A Midsummer Nights Dream Study Guide 2015-12-09
A Midsummer Nights Dream Study Guide 2015-12-09
A Midsummer Nights Dream Study Guide 2015-12-09
Study
Written by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Guide
Directed by JEFF HALL-FLAVIN
Cotributors
Contributors
Park Square Theatre Park Square Theatre
Study Guide Staff Teacher Advisory Board
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A Midsummer Night’s Dream Study Guide
Study Guide
Contents
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An Overview
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
Photo by P. Ytsma
Midsummer Night’s Dream is a play describing the
comic misadventures of two pairs of lovers who
become lost in a dark wood and fall under the power of
sprites. To Shakespeare’s audiences, the play’s title was a
clue that the play might be about romance, magic, and
madness. Midsummer Night was thought to be one of the
nights of the year when sprites were especially powerful. It
was also a time when people dreamed of their true loves
and sometimes went insane.
By Lara Stauff
*Member of Actors’ Equity ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL
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An Act-by-Act Summary
ACT I
The play takes place in ancient Greece where Theseus, Duke of Athens, is planning his wedding to the Amazon
Queen, Hippolyta, whom he has defeated in battle. Egeus, one of his noblemen, appears with his daughter,
Hermia, because Egeus wants the Duke to force Hermia to marry Demetrius, her father’s choice. But Hermia
loves Lysander, and the lovers plot to elope. Unfortunately, they reveal their plan to Hermia’s friend, Helena,
who is in love with Demetrius who does not return her affection. To win his favor, Helena tells Demetrius of
Hermia and Lysander’s plan. All four young people enter the forest that night: Hermia and Lysander eloping,
Demetrius in pursuit of Hermia, and Helena in pursuit of Demetrius.
In another part of Athens, six working men meet to practice a tragedy they hope to perform at Theseus and
Hippolyta’s wedding; however, it is comically obvious that they have little dramatic experience. Directed by
Peter Quince, a carpenter, two members of their troupe will play the star-crossed lovers Pyramus and Thisbe,
another will play a lion, a fourth will play the moon, and the fifth will play a wall. Nick Bottom, the weaver,
wants to play all the parts himself.
ACT II
In the forest, Oberon, the fairy king, quarrels with his queen, Titania, over custody of an orphaned boy that he
wants for a page. He decides to play a trick on her, so he tells Puck, a mischievous sprite, to put juice from a
magic flower on Titania’s eyes while she sleeps to make her fall in love with the next living thing she sees.
Demetrius appears looking for Hermia. He is followed by Helena who begs for his love, but he harshly rejects
her. Oberon feels sorry for her, so he instructs Puck to put some of the magic flower juice on the eyes of
Demetrius to make him fall in love with Helena. Puck follows his order, but he gets the wrong young man—he
puts the flower juice in Lysander’s eyes, and when Lysander awakes, seeing Helena, he forgets his past love,
Hermia, and falls in love with Helena instead.
ACT III
In another part of the forest Bottom and his friends meet to rehearse their play. Puck finds them close to
where Titania lies asleep, so he transforms Bottom’s head into that of a donkey, scaring all of Bottom’s friends
away. When Titania wakes, she sees Bottom and falls in love with him.
Puck tells Oberon how well his plan is working, but when Demetrius enters, still in pursuit of Hermia, Oberon
realizes Puck’s mistake. He tells Puck to find Helena, while he puts the flower juice on Demetrius’ eyes himself.
The juice works, causing both Demetrius and Lysander to be in love with the previously rejected Helena. When
both young men profess their love for her, Helena thinks they are making fun of her. Hermia, now rejected, is
stunned and angry causing her to insult Helena. The women bicker and so do the men; everyone is angry and
quick to fight. Puck thinks it is all great fun, but Oberon has another flower that will set things right. This he
instructs Puck to use on Lysander to make him love Hermia again.
ACT IV
CONTINUED...
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
An Act-by-Act Summary
CONTINUED
Oberon watches the effects of his trick on Titania as she and her fairy attendants dote on the absurd looking
Bottom. Eventually Bottom and Titania fall asleep. When Puck returns, Oberon has him break the spell on
Titania, but Puck does not transform Bottom back to a human until Titania sees that she has been fawning
over an ass. She and Oberon are reunited, and she agrees to give Oberon the boy to be his page.
As night wanes, Theseus, Hippolyta, and Egeus enter the forest to the baying of Theseus’ hounds and
discover the four young lovers asleep. When they awake, the four lovers are confused but happy to find that
each is in love with someone who loves them back. Egeus is furious to find Hermia and Lysander together
and demands a father’s vengeance, but Theseus, upon seeing their joy and hearing that Demetrius no longer
loves Hermia, declares that the two couples will be married the next day. This pleases Hippolyta whose
uncertainty about their forthcoming marriage begins to soften.
Bottom also awakes remembering his fantastic night with the fairy queen, not quite certain if it has all been a
dream. His friends find him and rejoice that he is himself again just in time to perform in their play for the
Duke and his bride.
ACT V
The newly married couples celebrate at Theseus’s palace. Theseus is amused by the four lovers’ stories about
what has happened and is sure they have dreamed the whole thing. Bottom and his friends perform their
tragic play for the Duke and his guests although their performance is so misguided that it becomes comic.
