Promptbooks are cool

Promptbooks are copies of the script with a whole bunch of handwritten notes inside that the actors would have used to detail exactly how a scene would be played. This site has scans of a number of Shakespearean prompt books, including Macbeth. Fascinating stuff. It’s a little hard to navigate at first. Head for the images, basically. If you find yourself on a page that says “Hand” a lot, it’s actually describing in detail who wrote what on the page — but there’s probably an image of the page that you can click on.

Honorificabilitudinity !

A friend sent me the link to yesterday’s Word A Day word, asking if I’d ever heard of it through the Shakespeare connection. Apparently a character in Love’s Labour’s Lost says it, but no, I did not remember it. Additionally, if you scramble the letters a bit you end up with a Latin phrase that means “These plays, F. Bacon’s offspring, are preserved for the world.” Which of course means nothing, but it’s neat nonetheless :).

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