Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Julius Caesar", Act III, Scene 2, the Murder Scene, George Clint (1822) After ignoring the soothsayer, as well as his wife Calpurnia's own premonitions, Caesar goes to the Senate. The conspirators approach him with a fake petition pleading on behalf of Metellus Cimber's banished brother. As Caesar predictably rejects the petition, Casca and ...
George Frideric Handel composed his opera Giulio Cesare in Egitto (known also simply as Giulio Cesare) in 1724 to a libretto by Nicola Francesco Haym. [4]"Va tacito e nascosto" is set as a da capo aria sung by the character Julius Caesar in act 1, scene 9 of the opera, and is scored for strings and natural horn in F major. [1]
The quote appears in Act 3 Scene 1 of William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, [1] where it is spoken by the Roman dictator Julius Caesar, at the moment of his assassination, to his friend Marcus Junius Brutus, upon recognizing him as one of the assassins.
"Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears" is the first line of a speech by Mark Antony in the play Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare. Occurring in Act III, scene II, it is one of the most famous lines in all of Shakespeare's works. [1]
A reference to Lucius Junius Brutus is in the following lines from Shakespeare's play The Tragedie of Julius Cæsar, (Cassius to Marcus Brutus, Act 1, Scene 2). "O, you and I have heard our fathers say, There was a Brutus once that would have brookt Th'eternal devil to keep his state in Rome As easily as a king."
Cassius (Martin Gabel) and Brutus (Orson Welles) in Caesar (Act I, Scene 2) Unable to attend on opening night, drama critic John Mason Brown asked to review the matinee preview of Caesar—"a troublesome request", wrote producer John Houseman, but one that was granted. At the end of the performance, Brown asked to be taken backstage.
The Mercury Theatre production of Julius Caesar, the scene in which Julius Caesar (Holland, center) addresses the conspirators including Brutus (Orson Welles, left). Holland made his professional stage debut in London while a student at RADA as George Patterson in Howard Irving Young's The Drums Begin at the Embassy Theatre in April 1934. [5]
"The evil that men do", a quotation from Act 3, scene ii of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare; The Evil That Men Do, a 1904 novel by M. P. Shiel; The Evil That Men Do, a 1953 novel by Anne Hocking; The Evil That Men Do, a 1966 novel by Judson Philips, writing as Hugh Pentecost; The Evil That Men Do, a 1969 novel by John Brunner