When it is over and everyone has gone to bed, the fairies slip into the palace. Oberon and Titania bless the
three marriages, but it is Puck who has the last word.
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
The characters of A Midsummer Night’s Dream originate from three distinctly different backgrounds and
worlds of experience. The parallels between these worlds and the similarities between the characters in each
world are reinforced in this production by having actors transform into different characters from different
worlds. The three worlds of the play are the Court, the Forest, and the Mechanicals.
The Forest – The fairies dwell in this untamed world. Oberon, Titania, and Puck embody the magical
power of the forest and its transformative possibilities.
The Mechanicals – A weaver, a carpenter, a joiner, a tailor, and a bellows-mender are common folk
from the town. Their world is concrete and straightforward, as are the characters themselves.
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
Mustardseed
One of the fairies whom Titania orders to wait on Bottom after she falls in Hermia, Starveling and
love with him. Mustardseed played by Hope Cervantes*
Peaseblossom
Demetrius, Tom Snout, and One of the fairies whom Titania orders to wait on Bottom after she falls in love with
Peaseblossom played by him.
Dustin Bronson*
Snug: A joiner
He is chosen to play the lion and worries his roar will frighten the ladies in
the audience and get the group in trouble.
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Glossary
Shakespeare: Man of Mystery
T his startling epitaph of William Shakespeare both stirs curiosity about the
world’s best-known playwright and also discourages exhumation and scien-
tific investigation of his remains. Did he foresee a time of DNA testing and foren-
sic examination?
According to popular belief, Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564 and died on
April 23, 1616 at the age of 52. During those years, Shakespeare wrote 38 plays,
154 sonnets, and 2 narrative poems that have survived. He is considered the
greatest playwright in the English language, and unlike other great playwrights,
Shakespeare excelled at both comedy and tragedy. His body of work includes not
only famous tragedies such as Hamlet, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, and Othello,
Portrait of William Shakespeare
but also wonderful comedies such as Taming of the Shrew, Twelfth Night, and A Mid-
summer Night’s Dream.
Who was the mysterious man behind the work? Shakespeare was born and grew up in the small town of Stratford-
upon-Avon about 100 miles from London. The son of a glove-maker, John Shakespeare, and his wife Mary Arden, Wil-
liam was the third of eight children. He received an excellent education in Stratford, but as far as we know, he never
attended college. He married Anne Hathaway in 1582 at the age of 18. His first daughter, Susanna, was born in 1583,
and twins, Judith and Hamnet, were born in 1585. Because so little is known about Shakespeare’s private life, some
refer to the next few years as his “lost years.”
Shakespeare burst upon the London theater scene in 1590 and established himself as an actor and a playwright. He
was a member of an acting company that often played before Queen Elizabeth I. During her reign, while Shakespeare
was still in his twenties and thirties, he created his most popular comedies such as Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer
Night’s Dream and Twelfth Night. After King James came to the throne in 1603, Shakespeare wrote some of his great-
est tragedies including Othello, King Lear, and Macbeth. Even in his darkest tragedies, however, Shakespeare frequent-
ly included scenes of comic relief which allowed the audience to laugh in moments of high tension.
Shakespeare’s plays were often performed in the Globe Theater. This magnificent theater could hold several thousand
people who either stood on the ground or sat in balconies surrounding the open courtyard.
A prolific and popular playwright, Shakespeare wrote and produced some of the most remarkable plays the world has
ever known. He enjoyed royal patronage and was both artistically and financially successful during his own lifetime be-
cause his productions appealed to people from all walks of life, not just upper class or literary types. His plays have
been translated into many languages and today are performed on stages throughout the world.
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ARTISTIC AND LITERARY CONTEXT
Audience
Groundlings paid the
least and stood in the pit
or ground area closest to
the stage
Royalty and aristocrats
in balconies
Etiquette: Interruptions
common A sketch of Elizabethan costumes
Costumes
Elizabethan dress (clothes of the era) often owned by actors
Financial Support
Royal patronage plus box office revenue
Poetic Language
Blank verse: Unrhymed iambic pentameter
Pentameter: Five beats to a line
Iambic: Each iambic foot begins with an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable:
She loved me for the dangers I had passed
And I loved her that she did pity them.
Couplet: two rhyming lines with regular meter. In Shakespeare’s plays, couplets often signal
the end of a scene or act:
Myself will straight aboard, and to the state
This heavy act with heavy heart relate.
Soliloquy: A monologue in which a character (usually alone on stage and not heard by
other characters) reveals inner thoughts to the audience
Asides: Brief and short speeches of direct address to the audience which are not heard or
noticed by other characters on stage
CONTINUED...
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ARTISTIC AND LITERARY CONTEXT
Renaissance Tragedy
Influenced by classical drama and
mythology
Influenced by history of ancient
Greece and Rome
Featured Greek concept of tragic
hero with tragic flaw
Included Roman aspects such as A sketch of the Swan Theatre in London in 1596, which is very
horrible deeds, blood-thirsty revenge, characteristic of theatres during Shakespeare’s era
ghosts, witches, and corpse-strewn final scenes
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ARTISTIC AND LITERARY CONTEXT
Director: I’ve worked on this show now six times. I’m amazed
and inspired by it each time. So that to me is a true mark of a
gifted playwright and a bottomless play. I’m thrilled to work
on it again. Every time you remount a production, you have
an opportunity to refine it. The good thing about a remount
is you’re not making all of the design decisions, and you find
out what worked and what can be improved upon. Actors
understand things better, it’s deeper, they’re not worrying
about characters — they’re working on nuances, and that’s a
lot of fun.
