There was no single 'Elizabethan stage'. Early modern
actors exploited various opportunities for patronage and
profit between the 1570s and 1642, whether touring, or
performing at inns, in country houses, in purpose-built
theatres, at court, at the universities, or at the inns
of court. This authoritative and comprehensive
collection of new essays explores the social, political,
and economic pressures under which the playing companies
of Shakespeare and his contemporaries operated. It shows
how they evolved over time to meet new challenges such
as the opposition of City of London authorities, the
possibility of permanent location in London, the
re-emergence of boy companies c. 1600, and the great
increase in court performance which began under James I.
Essays also explore the practical everyday business of
playing: acquiring scripts and playhouses, dramatic
authorship, the contribution of financiers and
entrepreneurs, rehearsing, lighting, music, props,
styles of acting, boy actors, and the role of women in
an 'all-male' world.A number of contributors address the
methodologies of theatre history itself, questioning its
philosophical premises and evaluating the nature of the
evidence we have, such as that from stage directions in
play-books or from the visual records. The collection as
a whole offers a challenging account of the world of the
players in Tudor-Stuart England, revising old
assumptions and so inviting us to explore anew the plays
which were written for them and which are their greatest
living legacy. |
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