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Shakespeare’s Theatre
Done by:Benedict Tan (2)
Keloysius Mak (11)Keith Ong (14)
Teo Ming Jie (21)John Yap (23)
Richard Burbage (1568-1619)
Richard Burbage (1568-1619) was the leading actor in the Lord Chamberlain's - King's Men
He played most of the dramatic leads, including Richard III, Hamlet, Lear and Othello.
He may have begun his career at 16 years, and continued to perform until his death
He was the son of James Burbage, who constructed the Theatre
He and his brother Cuthbert owned half of the Globe
Although he did not achieve the financial success of Shakespeare, Richard did manage to leave his heirs a modest estate of 300 pounds (To put that into perspective, actors were usually paid about 18 pounds yearly)
John Heminges (1556-1630)
John Heminges was an actor and the financial manager of The Lord Chamberlain’s – King’s men
He was the joint editor of the First Folio
He was believed to have played the part of Falstaff (character in King Henry IV and the Merry Wives of Windsor)
Augustine Philips (? – 1605) He was one of the first generation of
English actors to achieve wealth and a degree of social status by means of his trade
He was one of the six sharers in the Globe Theatre when it was built in 1598–9, with a one-eighth share.
Over time this made him a comparatively wealthy man, at least as far as Elizabethan actors were concerned.
Like Shakespeare, Phillips lived for many years near his occupation in Southwark, in Paris Garden near the Swan Theatre
Shakespeare’s audience
Almost every kind of people: Lower class: labourers Middle class: workers,
businessmen Upper class: Gentlemen, Lords Royalty: Queen Elizabeth
Classification via seating Lower class:
Groundlings (near the stage) Cost: 1p
Middle Class Sheltered, raised platforms Cost: 2p
Upper Class: Gentlemen’s Room or Lord’s room Cost: 5-6p
The Atmosphere
The audience would eat, drink and talk throughout the performance
Theatres were open air and used natural light
Plays were performed in the afternoon in the daylight
Plays used very little scenery, instead using language to set the scene
The Actors Over a thousand actors
in Shakespeare’s plays between the years 1590 and 1642 are known.
Most of them were poor, although perhaps twenty famous actors acquired respectable estates.
The First Folio itself includes a list of 26 famous actors
The Actors
William Shakespeare Richard Burba(d)ge John Hemmings Augustine Phillips William Kempt Thomas Poope George Bryan Henry Condell William Slye Richard Cowly John Lowine Samuel Crosse Alexander Cooke
Samuel Gilburne Robert Armin William Ostler Nathan Field John Underwood Nicholas Tooley William Ecclestone Joseph Taylor Robert Benfield Robert Gouge Richard Robinson John Schanke John Rice
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) It is not known exactly how
many roles Shakespeare played himself
Shakespeare began his career on the stage by 1592.
Tradition suggests that Shakespeare played relatively minor parts in his own plays, mainly the parts of older men.
William Shakespeare Recent scholarship based on computer
analysis of the language in Shakespeare's plays by Donald Foster proposes that Shakespeare acted in the following parts (selected):
All's Well That Ends Well: The King
As You Like It: Adam and Corin
The Comedy of Errors: Egeon
Hamlet: The Ghost Julius Caesar: Flavius King John: King Philip A Midsummer Night's
Dream: Theseus
The Merchant of Venice: Morocco, Messenger, and the Duke
Much Ado About Nothing: The Messenger and the Friar
Othello: Brabantio Richard the Second: Gaunt
and the Gardener The Taming of the Shrew: The
Lord (Induction)
The actors – the young
Women forbidden to act in Elizabethan law
Female roles are played by young boys aged 13-19 (before their voices break)
Boy actors lived with the adult members of the company
They received vigourous training in almost every aspect of acting
The actors – the young This included:
Dancing Music Singing Elocution (the study of formal speaking in
pronunciation, grammar, style, and tone ) Memorization Weaponry
Very little is known about individual boys, no portraits and only few references survived
The actors – the young
There were far fewer boys than men in the companies, which explains why there were few female parts
Transvestite theatre (the proper name) ended with the Restoration in 1660
When woman began appearing in female parts, old-timers would reminiscence on the boy Juliet having been the definite portrayal
Society’s view on ‘the theatre’ Well-do-to folk: most viewed actors as rogues and scoundrels (but they still watched the plays)
Common folk: clamoured to see actors perform
Despite disapproval, actors were called frequently to act in court
Shakespeare’s company, for example, was sponsored from 1596 to 1603 by George Carey and Baron Hunsdon (who later became Queen Elizabeth I’s Lord Chamberlain).