Interviewer: Your production is fascinating because almost all the actors play two or three roles, but Bottom
doesn’t. Why don’t you have that actor double as well?
Director: The reason Bottom doesn’t double in the play is twofold. First, it’s practical because he is already in
scenes with the Lovers, the Fairies, and the Mechanicals. In this production, the Lovers double with the
Mechanicals and with the Fairies. Bottom can’t double. That was intentional.
Second, my idea about the play made it impossible for Bottom to double because of a thematic reason. My
idea is about transformation. What makes us change as people? We meet someone and we change. We have a
dream that gives us perspective. There are many, many ways that we change, but in this play, change is
actually palpable. You see it happen right before your eyes. Bottom is the ultimate symbol of transformation in
the play because he goes from being a person to being a donkey, right on stage. He embodies that idea of
metamorphosis.
Bottom is peculiarly unafraid of things. If you look at the scenes with Titania, he doesn’t question; he sees these
fairies. He’s the only mortal in the play who actually pierces the veil between the mortal world and the fantasy
world.
CONTINUED...
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ARTISTIC AND LITERARY CONTEXT
Interviewer: You don’t think Bottom can see them because he is under Puck’s spell?
Director: Even if it is because of a magic spell, Bottom accepts the supernatural. Puck simply sees a part of
Bottom’s personality and exploits it by turning him into an ass. By contrast, the Lovers are also under a
magic spell, but they seem to fight against the supernatural world. Bottom is able to somehow transverse
two different worlds. He’s someone who can throw himself into five different roles at the drop of a hat. He
has the ability to imagine himself – and therefore the world – in a different way. The power of his
imagination allows him to see the fairies without question.
Imagination played a role in casting as well. We were looking for someone who’s large-hearted, fun loving,
and takes his work seriously, but perhaps not himself; so we’re lucky to have Terry Hemplemann who
embodies all that childlike wonder I was looking for and yet is still a consummate actor.
Interviewer: Do you want the audience to see the play from Bottom’s point of view?
Director: No, Bottom is our touchstone; he’s our lens. He’s our way in, but not a narrator. We don’t want to
solely focus on him. We’ve got to love him though. We should look for connections between the worlds and
ultimately for redemption through the lens of Bottom’s dream because the connections are very deliberate.
Look at it this way: we have two parallel tracks. We have this argument between Titania and Oberon about
the changeling boy and an uneasy marriage planned between Hippolyta and Theseus. But what finally melts
their argument into nothing is Titania’s act of generosity. She gives the child over to Oberon even though
she said she wouldn’t. That has a ripple effect for the royals in the “real” world.
Interviewer: You mention the two parallel tracks. How does your double and triple casting fit into the odd
subplot about the changeling boy?
Director: By having one actor playing both roles, you can see those threads much more clearly. Hippolyta
doesn’t want to marry Theseus. Who would? She’s been conquered; she’s the Amazonian warrior queen
forced into an arranged marriage. I think because the actress also plays Titania, an alter ego of hers is
Titania. She falls in love with Bottom in the woods, and her feelings in the argument with Oberon melt. As a
result, Hippolyta is able to find something to love about Theseus.
In Act IV, ii Theseus and Hippolyta have a mundane little conversation about hunting dogs. In Act I, there
was this icy difference between the two. It’s a really interesting transition. It couldn’t have happened
without what happened in the woods with Bottom. A lot of directors cut the hunting scene, but you
absolutely need to see them conversing like adults.
Interviewer: So because Titania takes the journey to forgiveness, the ice between them can melt. She’s not
being mocked and totally manipulated by Oberon when he drugs her into falling in love with an ass?
Director: In this production, she’s the victor because through a sheer act of love, which is where generosity
comes from, she forgives him. In our production, Oberon is surprised by that. You know, when you want to
play a cruel joke on someone, and afterward you feel a little ashamed, especially if they’ve done something
CONTINUED...
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ARTISTIC AND LITERARY CONTEXT
Interviewer: How do you interpret the power relationships in the play and how are they overturned?
Director: The first of those, and one the students will recognize, is the parent/child struggle. Simply because
Hermia doesn’t love the right boy, she is presented the choice of either being single and being a nun, or being
put to death. Her father is fine with that. In fact, he supports the law.
In the very first scene, Hippolyta doesn’t say much, but she doesn’t need to because it’s very clear how she
feels about Hermia’s plight. So part of the way that Theseus and Hippolyta get on the same page is because
Theseus overturns the Athenian marriage law. Hippolyta has an effect upon Theseus. She is the ultimate
feminist.
Interviewer: Your focus on transformation and the imagination drives everything about the production. When
you’re approaching a text, where does that director’s vision come from?
Director: A play isn’t a thing to be tamed; it’s something with which to resonate or to harmonize. I read the
play over and over again, and then I read it aloud to myself. I don’t do that with every play, but with
Shakespeare I want to hear the poetry.
Slowly, you begin to find what I call a handle on the play as if you were to pick up the play and carry it.
