This question is very difficult to answer with any degree of accuracy.
Consider just a few of the indeterminate variables which need to be considered in order to find an average length of time for "shakespearean [sic] actors to memorize the script".
How many actors?
Can the actors read?
How quickly can the actors read?
Do any of the actors who are capable of reading have a photographic memory?
If the actors can't read, when can someone help with memorization?
How many lines need to be memorized?
Is the language in which the script is written the actors' first language?
If not, how fluent are they in the language of the script?
Is the memorization process delayed because the actors have to wait for changes or new pages from the playwright?
Itll take to long!
Read it over and over, and try to write it out on a piece of paper so your start to remember it
When working to come up with a script for a college dance competition, be sure to get the names of the music and the names of the contestants correct. If you do not know how to pronounce a name, find out ahead of time to avoid embarrassment on the day of the competition. If it is going to be a long competition, you may want to include an intermission.
In Shakespeare's plays, the major difference between a tragedy and a comedy is that the main character dies in a tragedy. A Shakespearean comedy can be very tragic and depressing, but so long as the main character remains alive, it is not actually a tragedy.
Samual French has been providing scripts for a long time. http://www.samuelfrench.com/store/advanced_search_result.php?keywords=bleacher+bums&x=7&y=4
It sounds like your procrastinating by asking this question. Just repeat it over and over. You could try it section by section. However it triggers or stays in your memory. Maybe you remember a certain line because of an event from your life. Hope this helps, Chao!
its a wonderful script....
What I do is not memorize the speech. Rather, I remember the points and if I am familiar enough with the topic (which I should be!) then just talking rather than reading off a mental script is so much better. For example, I had to deliver a speech to my class about Henry Ford, a ten minute long speech. Rather than memorizing it or putting it on index cards as did the remainder of the class, I just knew him so well that I was able to talk about him. I did not remember at all exactly how my script was. However, I was so immersed in the topic I could talk as if I was him. If you decide that you want to memorize a speech, get going quickly! Read it over about ten times. Then, try reading it out loud using the script. Over time, begin to look at the script less and less until you are confident. Remember, if you miss a few words or forget exactly what your lines are, this is not a play. Nobody knows what you were supposed to say, so as long as you expressed what you intended you will be fine.
Langston hughes
If you listen to it for several hours a day than it should only take a few days to memorize. I guess it really depends on the person trying to memorize it, and how long they actually listen to it.
It depends on how you define "long". Even so, I see now way to memorize even 50 pages in three days. Good luck.
Here's a good link.
The difference between memorize and remember is that memorize occurs in real time whereas people remember what happened long ago.
I'm afraid there's no easy way to memorize songs -- you just sing them over and over until you've got them learned.
There are 3: Glen Power, Danny O'Donoghue and Mark Sheehan.
6 weeks
10 years bruv