Baron Hunsdon
The Puritans Puritan clergy viewed the
theatre as sinful as it diverted attention from prayer, and claimed that it stimulated “whorish lust”
Philip Stubbes, a Puritan leader was one of the most outspoken: he claimed that all acting troupes were “secret conclaves” of sodomy
Philip Stubbes
The Anatomie of Abuses You say there are good Examples to be
learned in [plays]. Truly, so there are: if you will learn falsehood; if you will learn cozenage; if you will learn to deceive; if you will learn to play the hypocrite, to cog, lie, and falsify; if you will learn to jest, laugh, and leer, to grin, to nod, and mow; if you will learn to play the vice, to swear, tear, and blaspheme both Heaven and Earth; if you will learn to become a bawd, unclean, and to devirginate maids, to deflower honest wives; (...) and, finally, if you will learn to condemn God and all his laws, to care neither for heaven nor hell, and to commit all kind of sin and mischief, you need to go to no other school, for all these good examples may you see painted before your eyes in interludes and plays.
The Crown The Crown regarded drama as
having the power to persuade (making action look real), making it possible to serve the government’s interests
Numerous Elizabethan plays celebrated pious and patriotic values
Both Queen Elizabeth I (reigned 1558-1603) and her successor King James I (reigned 1603-25) were connoisseurs of the drama Queen Elizabeth
I
The decision However, the Crown eventually
bowed to the pressure of the Puritans, with the London aldermen (members of the municipal assembly) banning all playhouses within the city limits in 1594
Theatres were thus usually set up in seedy nearby suburbs, where London aldermen could not get them, side by side with ale houses, bear-baiting areas and brothels
The Theatre dismantled In 1597, the Theatre, where the
Lord Chamberlain’s men primarily performed, was forced to close because of a dispute with the landlord
James Burbage (the original creator) bought the old Blackfriars monastery, but the project ground to a halt due to protests
James Burbage died soon after on 2nd February, and the landlord seized the opportunity to try and dismantle the Theatre
James Burbage
The Globe Theatre One step ahead of the
law, Burbage’s sons dismantled the Theatre themselves
The pieces were hauled across the Thames to a site in Southwark
It took 6 months to rebuild the Theatre, and thus the Globe was built
The Globe Theatre It was one of four major theatres in the
area, along with the Swan, the Rose, and the Hope
The open-air, 20-sided amphitheatre rose three stories high with a diameter of approximately 100 feet
Its layout was similar (1500 -3000 audience capacity) to the Coliseum in Rome (50,000 audience capacity)
The rectangular stage platform on which the plays were performed was nearly 43 feet wide and 28 feet deep
The Globe Theatre
Not one inside picture of the old Globe exists
However a picture of the Swan has survived
The layout of the open air arena featured the 'pit' or the 'yard'
It also has a raised stage at one end and is surrounded by three tiers of roofed galleries with balconies overlooking the back of the stage.
Picture of the Swan (top)
Paper Model made by John (bottom)
So how did the constraints of the Globe affect
Shakespeare’s plays?