So I guess the simple answer is by reading it; a difficult answer is finding inspiration. It’s in your mind. If
you’re living with a play, over time, as you have it in your imagination, you’ll see something and you’ll say,
that’s it! It could be a painting or a design, or you’ll hear a song, or you’ll meet an actor, or you’ll find some
kind of inspiration for that play. That’s what happens with most of the things I direct, and that becomes my
handle on it.
It’s what Theseus is talking about; it’s one of the most beautiful compact speeches:
And that’s what I’m doing with the play; I’m saying, OK, here I have this enormous, faceless entity to stage…
how am I going to give it a place and a shape? That’s what imagination does.
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Tossing
An Linesof the Holiday of Hanukkah
Explanation
A PRE-PLAY CLASS ACTIVITY
Objective
The purpose of this activity is to familiarize students with A Midsummer Night’s Dream by exposing them to lines
spoken in the play. Based on these lines, students are to make predictions about the play’s characters and central
conflicts and discuss these predictions. This activity helps students form questions, gain insight, and build
excitement for seeing and hearing these lines acted out on stage. “Tossing Lines” serves the students best if
completed before they attend the play.
Procedure
Cut out the slips of paper printed on the following page and distribute them to volunteers. Give students a few
minutes (or overnight, if appropriate) to practice or memorize their lines. When they’re ready, have these students
form a circle and give one student the ball. After she speaks her line, the student tosses the ball to another student
who speaks his assigned line. Students toss the ball across the circle until all lines have been heard a few times.
Encourage students to speak lines with varying emotions, seeking out a variety of ways to perform the lines. If
there is time, reassign lines within the group or to other students in the class for another round.
Writing/Discussion
After the lines have been tossed, allow students five minutes to write their ideas and questions about the content
of the play. The following questions may be used to guide writing and/or discussion. You may wish to provide all
the students with a copy of all the lines either as a handout or through the use of an overhead or document camera
in order for them to examine the text more closely.
1. What are some different attitudes toward love expressed in these lines? What do these attitudes suggest
about the relationships between the characters?
2. What types of characters might speak these lines? Can you guess the sex or age of who might say any of these
lines?
3. What types of conflict might you expect in the play based on the lines? Which lines indicate possible conflicts?
4. The play contains both human beings and fairies. Can you guess which lines might have been spoken by each?
5. Which lines do you find most interesting? Most puzzling? Most musical? Most memorable? Explain.
6. Some of the lines are examples of Shakespeare’s use of inversion where he shifts the word order of a sentence
in order to adapt the line into the rhythm of iambic pentameter. Which lines exhibit a word order different
from what we would usually hear or expect? Can we still understand them?
7. What appears from the lines to be a connection between dreaming and loving? What do you personally see
as a connection between these two activities?
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
9. Now look at the line: “Now purple with love’s wound: /And maidens call it ‘love in idleness.’”
This is a description of a magic flower.
10. Explain the following two lines and state whether you agree or disagree and why:
“Love looks not with the eye but with the mind.”
“The course of true love never did run smooth.”
Identify any other books, plays, or films which also have this theme. How was the theme handled
in these other examples? Did those stories have a happy or tragic ending?
11. Speculate on the ending of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Identify the quotations which might
support your choice.
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
To the Teacher:
Cut these apart and distribute to students.
Love looks not with the eye but with the mind.
Thou has mistaken quite, /And laid the love juice on some true love’s sight.
I have had a most rare vision. I have had a dream, past the wit of man.
And this weak and idle theme, /No more yielding but a dream.
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
Hand out the sheet to the students and have them read the two prologues silently WITHOUT knowing which
prologue belongs to which play. Then read the passages aloud, paying careful attention to the punctuation in
prologue A from Midsummer. (These passages are best read by an experienced reader; an inexperienced reader may
not make the contrast so apparent to listeners.)
Then ask the students to complete the questions about the two prologues alone, in pairs, or in small groups. When
they have finished, bring them back together to discuss their discoveries and conclusions.
Activity II. Comparing and Contrasting Comic Language and Tragic Language
(allow about 40 minutes)
For a closer look at Shakespeare’s contrasting language, print out the cards with the numbered lines from three sets
of passages from the Mechanicals’ play in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and from Romeo and Juliet. (These are
provided on page 19 of the guide.)
Have students practice one numbered set of lines, and then read the parts in groups, alternating and comparing each
section. Finally, have groups perform for each other.
Then discuss the passages. The following questions may be projected or simply asked orally. (You may want to clarify
poetic terms— couplet, alliteration, concrete imagery, simile, metaphor, blank verse, and tone— which are defined
on page 12 of this guide.)
1. Which of the passages uses the most formal or difficult language? Are there words that were unfamiliar to you?
Which passages use the most common language?
2. Which passages rhyme? Which use couplets? What is the effect of these techniques?
3. Which passages use alliteration? How does that affect the tone of the passages?
4. What concrete images are used in each selection? Cite a few examples. What sort of mood do these images
create?
5. What comparisons (similes and metaphors) are present? Which comparisons seem humorous? Which ones do
not?
6. Which passages use blank verse? How does the use of blank verse contrast with the use of end rhymes? Which
seems more serious?
7. How can language choice actually make a death scene humorous? CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
Read and listen carefully to each prologue. Then answer the following questions:
1. What information about the play does each prologue provide? Is one prologue more specific than
the other? If so which one?
