Cinderella - play script

CINDERELLA Characters: Cinderella Prince Stepmother Stepsisters - Minerva and Calliope Queen Constantina King Maximillian Lionel Fairy Godmother Townspeople *Based on Cinderella (1997)* -----INTRODUCTION---- Godmother: (sings) Impossible... for a plain yellow pumpkin to become a golden carriage. Impossible... for a plain country bumpkin and a prince to join in marriage. (spoken) A slipper, made of glass, is just a shoe. And dreamers, never make a dream come true. (sings) Impossible!!! -----OVERTURE----- --At the Market Place-- Stepmother: Come along now, Girls!! Minerva: Hurry up!! Calliope: Move it!! (Following behind, panting, and carrying many packages is Cinderella. They arrive at a cart with hats on it. Minerva picks up one and puts it on her head. Calliope gasps) Minerva: What do you think mother?? Stepmother: (staggering, then laughing) It's certainly not the sort of thing you see every day. Calliope: I saw it first! How do you think it looks on me, Mother?? Minerva: (makes a gagging sound) Uhh!! Awful! Calliope: I didn't ask you! Stepmother: How can a mother choose between two such extraordinary daughters? (she goes into the store) Calliope: Cinderella? Cinderella!! Cinderella: Yes? (she has been watching a puppet show at another cart about a prince & his bride) Calliope: What do you think? Does it look better on

  • Word count: 8473
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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Was Julius Caesar an effective leader?

Was Julius Caesar an Effective Leader? When considering whether Julius Caesar was an effective leader two main areas must be taken into account; his generalship and his political positions of power within the Roman Republic. Effectiveness is the degree to which something is successful in producing a desired result of success. This question depends on both his lifetime and the state in which he left Rome on his death. By approaching his entire political career, including his first consulship prior to his military career in Gaul, as well as his dictatorship and in terms of his military exploits, concentrating on the Gallic wars. Also using certain criteria of effective leaders and judge whether he stands up to them, such criteria include: decision making without compromising personal integrity, an ability to fit unforeseen circumstances within an ultimate design, persuasion and the skill to win people over, acceptance of criticism to maintain morale and the choice of competent subordinates.1 By challenging Caesar's personality, as seen through writings on his life, it will discern qualities which stand him as an effective leader and those that do not. It is important to keep in mind that he was a man who was overshadowed by his past and that of his relatives; a weak man suffering from epilepsy and a frail body and coming from a damaged noble family, a relative of Marius who had

  • Word count: 6012
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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How do the makers of The Simpsons use a simple cartoon format to combine very realistic situations and farcical comedy to produce a widely popular television series?

The Simpsons How do the makers of The Simpsons use a simple cartoon format to combine very realistic situations and farcical comedy to produce a widely popular television series? The Simpsons is a very successful animated sitcom. A sitcom is an abbreviation of situation comedy in which you have different storylines for every episode. Other famous animated sitcoms include Family Guy, Futurama and South Park. The Simpsons, created by cartoonist Matt Groening (and named after the members of his immediate family except for Bart, which is an anagram of brat) first appeared on American television on April 19, 1987. The family live in the city of Springfield, named because of a long running joke based on the fact that 34 states in the USA have at least one community with that name. Springfield is meant to be a stereotypical American city with all the general amenities such as an elementary school, a baseball stadium, an airport, a shopping district and a church etc. Most people can relate the characters in The Simpsons to someone they know, and although they are not a perfect family, most if not all of the characters are emphasised stereotypical American citizens (i.e. Homer loves food and eats plenty of it as do many American citizens). The main characters include Homer, a father who gives bad advice and works as the safety inspector at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant;

  • Word count: 4662
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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To what extent is the theme of gender confusion used to create comic effect in Aristophanes' The Poet and the Women?

