Kraflyn6 жыл бұрын
so... he wrote poems and then he bought the second fanciest house... interesting, do say more please :D
@fndthousing6 жыл бұрын
I don't understand why they would have to write a new play every couple of weeks, surely as they were travelling they could regurgitate the same stuff?
@jamestang12276 жыл бұрын
Will we eventually talk about other European playwrights like Molière?
@WelshBathBoy6 жыл бұрын
Avon is pronounced like Av'n, fyi, like the 'on' in 'button'
@rubymoon95656 жыл бұрын
*I'll teach you how to flow* Tupac feat. Shakespeare
@kmbehrens146 жыл бұрын
Interesting to not count Julius Caesar in the Histories, according to that definition. It’s not a tragedy of Caesar himself, because he’s killed in Act III; I guess it could be the tragedy of Brutus? The play seems mostly political to me, rather than a character’s demise.
@MKPiatkowski5 жыл бұрын
I always thought the play was about Brutus.
@Kraflyn6 жыл бұрын
and how exactly do you know shakespeare wrote all of his plays? O.o have you been there?
@djangoray26656 жыл бұрын
Where art thou 😘.
@rkpetry6 жыл бұрын
*_...so-where did all the otherwise-controversy come-from about who, wrote, Mr. 'second-frontline's' (who shakes spear behind first-frontline, to forward to forward, not renegade) plays, docu-stories about a woman, a man, Bacon (for whom I suggest WS was Editor-in-Chief)... and-about how WS knew so much about royal intrigues... controversies, all..._*
@agilemind62416 жыл бұрын
Because gossiping about royalty is a completely new invention which definitely never happened in years past.... (sarcasm)
@ishaanbhardwaj12204 жыл бұрын
Hamnet!
4 жыл бұрын
So you think Shagsper wrote the works published under the name Shakespeare. You state as a fact that at age 7 this Shagsper started attending Stratford grammar school?! Really? Do you have documentation of that? People have been looking for this proof for years, centuries even. (I would be ever so excited to see this evidence.) He “ probably” read Plautus and Seneca, and maybe he left school at 13 or 15 - assuming he even went to school, since there is no documentation about his schooling. He might have worked as a butcher or even for his father, (while continuing to read Plautus, Seneca and maybe even Ovid, as well as pursuing corporal pleasures and becoming a parent at an early age.) After marriage and three children, having worked as maybe a butcher, maybe a glover or maybe a teacher, or maybe, maybe, maybe - he did after all have to support a family - he shows up in London, why or how we don’t, but we can create myths to fit a needed explanation. And his family? Maybe his father took up the financial slack. Lots of maybe’s here. But seriously, I’d love to see the evidence concerning his entrance into school at 6 or 7. And shake-scene? Why do you keep mentioning Edward Alleyne - shake-scene?
@yuridelgado60684 жыл бұрын
Shakespeare is not THE actor, almost an analphabet, but Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, a well know writer of THE artisticy, social class that didnt support play writers
@the17thearlofoxford386 жыл бұрын
So you don't know what day he was born, and you can't say with any certainty that he did anything. Except write the plays, despite the lack of evidence. People will believe anything. And get furious if someone disagrees. Despite the lack of evidence.
@MKPiatkowski5 жыл бұрын
More evidence than you, my friend. The lack of evidence is common for that time period for anyone non-nobility. That people think you might be the author points more to classicism than anything else. The plays could only be written by someone who truly understood acting, which you did not.
@the17thearlofoxford385 жыл бұрын
Very punny, but no, the lack of evidence is not common for the non-nobility. One of the reasons people think that someone besides William Shaksper of Stratford wrote the Works of Shake-speare is because it makes no sense for there to be such a lack of evidence to prove the story about a two-decade career on the public stage in the post-Renaissance city of London after the invention of the printing press (especially considering how much time and money has been spent on researching every scrap of paper from the period). Edward de Vere lived with an acting company until he was 12, and later owned theaters and was a patron of acting companies. In 1597 Meres put him at the top of the list of English play-writes. One would think he knew more about acting than a guy who held the horses outside the theater. @@MKPiatkowski
@LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat4 жыл бұрын
Hamnet Schlemiel.
@Dius2766 жыл бұрын
Why is there is there no Crash Course on geography? Or did Miriam the Super-Racist torpedo that idea for good?
@PennyDreadful15 жыл бұрын
Ale taster? I guess there are worse jobs to have in Elizabethan England.
@thedon41854 жыл бұрын
I’m
@thedon41854 жыл бұрын
Me too
@cosimocub6 жыл бұрын
i live there and he never wrote the plays
@rainydaylady65966 жыл бұрын
I'm curious how it's been determined that Shakespeare wrote his plays. I watched something a few years ago and one of the actors seemed quite emphatic that Shakespeare didn't write them.
@XaurielZ6 жыл бұрын
The question you should be asking is 'what evidence is there that Shakespeare didn't write Shakespeare's plays?' The answer is, none, beyond hearsay and classist assumptions about Shakespeare's level of education. 'Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's plays' is the null hypothesis here. You'd need some pretty good evidence to disprove it, and 'I heard once that some guy said so' isn't very good evidence.
@MarkThePage6 жыл бұрын
There is such a thing as "literature forensics", which is one way people figured out that JK Rowling was behind Robert Galbraith's novels. If an analysis of writing patterns in Shakespeare's plays discovered any big inconsistencies, I imagine this conspiracy would be more than just a theory.
@ms.rstake_12116 жыл бұрын
Prove he wrote the plays! ...p.s I love this show so much