2. Circle words in each prologue that are unfamiliar to you. Does one of them use simpler words? If
so, which one?
3. What do you expect in the plays which follow each prologue? Adventure? Tragedy? Romance?
Comedy? Violence? Something else?
4. Circle words in each prologue with emotional connotations. What sort of emotions do they evoke?
5. How is punctuation used to indicate pace in both passages? How many sentences are in each pro-
logue? Which prologue has the shorter and more simply constructed sentences? What might the
sentence construction tell you about the speaker or the type of play to follow?
6. Does either prologue lead you to expect a humorous or serious play to follow?
7. What themes might be explored in either play?
8. How would you describe the author’s tone in each prologue?
Prologue B
Prologue A
Two households, both alike in dignity,
If we offend, it is with our good will. In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,
That you should think, we come not to offend, From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,
But with good will. To show our simple skill, Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.
That is the true beginning of our end. From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
Consider then, we come but in despite. A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life;
We do not come, as minding to content you, Whole misadventured piteous overthrows
Our true intent is. All for your delight, Do with their death bury their parents' strife.
We are not here. That you should here repent The fearful passage of their death-mark'd love,
you, And the continuance of their parents' rage,
The actors are at hand; and by their show, Which, but their children's end, nought could remove,
You shall know, all that you are like to know. Is now the two hours' traffic of our stage;
The which if you with patient ears attend,
What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend.
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
FLUTE/THISBE JULIET
1. O Wall, full often hast thou heard my moans, 1. How camest thou hither, tell me, and wherefore?
For parting my fair Pyramus and me! The orchard walls are high and hard to climb,
2. My cherry lips have often kissed thy stones, 2. And the place death, considering who thou art,
Thy stones with lime and hair knit up in thee. If any of my kinsmen find thee here.
BOTTOM/PYRAMUS ROMEO
3. I see a voice; now will I to the chink, 3. With love's light wings did I o'er-perch
To spy and I can hear my Thisbe’s face. these walls;
For stony limits cannot hold love out,
PYRAMUS ROMEO
4. But stay, O spite! 4. Ah, dear Juliet,
But mark, poor knight, Why art thou yet so fair? Shall I believe
What dreadful dole is here! That unsubstantial death is amorous,
5. Eyes, do you see? 5. And that the lean abhorred monster keeps
How can it be? Thee here in dark to be his paramour?
O dainty duck! O dear! For fear of that, I still will stay with thee;
6. Thy mantle good, 6. And never from this palace of dim night
What, stain'd with blood! Depart again: here,
7. Approach, ye Furies fell! 7. …here will I remain
O Fates, come, come, With worms that are thy chamber-maids;
8. Cut thread and thrum; 8. O, here/ Will I set up my everlasting rest,
Quail, crush, conclude, and quell! And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars
THISBE JULIET
9. Asleep, my love? 9. What's here? a cup, closed in my
What dead, my dove? true love's hand?
Speak, speak! Quite dumb? Poison, I see, hath been his timeless end:
10. Dead, dead?/A tomb/Must cover 10. O churl! drunk all, and left no friendly drop
thy sweet eyes. To help me after?
11. These lily lips/This cherry nose, 11. I will kiss thy lips;
12. Those yellow cowslip cheeks 12. Haply some poison yet doth hang on them,
Are gone, are gone To make die with a restorative.
Lovers make moan; 13. Thy lips are warm…
13. His eyes were green as leeks… 14. Yea, noise? Then I’ll be brief. O
14. Tongue not a word!/Come happy dagger!
trusty sword, 15. This is thy sheath/There rust,
15. Come my breast imbrue! and let me die.
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
OnExplanation
An Their Feet:of the Holiday of Hanukkah
SUGGESTIONS FOR READING AND PERFORMING SCENES ALOUD
T here is general agreement among teachers and scholars of Shakespeare that the best way for students to
engage in his plays is “up on their feet,” acting out scenes followed by discussion of ideas and meanings.
The Folger Library’s Shakespeare Set Free series promotes this approach to studying the Bard. The following
procedure is adapted from an article by Michael Tolaydo in Shakespeare Set Free, Teaching Twelfth Night and
Othello.
Materials
1. Class set of copies of one scene enlarged with glossary and footnotes removed. (For scenes to use
from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, see “Scenes to Read Aloud,” pages 34-42 of this guide.)
2. A dictionary.
3. A good Shakespeare glossary or edition of the play with notes for looking up words or phrases the
class gets stuck on.
Reading #2
Purpose: To become more familiar with the text.
1. Select a new group of readers to read the same scene.
2. Non-readers should again LISTEN, making note of any different or new information observed in this
reading.
3. After the reading, begin a discussion with a few questions about what happens in the scene. It is vital
that all the answers to the questions are contained in the scene. Encourage students to support their
ideas with lines and ideas from the text. Possible questions:
a. Where does the scene take place? Look for clues in the text.
b. Where are the entrances and exits? Who makes them? Where do they come from? Look in the
text to find out.
c. Who is the most powerful person in the scene? Does this change? If so, when does it change?
How does the change affect the characters and the outcome?
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
On Their Feet:
SUGGESTIONS FOR READING AND PERFORMING SCENES ALOUD CONTINUED
Follow Up.
1. Assign groups to prepare the scene using some of the other suggestions raised for locations and
characteristics.