To what extent is the theme of gender confusion used to create comic effect in Aristophanes' The Poet and the Women? When one reads The Poet and the Women, what strikes the reader the most is that Aristophanes uses men dressing as women to amuse the audience and create comic effect. This essay will explore the playwright's use of gender confusion, as well as his manipulation of the theatrical conventions of the time, in an attempt to understand the true extent of the contribution of gender confusion to the play. Before exploring the extent to which the theme of gender confusion contributes to the comic effect of the play, one must first understand what gender confusion is in terms of Greek plays. Gender confusion occurs when the sex of a character is indiscernible; it is unclear as to whether the character is male or female. Gender confusion can affect both the audience and the surrounding characters of the play. Aristophanes often manipulated the theatrical conventions of the current Greek theatre in order to achieve comic effect. For example, one Greek theatrical convention was that male actors played all of the characters on stage, including the female characters. This convention was used in both Greek tragedies and Greek comedies, so this in itself would not have been funny. However, Aristophanes makes this convention humorous by playing with it, and he takes it

  • Word count: 3998
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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Assess the significance of the Gods in Homer's Iliad and Odyssey

Assess the significance of the Gods in Homer's Iliad and Odyssey It is the gods, not fate, who are concerned with the activities of human life in both the ">Odyssey<-" and the ">Iliad<-". The human action is so central that it quite absorbs the gods, as though they had no other responsibilities. We get a sense of this divine participation from the very beginning of the " Iliad "Hera prompts Achilles to call the assembly (1.54); Athene checks his resolve to attack Agamemnon (1.188ff.); Zeus sends to Agamemnon a dream bidding him rally the Achaeans (2.16); Athene prompts Odysseus to prevent them from boarding the ships (2.182ff.); she silences the army to let him speak (2.281); Aphrodite drives Helen to Paris (3.420). Most notable throughout the poem is a hero's might increased by a god (4.439, 4.515, 5.1-2, 5.122, 5.125, etc.). In all these cases, the god achieves nothing supernatural but simply stimulates existing potentialities. It could not be otherwise. Human acts or states of being so stand out in their native quality that no external agency is allowed to affect their true nature. Yet a man's fierce resilience may be quite baffling and may suggest some unsuspected power. Human free-will is something natural an mysterious at the same time. If the matter is seen in this light, it is pointless to inquire how far in Homer a man is responsible for his acts and how far he is

  • Word count: 3604
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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Whom do you admire more as a leader &#150; Odysseus in the Odyssey or Aeneas in the Aeneid?

Whom do you admire more as a leader - Odysseus in the Odyssey or Aeneas in the Aeneid? These two heroes have embarked from the same destination but on very different journeys. Whilst they are both Iliadic heroes at the start of their stories, they develop and adapt their manner towards the characteristics required of them to succeed. Before we judge them, it is necessary to determine our definition of a successful leader. A hero from the Iliad must be "a speaker of words and one who is accomplished in action", according to the horseman Phoinix (Iliad.9.413). A leader must have these primary qualities then, as he must lead by example, but to create the ideal we must add to this. The leader should rely on no others but in turn listen to sound counsel. He should be fair in his justice, in control of his situation and surroundings, keep his men abreast of the plan of action and reasoning behind it, remain calm under pressure and have compassion and understanding for his people. Thus his primary concerns should be the welfare of his people, their security and maintaining peace at all costs. His men, a good indicator of his leadership to us, should therefore give him loyalty, trust, and obedience, if the leader has led them suitably. The performance of the men is also important, and what they achieve under his direction is representative of his strength of leadership, though this

  • Word count: 3596
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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In what ways does The Simpsons portray American family and social values?

In what ways does The Simpsons portray American family and social values? Aims and Objectives The purpose of this study is to discuss the extent to which The Simpsons is representative of American family and social values. I will discuss how each member of the Simpsons family behaves, as well as highlighting what may be socially expected of them. Secondly, I will examine how the Simpsons family interacts with the surrounding community, concentrating particularly on the images that they portray. In order to do this, I will examine the regular codes and conventions of the series to show how the characters work together in the whole scheme of things Introduction Set in the north-western Illinois town of Springfield, The Simpsons is an animated sit-com about the day-to-day tribulations of a disfunctional lower-middle-class family. The main family itself consists of the father, Homer, his wife Marge, son Bart, and daughters Lisa and Maggie. Other family members include Homer's father, Abraham Simpson, as well as Marge's sisters, Patty and Selma. Occasionally, Marge's mother, Mrs Bouvier, makes an appearance, and on one occasion, Homer discovered that he had an adopted older brother, Nigel. Since its official launch in 1989, The Simpsons has become one of the world's most popular animated series, and has been enjoyed the world over by children and adult's alike.

