ABSTRACT

Playing Bit Parts in Shakespeare is a unique survey of the small supporting roles - such as foils, feeds, attendants and messengers - that feature in Shakespeare's plays. Exploring such issues as how bit players should conduct themselves within a scene, and how blank verse or prose may be spoken to bring out the complexities of character-definition, Playing Bit Parts in Shakespeare brings a wealth of insights to the dynamic of scenic construction in Shakespeare's dramaturgy.
M.M. Mahood explores the different functions of minimal characters, from clearing the stage to epitomizing the overall effect of the comedy or tragedy, and looks at how they can extend the audience's knowledge of the social world of the play. She goes on to describe the entire corpus of minimal roles in a selection of six plays:
* Richard III
* The Tempest
* King Lear
* Antony & Cleopatra
* Measure for Measure
* Julius Caesar
This new edition comes enhanced with a new Appendix, 'Who Says What', especially designed to aid directors in making decisions about the speaking parts of the minimal characters. It also comes complete with an index of characters (including line references) as well as a detailed general index.
An invaluable aid for directors and actors in the rehearsal room, this perceptive and informative volume is equally of interest to students studying and writing about Shakespeare's plays.

chapter 1|22 pages

Entities and nonentities

chapter 2|21 pages

Transposes

chapter 3|26 pages

Supporters

chapter 4|21 pages

Stress and counterstress

chapter 5|22 pages

Substance and shadow in Richard the Third

chapter 6|21 pages

Friends of Brutus

chapter 8|23 pages

Service and servility in King Lear

chapter 9|25 pages

The varying tide in Antony and Cleopatra

chapter 10|18 pages

The Tempest from the forecastle