2. Repeat this process for other scenes as students study the play.
3. Have students write about observations made during the process.
Resource:
Tolavdo, Michael. “Up on Your Feet with Shakespeare: The Wrong Way and the Right.” Shakespeare Set
Free: Teaching Twelfth Night and Othello. Washington Square Press: New York, 1995.
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
Pre-Play
An ExplanationTextofAnalysis
the Holiday of Hanukkah
SCENE TO READ ALOUD #1
In this scene the two young women show both their rivalry and their friendship. Hermia and Helena share
their secret thoughts and wishes.
(Enter HELENA)
HERMIA
God speed fair Helena! Whither away?
HELENA
Call you me fair? That fair again unsay.
Demetrius loves your fair: O happy fair!
Your eyes are lode stars; and your tongue’s sweet air
More tunable than lark to shepherd’s ear.
Were the world mine, and Demetrius being bated,
The rest I’d give to be to you translated.
O teach me how you look and with what art
You sway the motion of Demetrius’ heart.
HERMIA
I frown upon him yet he loves me still.
HELENA
O that your frowns would teach my smiles such skill!
HERMIA
I give him curses yet he gives me love.
HELENA
O that my prayers could such affection move!
HERMIA
The more I hate, the more he follows me.
HELENA
The more I love, the more he hateth me.
HERMIA
His folly, Helena, is no fault of mine.
HELENA
None but your beauty, would that fault were mine!
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
HERMIA
Take comfort: He no more shall see my face.
Lysander and myself will fly this place.
Helena, to you our minds I will unfold.
Tomorrow night, through Athens’ gates we have devised to steal
And in the wood where often you and I were wont to lie
There my Lysander and myself shall meet
and thence from Athens turn away our eyes
To seek new friends and stranger companies.
Farewell sweet playfellow; And good luck grant thee thy Demetrius!
Pray thou for us.
HELENA
I will Hermia.
HERMIA
Helena, adieu. As you on him, Demetrius dote on you.
(Exit)
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
Questions
An forofText
Explanation Analysis
the Holiday #1
of Hanukkah
1. What guesses can you make about the ages of these two women? About the ages of Demetrius and Lysan-
der? What might their ages have to do with their behavior?
3. Demetrius has been talking about Hermia to Helena. Identify two things he has said about Hermia to her
friend.
4. What does Helena mean when she says, “Were the world mine, and Demetrius being bated/ The rest I’d
give to be to you translated”?
5. What does Helena want Hermia to do at the end of her first speech?
6. Speculate on what may have been the previous relationship between Helena and Demetrius. What may
have caused a change?
9. How does Hermia say the problem will be resolved? Who is Lysander?
11. Does the situation presented in the excerpt seem to you to be realistic? Explain.
12. How do you think Shakespeare wanted the audience to feel toward these characters?
13. This discussion takes place in Act I. What do you think might happen as the play progresses?
By Marcia Aubineau
UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS, RETIRED
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
AnPre-Play TextofAnalysis
Explanation the Holiday of Hanukkah
SCENE TO READ ALOUD #2
The Mechanicals’ play about Pyramus and Thisbe is based on the myth of two lovers in the city of Babylon who
live next door to each other, but are forbidden by their parents to be wed. The fathers have built a wall be-
tween the houses, but through a crack in the wall, Pyramus and Thisbe whisper their love for each other. They
arrange to meet one night near Ninus' tomb to state their feelings. The following scene is from the rehearsal of
the play. These rustic tradesmen are entering in a competition to choose the main entertainment for the Duke’s
wedding. They are unaware they are being observed by Puck.
QUINCE
Come, sit down,
every mother's son, and rehearse your parts.
Pyramus, you begin: when you have spoken your
speech, enter into that brake: and so every one
according to his cue.
PUCK
What hempen home-spuns have we swaggering here,
So near the cradle of the fairy queen?
What, a play toward! I'll be an auditor;
An actor too, perhaps, if I see cause.
QUINCE
Speak, Pyramus. Thisbe, stand forth.
BOTTOM
Thisbe, the flowers of odious savours sweet,--
QUINCE
Odours, odours.
BOTTOM
--odours savours sweet:
So hath thy breath, my dearest Thisbe dear.
But hark, a voice! Stay thou but here awhile,
And by and by I will to thee appear.
(Exit)
PUCK
A stranger Pyramus than e'er played here.
(Exit)
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
FLUTE
Must I speak now?
QUINCE
Ay, marry, must you; for you must understand he goes
but to see a noise that he heard, and is to come again.
FLUTE
Most radiant Pyramus, most lily-white of hue,
Of colour like the red rose on triumphant briar,
Most brisky juvenal and eke most lovely Jew,
As true as truest horse that yet would never tire,
I'll meet thee, Pyramus, at Ninny's tomb.
QUINCE
'Ninus' tomb,' man: why, you must not speak that
yet; that you answer to Pyramus: you speak all your
part at once, cues and all. Pyramus enter: your cue
is past; it is, 'never tire.'
FLUTE
O,--As true as truest horse, that yet would
never tire.
BOTTOM
If I were fair, Thisbe, I were only thine.
QUINCE
O monstrous! O strange! We are haunted.
Pray, masters! Fly, masters! Help!
