Julius Caesar: Act 1, Scene 3 (part 2)

It's still raining in Rome! It's the perfect cover for a little conspiratorial administrative work, don't you think?

Meet Cinna, one of the Interchangeable Conspirators. Apart from Cassius and Casca, none of other conspirators really get enough stage time to establish individual personalities. Poor guys...

Julius Caesar: Act 1, Scene 3 (part 1)

It's time for some WEATHER. There's never any weather in Shakespeare that doesn't have a Purpose of some sort. Let's see what our buddy Casca thinks:

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Fun fact! There were apparently umbrellas in ancient Roman times, but they were primarily used by wealthy women as sun shades, as opposed to rain shields, and men considered themselves too manly to use them.

 

Julius Caesar: Act 1, Scene 2 (part 4)

Let's finally wrap up this scene!

Casca is probably my favorite character in Julius Caesar. He's just so sardonic and disrespectful. He's also got one of my favorite lines, which didn't make the cut for this comic:

CASSIUS: Will you dine with me tomorrow?
CASCA: Ay, if I be alive, and your mind hold, and your dinner worth the eating.

Try using this line the next time someone asks you over for dinner. It'll go over GREAT.

Julius Caesar: Act 1, Scene 2 (part 2)

When we last left our heroes, Caesar and the gang were off to watch men run around dressed in goat skins hitting people with whips, as you do on the Lupercal, while Brutus and Cassius lingered behind.

I love Brutus. He's so simultaneously self-important and incredibly earnest. I bet he's that really irritating kind of friend who tells you exactly how you've messed up your life, but only because he genuinely cares about you. 

Julius Caesar: Dramatis Personae

Yes, it's that time again... time to start another scene-by-scene journey through one of Shakespeare's plays! This time we're tackling Julius Caesar. As always, let's get started with a good, old-fashioned who's who:

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Things I learned putting this together:

  1. Julius Caesar has a LOT of random minor characters.

  2. Seriously, there's tons of them. And they all have similar-sounding Roman names.

  3. It's really hard to visually distinguish characters when they are almost all Roman men, who historically were all clean-shaven and, according to their busts, all had identical combed-forward hairstyles.

  4. Seriously, I'm going to have to print this out for reference, and I'm the one drawing this stupid thing.

So... sorry about that in advance.