Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 What is a ‘late play’?
- 2 Blackfriars, music and masque: theatrical contexts of the last plays
- 3 The literary and dramatic contexts of the last plays
- 4 Politics, religion, geography and travel: historical contexts of the last plays
- 5 ‘You speak a language that I understand not’: listening to the last plays
- 6 The Winter’s Tale: shifts in staging and status
- 7 Cymbeline: the afterlife
- 8 Literary invocations of The Tempest
- 9 Pericles: the afterlife
- 10 The Two Noble Kinsmen and King Henry VIII: the last last plays
- Further reading: Clare Smout
- Index
9 - Pericles: the afterlife
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 What is a ‘late play’?
- 2 Blackfriars, music and masque: theatrical contexts of the last plays
- 3 The literary and dramatic contexts of the last plays
- 4 Politics, religion, geography and travel: historical contexts of the last plays
- 5 ‘You speak a language that I understand not’: listening to the last plays
- 6 The Winter’s Tale: shifts in staging and status
- 7 Cymbeline: the afterlife
- 8 Literary invocations of The Tempest
- 9 Pericles: the afterlife
- 10 The Two Noble Kinsmen and King Henry VIII: the last last plays
- Further reading: Clare Smout
- Index
Summary
In Shakespeare's day, Pericles was one of his most popular works. It was first staged by the King's Men at the Globe Theatre sometime in late 1607 or 1608, and contemporary dramatists referred to it as a model of popularity. Robert Taylor's Prologue to his c.1613-14 The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl hopes that: 'And if [the play] prove so happy as to please, / We'll say 'tis fortunate, like Pericles'. Ben Jonson's 1631 poem 'On The New Inn' complains of the lasting audience interest in Shakespeare's 'mouldy tale', some twenty years after it was first staged. A licence to revive the play was granted in that same year, suggesting that Jonson's envy had some basis in fact. In 1640, James Shirley alludes to Pericles in his Arcadia, in which one of his characters exclaims: 'Tire me? I am no woman. Keep your tires to yourself. Nor am I Pericles Prince of Tyre.' The pun suggests that Shakespeare's play was still current towards the close of the theatres in 1642. In the Interregnum, Samuel Sheppard's poem The Times Displayed in Six Sestiads (1646) singles out Pericles in praise of Shakespeare: “See him whose tragic scenes Euripides / Doth equal, and with Sophocles we may / Compare great Shakespeare. Aristophanes / Never like him, his fancy could display. / Witness his Prince of Tyre, his Pericles.” / Pericles also appears to have been the first Shakespeare play to be staged during the Restoration, when theatres reopened in 1659, and it was revived again in 1661.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare's Last Plays , pp. 173 - 184Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009