  • Word count: 3561
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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Why do you think the TV. programme The Simpsons is so successful?

Why do you think the T.V. programme The Simpsons is so successful? In recent years, a certain animated sitcom has caught the public's attention, evoking reactions that are both favourable and unfavourable, but hardly ever apathetic. As a brilliant, socially aware satire, Matt Groening's 'The Simpson's' has effectively stirred different emotions from different factions of the culturally deadened American populace and for this alone, it should be recognised as quality programming. The Simpsons is a brutal satire of our society and our family structures yet it offers several redeeming qualities such as feminism, endurance and most of all humour. The American animation was created by Matt Groening as shorts for the Tracy Ullman Show and was bought by Fox Network, which began screening it as half hour shows in 1989. Initially its success was restricted to the 9-16 year old age group, but its success grew quickly and it is now popular in many countries with many different audiences. The Simpson's is one of Americas most popular television shows. It ranks as the number one television programme for the viewers under eighteen years of age. Matt Groening intended for them to represent the American typical family "who love each other and drive each other crazy." The improbable long term success of the Simpson lies in its producer's ability to understand the expectations of the

  • Word count: 3495
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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&#145;There are tears for suffering&#146; Aeneid 1.462. Show how Virgil conveys the pathos of suffering in the Aeneid. To what extent is a sympathetic vision of life evident in Homer&#146;s Odyssey?

'There are tears for suffering' Aeneid 1.462. Show how Virgil conveys the pathos of suffering in the Aeneid. To what extent is a sympathetic vision of life evident in Homer's Odyssey? Above all else, the Odyssey is a moral poem, where the guilty are punished and the good are exulted. No loose ends or unfinished business obstruct our certainty that all those involved have received their just deserts. Due to the lack of tragedy in the Odyssey, it was Aristotle that labelled it a 'comedy'. However, the Aeneid is a far more complex arrangement of characters, many of which perish for the glory of Rome to be realised. The constant and unalterable question hanging in the background throughout the poem is whether duty and honour overrides all this tragedy. Is the Roman race really worth all this inflicted pain? The future of the Romans is secured by the end of the Aeneid, and the final scene is representative of the themes of the story as a whole. We are left with an ending that is unsatisfying in the same way that the end of the Odyssey is appealingly simplistic. In the end of the Odyssey is left with the hero returning home to his wife and laying down on the bed together (or a triumphant end to the warring by Athene). But in the Aeneid, we find the man who will found the Roman race ends the story plunging his sword "full into his enemy's breast", an enemy that has just attempted

  • Word count: 3429
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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What impression is given of Aeneas as a man and as a leader in Books 1-6 of "The Aeneid"? How similar is he to Odysseus?

What impression is given of Aeneas as a man and as a leader in Books 1-6 of "The Aeneid"? How similar is he to Odysseus? To analyse the character of Aeneas in comparison to the character of Odysseus we must first recognise that they have both been sent away from home, Aeneas by force after the sack of Troy and Odysseus to fight from the Greek side. To analyse them as leaders and "good men" we must look at their feats and their strengths as well as recognising their flaws as people and warriors. Both characters are extremely respected as heroes. Virgil presents us with the man that founded the greatest empire of all, the Roman Empire. Odysseus had the idea of the Trojan horse, without which the Greeks would not have won the war. Both are primarily good men who serve their countries well. I found though, that they do this in two very different ways. Odysseus' nostos and Aeneas search for a new home. Scholars continue to disagree on whether or not Aeneas is presented as a good soldier, although the question itself is certainly far from black and white, complicated by the culturally relative nature of terms such as "conflict"and "courage", as well as by the rather oblique definition that "good" itself holds. Odysseus respectively. I will argue that Aeneas meets the criteria set by neither model and that, ultimately, he is an emotionally unstable, morally dubious and even an

  • Word count: 3298
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: Classics
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