PUCK
I'll follow you, I'll lead you about a round,
Through bog, through bush, through brake, through briar:
Sometime a horse I'll be, sometime a hound,
A hog, a headless bear, sometime a fire;
And neigh, and bark, and grunt, and roar, and burn,
Like horse, hound, hog, bear, fire, at every turn.
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
1. In the Mechanicals’ production, Bottom is playing the part of Pyramus. What is his misreading of “flowers
of odours savours sweet”? Why is his substitution of “odious” for “odours” funny? How does he un-
wittingly change the meaning of the line? What is he actually describing? How does the aspect of Thisbe,
his love, which he’s describing add another layer of humor? Would you expect a description of this sort
from someone talking about his girlfriend?
2. Flute is playing the role of Thisbe. What contradiction can you find in the description of the “radiant Pyra-
mus”? According to Renaissance scholars, “juvenal” and “Jew” are references to Pyramus’s youth. Beyond
saying he is young, what simile does Thisbe use to describe Pyramus? Taking into consideration that she is
talking about her boyfriend, why might this figure of speech be considered humorous? What is Quince’s
criticism of the way that Flute actually speaks his lines?
3. What trick does Puck play on Bottom? And why might he have chosen the head of a donkey (ass) instead
of some other animal? What is the reaction of the other actors to Bottom’s transformation? What does
Puck say he will do to the fleeing players? What will he change himself into? To what purpose?
4. This scene takes place in the woods, and in the Renaissance, the word “wood” was one synonym for
“mad” (i.e. insane, irrational). The forest in the play is the realm of the fairies. What does this excerpt sug-
gest about the following? Cite lines to defend your answers.
The relationship between the worlds of the fairies and the Mechanicals?
By Marcia Aubineau
UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS, RETIRED
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
Pre-Play
An ExplanationTextofAnalysis
the Holiday of Hanukkah
SCENE TO READ ALOUD #3
Oberon, king of the fairies, has quarreled with his wife Titania, and to punish her, he has squeezed the
juice from a magic flower onto her eyelids while she slept. The result will be that, upon awakening, she
will fall in love with the first thing she sees—which will be Bottom with the ass’s “nole” on his head.
Oberon has also ordered Puck to squeeze the same juice on Lysander’s eyes, but Puck has made a mis-
take and anointed Demetrius’ eyes instead.
OBERON
I wonder if Titania be awak’d;
Then, what it was that next came in her eye,
Which she must dote on in extremity.
Here comes my messenger. How now, mad spirit?
What night-rule now about this haunted grove?
PUCK
My mistress with a monster is in love.
Near to her close and consecrated bower,
While she was in her dull and sleeping hour,
A crew of patches, rude mechanicals,
That work for bread upon Athenian stalls,
Were met together to rehearse a play
Intended for great Theseus’ nuptial day.
The shallowest thick-skin of that barren sort,
Who Pyramus presented in their sport
Forsook his scene, and enter’d in a brake,
When I did him at this advantage take:
An ass’s nole I fixed upon his head….
When in that moment, so it came to pass,
Titania wak’d, and straightway lov’d an ass.
OBERON
This falls out better than I could devise.
But hast thou yet latch’d the Athenian’s eyes
With the love-juice, as I did bid thee do?
PUCK
I took him sleeping—that is finish’d too—
And the Athenian woman by his side,
That when he wak’d, of force she must be ey’d.
OBERON
Stand close: this is the same Athenian.
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
PUCK
This is the woman, but not this the man….
OBERON
What hast thou done? Thou hast mistaken quite,
And laid the love-juice on some true love’s sight;
Of thy misprision must perforce ensue
Some true love turn’d, and not a false turn’d true….
About the wood go swifter than the wind,
And Helena of Athens look thou find;
All fancy-sick she is, and pale of cheer
With sighs of love, that costs the fresh blood dear.
By some illusion see thou bring her here;
I’ll charm his eyes against she do appear.
PUCK
I go, I go, look how I go!
Swifter than the arrow from the Tartar’s bow. (Exit.)
(Enter Puck.)
PUCK
Captain of our fairy band,
Helena is here at hand;
And the youth, mistook by me,
Pleading for a lover’s fee.
Shall we their fond pageant see?
Lord, what fools these mortals be.
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
1. What is Oberon’s reaction to Puck’s news that Titania has fallen in love with an ass? What might this
indicate about his character? Are you surprised at his reaction to the degradation of his wife?
2. Puck has made an error, confusing one Athenian man for the other, and anointing Demetrius instead of
Lysander. What does Oberon mean when he states that Puck’s mistake has “some true love turn’d”
instead of “a false turned true”?
3. Oberon sends for Helena and then anoints the sleeping Demetrius’ eyes so that he will fall in love with her
instead of Hermia when he wakes up. Unpack Oberon’s speech as he squeezes the flower’s “purple dye”
on Demetrius’ eyelids.
*What does the allusion to “Cupid’s archery” refer to?
*What might be the literal “apple” of a person’s eye?
*What does Oberon mean when he says he wants Helena to “shine as gloriously/ As the Venus of
the sky”?
*How does Oberon appear to feel about the lovers in the woods? (Point out the lines which
indicate his attitude.) How does his view toward the humans compare/contrast to his behavior
toward his queen?
*What is Demetrius to do when he sees Helena?
4. Puck suggests that he and Oberon watch the “fond pageant” of Demetrius and Helena’s reunion. Look up
the various definitions of the word “fond.” Which definition fits the line best? What does his speech
indicate about his view of the humans? Do the fairies feel superior or inferior? Which words give you
clues?
