This 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 \u27all-male\u27 world. A number of contribu...
In Shakespeare studies, the term romance is widely understood to refer to a group of plays from th...
In the commercial theaters of early modern London there worked a group of dramatists who, though the...
Includes bibliographical references.The public of 1590 and Shakespeare's inheritance in dramatic tec...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onwa...
What happens when scholarship on the early modern stage is presented on a recreation of an early mod...
How does our understanding of early modern performance, culture and identity change when we decentre...
Recent research on patronage, performance and playing spaces in early modern England allows us to re...
This study explores the cultural implications of theatrical performance in early modern England. Eve...
"Acts of Imagination" examines playing companies as the locus for the production of Renaissance dram...
In Medieval England, games and plays were cognate activities. By Shakespeare’s time, “games” seem to...
The fourteen essays included in this collection offer a range of contributions from both new and wel...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
This book offers an accessible introduction to England’s sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century pl...
The thirteen essays collected in ‘This Earthly Stage’ explore intersections between the world as sta...
In Shakespeare studies, the term romance is widely understood to refer to a group of plays from th...
In the commercial theaters of early modern London there worked a group of dramatists who, though the...
Includes bibliographical references.The public of 1590 and Shakespeare's inheritance in dramatic tec...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onwa...
What happens when scholarship on the early modern stage is presented on a recreation of an early mod...
How does our understanding of early modern performance, culture and identity change when we decentre...
Recent research on patronage, performance and playing spaces in early modern England allows us to re...
This study explores the cultural implications of theatrical performance in early modern England. Eve...
"Acts of Imagination" examines playing companies as the locus for the production of Renaissance dram...
In Medieval England, games and plays were cognate activities. By Shakespeare’s time, “games” seem to...
The fourteen essays included in this collection offer a range of contributions from both new and wel...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
This book offers an accessible introduction to England’s sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century pl...
The thirteen essays collected in ‘This Earthly Stage’ explore intersections between the world as sta...
In Shakespeare studies, the term romance is widely understood to refer to a group of plays from th...
In the commercial theaters of early modern London there worked a group of dramatists who, though the...
Includes bibliographical references.The public of 1590 and Shakespeare's inheritance in dramatic tec...