London theatrical culture, 1560-1590
London theatrical culture, 1560-1590
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onward, multiple venues in and just outside London that played to a significant proportion of Londoners on most afternoons. Revisiting the evidence for this historical moment offers the opportunity to look afresh at the playhouses, plays, and playmakers that drove this new theatrical culture. These three terms include the inns and indoor spaces that regularly hosted plays, alongside the now more familiar outdoor, amphitheatrical venues the Theatre and the Rose; plays onstage, plays in print, and plays that are now lost; and the writers, actors, company managers, and male and female playhouse builders and investors who made the creation and performance of those plays possible. Conventional histories of this period’s theaters have tended to concentrate on the opening of the Theatre in 1576 as the first such playhouse. Scholarship of the late 20th and early 21st centuries shows that this event was not the initiating formative act it has come to seem, and emphasizes instead the multiple decades and kinds of playing space that need to be attended to in understanding the earliest years of the playhouses. Multiple kinds of playing company, too, operated in this period, in particular companies made up of predominantly adult male performers, with boys playing female roles, and companies composed entirely of boy performers.
Kesson, Andy
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Munro, Lucy
1a75a95e-3ab4-4065-8026-41ddb1bb76dd
Davies, Callan
00da24ad-3e32-4484-a8c8-c9e624511295
28 June 2021
Kesson, Andy
a9193096-4fba-43f3-a1a7-36826efe9049
Munro, Lucy
1a75a95e-3ab4-4065-8026-41ddb1bb76dd
Davies, Callan
00da24ad-3e32-4484-a8c8-c9e624511295
Kesson, Andy, Munro, Lucy and Davies, Callan
(2021)
London theatrical culture, 1560-1590.
In,
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature.
United Kingdom.
Oxford University Press.
(doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.1194).
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Book Section
Abstract
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onward, multiple venues in and just outside London that played to a significant proportion of Londoners on most afternoons. Revisiting the evidence for this historical moment offers the opportunity to look afresh at the playhouses, plays, and playmakers that drove this new theatrical culture. These three terms include the inns and indoor spaces that regularly hosted plays, alongside the now more familiar outdoor, amphitheatrical venues the Theatre and the Rose; plays onstage, plays in print, and plays that are now lost; and the writers, actors, company managers, and male and female playhouse builders and investors who made the creation and performance of those plays possible. Conventional histories of this period’s theaters have tended to concentrate on the opening of the Theatre in 1576 as the first such playhouse. Scholarship of the late 20th and early 21st centuries shows that this event was not the initiating formative act it has come to seem, and emphasizes instead the multiple decades and kinds of playing space that need to be attended to in understanding the earliest years of the playhouses. Multiple kinds of playing company, too, operated in this period, in particular companies made up of predominantly adult male performers, with boys playing female roles, and companies composed entirely of boy performers.
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Published date: 28 June 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 481632
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481632
PURE UUID: 26f22011-b917-47b1-8d53-f64bb2241556
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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2023 16:41
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 02:10
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Author:
Andy Kesson
Author:
Lucy Munro
Author:
Callan Davies
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