Transvestite performers The use of male actors for female
roles meant that there were very little scenes of making love in Shakespeare’s plays
Shakespeare compensated for this by the frequent use of bawdy puns (often stunningly vulgar) in the play
E.g “Well, while I live I’ll fear no other thing/ So sore, as keeping Nerissa’s ring” (Gratiano, Act 5)
– thing and ring were puns on the male and female sexual organs
Transvestite performers
This also provided dramatic irony in the cases of a female (played by a male) dressing up as a male in the plot
E.g Portia and Nerissa in the trial, Jessica in her elopement (Merchant of Venice)
Lack of scenery Actors could move more freely but
audience had to use their imagination for scenery
This made it necessary to create the atmosphere through language
E.g “Two households, both alike in dignity, /In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,” – Prologue, Romeo and Juliet
Structure of theatre
The Globe’s structure, with partially enclosed galleries and a open yard, presented a problem in acoustics
There was a need to compensate by actors’ delivery, “with energy and precision, not to themselves, but to all parts of the audience”
Presence of audience Shakespeare had to write his plays to be
enjoyed – there was thus a need to accommodate various styles in his plays
Therefore, sources for his plays ranged form the Latin Classics, the Bible, in popular ballads and in true accounts of murders
Story of a pound of flesh – present in religious tales in India and Persia
Highly likely to have been influenced by Christopher Marlowe’s play “The Jew of Malta” as well as a late 14th century drama “The Blockhead”-
The latter has the implacable Jew, the lady of Belmont finding a loophole, and the episode of he ring
Theatrical conventions
Fine writing was not original writing – plagiarising of plots was common Julius Caesar, Anthony and Cleopatra,
and Coriolanus: taken from Plutarch’s Lives
Othello: Cinthio’s Gil Hecatommithi As You Like It: Thomas Lodge’s
Roaslynde But, compare the difference:
Translation of Plutarch’s LivesTherefore, when she was sent unto by divers letters, . . . she disdained to set forward otherwise, but to take her barge in the river Cydnus; the poop whereof was of gold, the sails of purple, and the oars of silver, which kept stroke in rowing after the sound of the music of flutes, howboys [oboes], cithernes [guitars], viols, and such other instruments as they played upon in the barge.And now for the person of her self, she was laid under a pavilion of cloth of gold of tissue, apparelled and attired like the goddess Venus, commonly drawn in picture: and hard by her, on either hand of her, pretty fair boys apparelled as painters do set forth god Cupid, with little fans in their hands, with the which they fanned wind upon her.
Anthony and Cleopatra The barge she sat in, like a burnished throne,
Burned on the water: the poop was beaten gold;Purple the sails, and so perfumed thatThe winds were lovesick with them; the oars were silver,Which to the tune of flutes kept stroke and madeThe water which they beat to follow faster,As amorous of their strokes. For her own person,It beggared all description: she did lieIn her pavilion, cloth-of-gold of tissue,O'erpicturing that Venus where we seeThe fancy outwork of nature: on each side herStood pretty dimpled boys, like smiling Cupids,With divers-colored fans, whose wind did seemTo glow the delicate cheeks which they did cool,And what they undid did.(2.2.193-207)
Political Censors The Master of Revels was a political
censurer who examined all plays for political slander
Shakespeare’s history plays, therefore, had to present Queen Elizabeth and the Tudor line in a favourable light
This is evident in King Richard III (where Richard is probably not as bad as he is portrayed) as well as King Henry IV, V, VI
“Anglo-Superiority” This censorship was probably why
Shakespeare portrayed foreigners in a bad light
Examples (The Merchant of Venice): Portia’s comment on her suitors in Act 1,
Scene 2: based on common stereotypes Portrayal of Shylock as the villain Portia’s comment on Morocco in Act 2,
Scene 7 (“May all of his complexion choose me so”); Act 1, Scene 2 (“I rather he shrive me than wife me”)
Other factors There was a need to fill the large
stage completely – presence of battles, duels, songs, dances, balls, fights to fill the space
Plays on stage were often shortened for lack of time, thus the play we read today maybe unlike the actual performance
It was a theatrical convention to have scenes should contrast with each other in style
The burning of the Globe In 1613, a cannon was fired
as part of the performance of the play King Henry VIII
The flaming wadding landed on the Globe’s roof and burnt it down.
