In order to answer this, one would have to know which DVD and whether you want to compare it to a particular performance (and if so, which one) or to a written copy of the script.
Who knows? The Duke of Venice is not a character in the play The Merchant of Venice. In Othello, yes. But not in the Merchant of Venice.
the line is from a play called the merchant of Venice
You will find Portia and Shylock in the play of Hamlet.
It is from Merchant of Venice.
There is no "audience" in the play Merchant of Venice, unlike Hamlet or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Who knows? The Duke of Venice is not a character in the play The Merchant of Venice. In Othello, yes. But not in the Merchant of Venice.
the line is from a play called the merchant of Venice
You will find Portia and Shylock in the play of Hamlet.
It is from Merchant of Venice.
There is no "audience" in the play Merchant of Venice, unlike Hamlet or A Midsummer Night's Dream.
There is no specific record of a play titled "The Maori Merchant of Venice" being created. However, if you are referring to a production or adaptation of Shakespeare's play, "The Merchant of Venice," that incorporates Maori culture, customs or language, it would depend on the specific production or adaptation. Shakespeare's original play was written between 1596 and 1598.
The Merchant of Venice was written by William Shakespeare. It is considered a comedy. The main character is Antonio, the merchant.
It's a play by Shakespeare.
Launcelot Gobbo (a clown, first Shylock's servant and then Bassanio's) says this to Gobbo, his father in The Merchant of Venice (act 2 Scene 2). He has just encountered his father, who does not recognize him.
Shakespeare's play was never called The Jew of Venice. It was always The Merchant of Venice. You may have been thinking of Christopher Marlowe's play, The Jew of Malta.
There is no masked ball in the Merchant of Venice. Sorry. Not in Shakespeare's play, anyway.
The Merchant of Venice