Source text (please read only from this text!): https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1507Perhaps no play in William Shakespeare's body of work is more divisive than his first tragedy <i>Titus Andronicus</i>, wherein the titular Roman general, freshly arrived back home after a decade-long crusade against the Goths, refuses to ascend to the emperorship and quickly sets off a bloody campaign of vengeance when he orders the death of the eldest son of Tamora, Queen of the Goths, to avenge the deaths of his own sons during the war. Violence gives way to more violence as more and more bodies are maimed, violated and dismembered in an agonizing symphony of bloodlust and retribution for the sins of both Titus and Tamora, with Shakespeare capitalizing on the success of other practitioners of the revenge tragedy in his time, such as Thomas Kyd and Christopher Marlowe, to deliver a gruesome spectacle that has simultaneously fascinated and repulsed audiences ever since. Whether you take Shakespeare's aims here to be sincere or parodic, and whether you side with critics like T.S. Eliot (who called it "one of the stupidest and most uninspired plays ever written") or artists like Julie Taymor (who directed the 1999 film adaptation with Anthony Hopkins and who has called the play the most "relevant of Shakespeare's plays for the modern era"), it cannot be denied that <i>Titus Andronicus</i> evokes the kinds of visceral and complicated responses that only a play from an ingenious mind can produce.<br><br>And to perform it all? Three men (<a href="https://librivox.org/reader/11305">Craig Franklin</a>, <a href="https://librivox.org/reader/10789">Tomas Peter</a>, and <a href="https://librivox.org/reader/9905">Brad “Hamlet” Filippone</a>) and three women (<a href="https://librivox.org/reader/10179">Sonia</a>, <a href="https://librivox.org/reader/13140">Jenn Broda</a>, and <a href="https://librivox.org/reader/13852">Kelly S. Taylor</a>), determined to give you a performance of this controversial work that you will never forget. You thought you knew your Shakespeare? Well, think again! (Summary by Tomas Peter)
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Magic Window:
BC Admin
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LibriVox recording settings: mono (1 channel), 44100 Hz sample rate, 128 kbps constant bit rate MP3. See the Tech Specs
For individual roles:
Submit one file per act. At the beginning of the first file, say:
Leave 3-5 seconds of space between your lines (room noise, not generated silence)."Character, read by your name."
For narration/stage directions:
Leave 0.5 to 1 second of silence at the beginning.
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At the end of the final scene in each act, say:"Act # of The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit librivox.org."
If you are recording the final section of the book, add:"End of Act #."
Leave 5 seconds of silence at the end."End of The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare."
Filename:
For individual roles: titusandronicus_role_#_#.mp3 where the first # is the act number and the second # is the scene number. (e.g. titusandronicus_tamora_1_1.mp3)
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MC to select: Kitty
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