Everyone escaped unharmed (One man’s pants were set on fire, but the flames were doused with beer)
The shutting of the theatres
The Globe was immediately rebuilt and continued in operation
Anti-theatrical Puritan parliamentarians, however, finally got their way by deposing and executing King Charles I in 1642 and shut the theatres
The theatres were not to be opened for another 20 years
King Charles I
New London GlobeTheatre Structure
Let’s go on a virtual tour!
(Note: 10 seconds of silence have been inserted here. Please click on the link yourself to open the video)
Its construction In 1970 American actor and
director Sam Wanamaker, founded the Shakespeare Globe Trust in order to build a faithful recreation of Shakespeare’s Globe close to its original location.
Despite many disbelieving that such could happen, he persevered and in 1987, the foundations were built
The actual construction started in 1993, and the New Globe Theatre officially opened in 1997
The structure With the motive being to create a faithful
reconstruction, the structure was planned painstakingly
‘Green’ oak was cut and fashioned according to 16th-century practice and assembled in two-dimensional bays on the Bankside site
Oak laths and staves supported lime plaster mixed according to a contemporary recipe and the walls are covered in a white lime wash.
The roof is made of water reed thatch, based on samples found during the excavation.
The Design
Open-air stage similar to an amphitheatre
99 feet in diameter 20 sided circular-
shaped building Traditional
building materials such as timber, nails, stone (flint), plaster and thatched roof used
The stage wall
Behind the pillars is stage wall, also known as' Frons Scenae '
Doorway to the left and right behind pillars in structure and curtained central doorway for entrances by actors.
Above door area is highly decorative screen
' Herculean ' oak pillars are painted to look like marble with golden leaves
The ' Heavens '
The pillars support roof called 'Heavens'. The Heavens are painted with the sun, moon and the zodiac animals.
This area above stage is hidden from audience
A selection of ropes & rigging found here are used for special effects on stage.
The ' Tiring House '
Side doors and central door lead to small structure, back stage, called 'Tiring House'.
Area is used by actors to change costumes and attire.
Virtual model by Google Earth (top)
Paper model (bottom)
Overall design and structure Open air arena, called '
pit ' or ' yard ', is 80 feet in diameter and has raised stage at one end
Surrounded by three tiers of roofed galleries with balconies overlooking back of stage.
The stage projects halfway into the ' pit '
Two sets of external stairs in the structure , either side of the theater.
Globe Theatres around the world (selected) U.S.A.
Cedar City, Utah, Adams Shakespearean Theatre (top)
Germany Neuss am Rhein, Globe
Neuss (bottom) Italy
Rome, built 2003 Japan
Tokyo, Isozakia Arata's Panasonic Globe Theatre in Tokyo, built 1988
References http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/stage/aud
ience.html http://www.shakespeare.org.uk/content/view/735/623/ http://www.globe-theatre.org.uk/globe-theatre-actors.ht
m http://www.william-shakespeare.info/new-globe-theatre-
structure-design-dimensions.htm
http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca http://abagond.wordpress.com/2007/05/02/money-in-sha
kespeares-time/
http://ahds.ac.uk/ahdscollections/docroot/shakespeare/imagedetails.do?imageId=17506
http://www.bardweb.net/globe.html http://shakespeare.mit.edu/ http://www.culture24.org.uk/am10596 http://www.enotes.com/william-shakespeare/
shakespeares-globe-theater
References
http://gallery.nen.gov.uk/image58448-.html http://www.globe-theatre.org.uk http://www.sgc.umd.edu/plans.htm http://shakespeare.palomar.edu/ http://www.shakespeares-globe.org/virtualtour http://virtual.clemson.edu/caah/Shakespr/VRGLOBE/
2c2.php http://shakespeare.about.com/od/theglobe/a/
Th_Expereince.htm “The Friendly Shakespeare” by Norrie Epstein “The Idiot’s Guide to Shakespeare” by Laurie Rozakis “The Merchant of Venice: Total Study Edition” edited by
Robert Wilks “An Oxford Guide to Shakespeare” by Stanley Wells and
Lena Cowen Orlin
Thank you for your kind attention