-;" | Scientific classification Scientific classification or biological classification is how biologists group and categorize extinct and living species of organisms. ...
- Families many, see text The Perciformes, also called the Percomorphi or Acanthopteri, include about 40% of all fish and are the largest order of vertebrates. ...
- Subfamilies Anthiinae Epinephelinae - Groupers Grammistinae The Serranidae or serranids are a family of fish, belonging to the order Perciformes. ...
Genus:
Hypoplectrus
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- A hamlet is a fish of the genus Hypoplectrus. It is a grouping fish that is found mainly in coral reefs in the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, particularly around Florida and the Bahamas. - - == Reproduction == - - Hamlets are simultaneous hermaphrodites (or synchronous hermaphrodites): They have both male and female sexual organs at the same time as an adult. They seem quite at ease mating in front of divers, allowing observations in the wild to occur readily. They do not practice self-fertilization, but when they find a mate, the pair takes turns between which one acts as the male and which acts as the female through multiple matings, usually over the course of several nights. - Groups Conodonta Hyperoartia Petromyzontidae (lampreys) Pteraspidomorphi (early jawless fish) Thelodonti Anaspida Cephalaspidomorphi (early jawless fish) Galeaspida Pituriaspida Osteostraci Gnathostomata (jawed vertebrates) Placodermi Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish) Acanthodii Osteichthyes (bony fish) Actinopterygii (ray-finned fish) Sarcopterygii (lobe-finned fish) Actinistia (coelacanths) Dipnoi (lungfish) A fish is a poikilothermic (cold-blooded) water-dwelling... Some of the biodiversity of a coral reef. ... ... Gulf of Mexico in 3D perspective. ... State nickname: Sunshine State Other U.S. States Capital Tallahassee Largest city Jacksonville (largest metropolitan area is Miami) Governor Jeb Bush (R) Senators Bill Nelson (D) Mel Martinez (R) Official language(s) English Area 170,451 km² (22nd) - Land 137,374 km² - Water 30,486 km² (17. ...
Hamlet is certainly the most famous Dane in all dramatic literature, but he hasn't been seen brooding around the McCarter Theater since film and TV star Harry Hamlin played him (most charismatically) in 1982 in a highly romanticized staging by McCarter's former artistic director Nagle Jackson.
Both Campbell and (director) Fish seem to be in agreement that it is Hamlet the actor/provoker not Hamlet the poet/procrastinator who is to be the key to the mystery.
It is only with Hamlet's death, a scene that fails to register despite an unexpected twist does the pain and the realization of his course of action fail to grip.
Fish's goals in this staging of a play the lines of which many theater-goers can recite along with the actors is to defy expectations, to force us to take a new look, to challenge our assumptions about what we thought we knew, and to surprise us again and again.
Hamlet is playing at being mad and trying to assume the responsibility, as Prince, to "set it right" in Denmark, and the other characters are constantly playing and staging the roles and scenes of their lives.
Fish repeatedly reminds us, with his conspicuous display of the upper reaches of the Berlind backstage, the wheeling onstage of the requisite fog machine for the ghostly "battlements", the sudden descent of a dangling loudspeaker, that we are witnessing not life but theater.