top of page

Setting

Disguise and gender​

Shakespeare ’s comedy can often be seen with a lot of settings, these settings are so imaginative and dreamy.

However, excluding some daily scenes, time setting, Shakespeare's drama setting largely reflects some of his ideas or spirit.

And here we give some common examples...

miss.png
Misconception
Read More

The action of Twelfth Night takes place at some uncertain date in Illyria, an imagined place where the Italian-seeming court of Orsino is neighbour to the apparently English household of Olivia. Several of Shakespeare’s comedies have such highly imaginary settings – the magical wood outside Athens in A Midsummer Night’s Dream or the Forest of Arden in As You Like It. Only one, The Merry Wives of Windsor, is set in England, and this is an opportunistic piece, written to exploit the popularity of the character of Falstaff. Shakespeare was unusual in invariably finding foreign (and timeless) locations for his comedies. In his day, stage comedy frequently had a contemporary and English (often London) setting. Tragedies took place in Spain, France or Italy; comedies nearer to home. Shakespeare’s best-known rival dramatist, Ben Jonson, set Every Man in His Humour (first performed in 1598) in Italy, but later revised it and relocated it to London, partly in response to popular taste. Later Jonson comedies such as The Alchemist and Bartholomew Fair were also set in London and belong to a genre of so-called ‘city comedies’ that attracted other accomplished playwrights such as John Marston and Thomas Middleton.

William-Blake-painting-of- Tate-N02686_H

(the magical wood outside Athens in A Midsummer Night’s Dream)

As-you-like-it.jpg

(the Forest of Arden in As You Like It)

bottom of page