he wants too
Line numbers are not very helpful because they are different from edition to edition of the play. If what you mean is, "Could the play Macbeth end at the moment Macduff cuts off Macbeth's head?", then, the answer is, yes it could. Producers of Shakespearean productions frequently cut lines and passages from the plays to get the running time down to something a modern audience can put up with. The play might well end at that point, and leave out Macduff's report to Malcolm, his line "The time is free", hailing Malcolm king of Scotland, Malcolm's creation of English earls instead of Scottish thanes, and his invitation to come to his coronation. Artistically, the play may not feel as satisfying if you end with a fade to black when Macduff's sword hacks off Macbeth's head. Macduff needs to underline the fact that Macbeth is dead and his reign of terror is over. At the very least, Macduff must say "Behold where stands the usurper's cursed head. The time is free!" If you end the play there, you allow the audience to forget about the question, "What happens next?" Having Malcolm hailed as king reminds the audience of the weakness of his character, and that in some ways he may prove a worse king than Macbeth (or, if his character is built up, would reinforce the relief felt that Macbeth is dead). The creation of earls is important in a reading of the play that sees Malcolm as an English-backed Anglophile bent on destroying the indigenous Scottish customs. But if you marginalize the character of Malcolm throughout the play, it would be consistent to end the play with "the time is free".
Malcolm X has written: 'On Afro-American history' 'Malcolm X and the Negro revolution' -- subject(s): African Americans, Black Muslims, Civil rights, Race question, Race relations 'Malcolm X' -- subject(s): African Americans, Black Muslims, Civil rights, Race relations 'Malcolm X, Derniers Discours' 'Habla Malcolm X' -- subject(s): In library, Race relations, Afroamericanos, Black Muslims, Civil rights, Relaciones raciales, Derechos civiles, Musulmanes negros, African Americans 'Autobiogrphy Malcolm X' 'The end of white world supremacy' -- subject(s): Black Muslims, Civil rights, African Americans, Race identity, History 'The speeches of Malcolm X' 'February 1965' -- subject(s): African Americans, Black Muslims, Civil rights, Race relations 'Two speeches' -- subject(s): African Americans, Civil rights, Race relations 'Prophetic Voice of Malcolm X' 'By any means necessary' -- subject(s): African Americans, Civil rights, Race relations 'Malcolm A to X' -- subject(s): African Americans, Biography, Black Muslims
Natalie Portman starred in Black Swan as the character Nina Sayers.
Tiffany Evans played the part of Tiffany in Diary of a Mad Black Woman (2005).
That'd be Othello
Line numbers are not very helpful because they are different from edition to edition of the play. If what you mean is, "Could the play Macbeth end at the moment Macduff cuts off Macbeth's head?", then, the answer is, yes it could. Producers of Shakespearean productions frequently cut lines and passages from the plays to get the running time down to something a modern audience can put up with. The play might well end at that point, and leave out Macduff's report to Malcolm, his line "The time is free", hailing Malcolm king of Scotland, Malcolm's creation of English earls instead of Scottish thanes, and his invitation to come to his coronation. Artistically, the play may not feel as satisfying if you end with a fade to black when Macduff's sword hacks off Macbeth's head. Macduff needs to underline the fact that Macbeth is dead and his reign of terror is over. At the very least, Macduff must say "Behold where stands the usurper's cursed head. The time is free!" If you end the play there, you allow the audience to forget about the question, "What happens next?" Having Malcolm hailed as king reminds the audience of the weakness of his character, and that in some ways he may prove a worse king than Macbeth (or, if his character is built up, would reinforce the relief felt that Macbeth is dead). The creation of earls is important in a reading of the play that sees Malcolm as an English-backed Anglophile bent on destroying the indigenous Scottish customs. But if you marginalize the character of Malcolm throughout the play, it would be consistent to end the play with "the time is free".
Malcolm X was an advocate of black nationalism
no
Yes.
Why wouldn't she be if one wants to ask that. Then one could ask did Abraham Lincoln care about black people and the answer is no. But yes she was.
Malcolm X.
Black rights.
Black Nationalism
Stevie
who the **** is Malcolm X
his black .
idek