5. What observations can you make about the power hierarchy within the fairy world itself? Cite lines to
back up your examples.
*Do the king and queen of the fairies have equal power?
*How does the power of Puck compare/contrast with the power of Oberon?
6. With whom do you think Shakespeare wants the audience to sympathize—Tatiana? Bottom? Oberon?
Puck? With whom do you sympathize? Why?
7. This excerpt takes place in Act III, mid-way through the play. What do you think will happen to
Tatiana, Bottom, Oberon, and Puck?
8. Based on this scene, what conclusions can you draw about the fairy world in general and the fairies
who populate it? Cite lines to defend your answers.
By Marcia Aubineau
UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS, RETIRED
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THE PLAY AND THE PLAYWRIGHT
Characters/Relationships
1. Which character do you most sympathize with? Why? What do you like most about his/her personality,
situation, and perspective?
2. Who do you think is the most important character in the play? Is s/he the protagonist?
3. How do power and status affect how characters interact? For example, how does Oberon interact with
Puck and how is that different than the way he interacts with Titania? What about the other characters?
How did you see power relationships portrayed in the production?
4. A Midsummer Night’s Dream is about walls and overcoming them. There is an actual wall between the
houses of Pyramus and Thisbe, but consider the imaginary and metaphorical walls in the play separating
characters: parents from children, lovers from each other, present (and future) husbands from wives,
and different social classes. Identify as many examples as you can of each type of wall. Then explain how
each of these walls is brought down by the end of the play.
5. Shakespeare contrasts the court (a place of order) with the forest (a place of confusion and chaos). How
do the characters reinforce this contrast? Where are they the most content and happy?
6. Which romantic relationships in the play are the most likely to be successful? Why do you think so?
Three Worlds
1. How are the worlds of the fairies, the nobles, and the Mechanicals different? How are the inhabitants of
those worlds different?
2. How are the three worlds similar? In what ways are they parallel? Are there parallel characters in each
of the three worlds?
3. How do the three worlds intersect or collide with each other? What happens when they bump into each
other?
4. What point does Shakespeare make by representing these three distinct worlds?
5. What does it mean that Nick Bottom is the only character who participates in all three worlds? How
does he connect them? Why is he the one in this unique position?
6. How did the actors transform themselves from one role to another?
7. How were the three worlds contrasted through sound, set and lighting?
8. Two of the play’s five acts take place in the woods.
*What do the woods symbolize in the play?
*In Renaissance parlance, “wood” could also mean “madness.” How would that definition relate
to occurrences and characters in the play? Be specific.
Nature of Love
1. Do you agree with Hermia’s decision to run away with Lysander against her father’s wishes? Why or
why not?
2. The love potion causes characters’ romantic feelings to change suddenly. Do you think Shakespeare
represents love accurately? How and why?
3. What outside influences other than “potions” can affect how two people love each other?
4. Which romantic pairings are the most comical? What might Shakespeare be spoofing by including them
in the play?
5. Do you think this play demonstrates that love is necessary for happiness? (Consider Theseus and
Hippolyta.)
CONTINUED...
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ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES
Dreams
1. Why does the play have “dream” in the title?
2. How many movies, TV shows, books, or plays can you think of about dreams and love?
3. How many different definitions of “dream” can you think of? Which of those definitions best apply
to this play? What kinds of dreams are portrayed here? Are there nightmares portrayed here as
well?
4. Midsummer’s Eve is still celebrated at the time of the summer solstice. It was originally a fertility
festival and was associated with magic affecting all aspects of nature—plants, animals, and
humans. In the play, Shakespeare conflates it with another fertility rite—May Day, a festival of
rebirth, revelry, enchantment, magic, merry-making, love, and marriage. How many of these
associations can you make with the characters and events of the play?
5. Whose dream might this play be?
6. Whose nightmare might this be?
Use of Symbols
1. The magic flower: The flower whose juice Oberon uses to enchant Titania and the lovers is named
“love in idleness.” At the time Shakespeare wrote the play, “idleness” had more definitions than it
does now:
*Vanity; “in idleness” meant “in vain”
*Groundlessness, worthlessness, triviality, futility
*Light-headedness, imbecility, delirium; also folly, foolishness, silliness
*State or condition of being idle, unoccupied; habitual avoidance of work, inactivity
How many of these definitions fit the characters in the play who received the juice of the flower?
How many of these definitions fit other characters and events of the play? Give specific examples.
2. The moon: The moon is referred to many times during the play. It is present in all the settings
and in all the separate stories, and it is significant to all the characters in some way. (It is even a
character itself in the Mechanicals’ play.)
*List as many references to the moon as you can remember. How was it important
to the characters who mentioned it?
*The moon itself has had many symbolic characteristics from ancient times. It has
represented inconstancy because it’s always waxing or waning. It also has
symbolized chastity as it is related to the virginal goddess Diana (who was also the
goddess of the hunt). Moonlight transforms a landscape and at night no one sees
clearly. How might these symbolic associations relate to the characters and events of
the play?
By Marcia Aubineau
UNIVERSITY OF ST. THOMAS, RETIRED
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Acknowledgements
To Our Teachers,
Yours sincerely,
The Staff at Park Square Theatre
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