yes
It's a sonnet.
Shakespeare has nothing to do with the phrase "the show must go on" which originated long after he had left the theatre scene. In his day "show" did not mean a production, but did refer to a scene done without dialogue, or "dumb show", as in Quince's line from Midsummer Night's Dream "Perhaps you wonder at this show".
In the dialogue. Sometimes in a prologue ("in fair Verona, where we lay our scene"), sometimes in a baldfaced question ("What country, sir, is this?" "It is Illyria, lady"), sometimes in an offhand remark ("And liegemen to the Dane").
Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English.
Are you intending to write a scene to insert into Shakespeare's play? Sort of like all the new scenes they made up for the 2013 movie of Romeo and Juliet? You have to find something that happened, but you didn't see on stage, like how Borachio talked Margaret into getting it on in Hero's bedroom with him calling her Hero all the time. Then you create the dialogue between the characters, always making sure that it is consistent with what they do and say in the rest of the play.
It depends which scene you are talking about. Many scenes are intended to sound like the way ordinary people talked, especially those which featured ordinary people. A lot of the dialogue in Much Ado about Nothing is like this. But then there is other dialogue which is supposed to give a heightened effect, so the actors seem more noble, more in love, more despicable, more philosophical or more doomed than any real person could possibly sound. And it is this dialogue that sticks in our memories, because it is special. Who could remember (or would want to) dialogue that goes like "Yeah, well, I was, you know . . . whatever. You know?" no matter how much it sounds like real dialogue.
It depends which scene you are talking about. Many scenes are intended to sound like the way ordinary people talked, especially those which featured ordinary people. A lot of the dialogue in Much Ado about Nothing is like this. But then there is other dialogue which is supposed to give a heightened effect, so the actors seem more noble, more in love, more despicable, more philosophical or more doomed than any real person could possibly sound. And it is this dialogue that sticks in our memories, because it is special. Who could remember (or would want to) dialogue that goes like "Yeah, well, I was, you know . . . whatever. You know?" no matter how much it sounds like real dialogue.
It's a sonnet.
Shakespeare has nothing to do with the phrase "the show must go on" which originated long after he had left the theatre scene. In his day "show" did not mean a production, but did refer to a scene done without dialogue, or "dumb show", as in Quince's line from Midsummer Night's Dream "Perhaps you wonder at this show".
In the dialogue. Sometimes in a prologue ("in fair Verona, where we lay our scene"), sometimes in a baldfaced question ("What country, sir, is this?" "It is Illyria, lady"), sometimes in an offhand remark ("And liegemen to the Dane").
It's an exciting scene in a story, where there's something going on instead of description or dialogue.
Dialogue. In some cases the setting is established by interchanges between the characters ("What country is this?" "It is Illyria, lady") and in others in a monologue by a prologue or chorus ("in fair Verona where we lay our scene")
dialogue magazine scene a set
There are approximately 190 scene twos in Shakespeare. Please specify.
There are approximately 190 scene twos in Shakespeare. Please specify.
Shakespeare's Hamlet, Act III Scene I.
What is probably meant by the question is 'what is comic effect'? Comic effect is possibly best illustrated in Shakespeare's play Macbeth where the scene with the Porter answering the knocking at the castle entrance is funny. (Well, folks in Shakespeare's day would have found it very funny). The reason for the scene being there to make the horror of the discovery of the murder of Duncan (the king) even more horrible because of the contrast. Comic effect is used all the time in movies - look out for it.