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
2 - Blackfriars, music and masque: theatrical contexts of the last plays
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 1948 Gerald Eades Bentley was confident that one of the most important events in the affairs of the King's Men, and one that 'influenced decidedly the dramatic compositions of Shakespeare', was the acquisition of the Blackfriars playhouse in 1608. He was certain that all Shakespeare's plays from Cymbeline onwards were composed specifically with the indoor theatre in mind, and aimed at 'the sophisticated audience attracted to that house'. It would, at first sight, seem entirely likely that the adoption of a new performance space might have exercised an important influence on the way Shakespeare wrote, but exactly how and to what extent is far from self-evident. James Burbage originally took over two properties in the former Blackfriars priory in 1596 to provide winter accommodation for his theatre company, the Chamberlain's Men. He constructed a galleried playhouse of some 66 by 46 feet, and if his plans had gone ahead, Andrew Gurr conjectures, 'the Globe might never have been built, and London playing would have moved indoors far earlier than it did'. In the event, protests by the inhabitants of the area against the noise and inconvenience of the presence of actors and audiences persuaded the Privy Council to prevent him from performing in his new theatre. Instead it was leased to one of the children's companies which performed much less frequently than the adult companies, and so, presumably, were tolerable to the easily antagonised neighbours.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare's Last Plays , pp. 29 - 46Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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