This essay seeks to situate the Hundred Days within the context of English popular culture by offering an examination of the plays staged at the patent theatres of Covent Garden and Drury Lane during Napoleon’s return to power. As sites closely monitored by the Office of the Lord Chamberlain, Covent Garden and Drury Lane represented venues wherein popular reactions, rarely straightforwardly and often uneasily, were kept in check by the state. This essay examines how these theatres’ repertoires engaged with Napoleon’s return to France; whether questions of political order, security, and legitimacy were acknowledged and addressed; and what Edmund Kean’s early career might reveal about the political purchase of theatre-going during this period
How did early modern actors convey meaning on stage without speaking? A few plays of the Caroline pe...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
The article discusses the use of minor characters in the theatrical production "Cymbeline" by Willia...
This collection of essays is part of a series coordinated by Palgrave Macmillan under the title War,...
ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: STAGING AN EMPIRE: HOW LATE VICTORIAN THEATRE REPRESENTS PUBLIC PERCEPTIO...
This chapter brings Charles Dibdin the Younger centre stage, facilitating an assessment of longer-te...
At the centre of David Worrall’s Theatric Revolution a striking tableau is unveiled. It is around 18...
Most of the plays are preceded by a brief history of the play, dramatis personae, etc.General title-...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
One of the most striking features of performances at the reconstructed Shakespeare’s Globe has been ...
Review of Scott McMillin and Sally-Beth MacLean, 'The Queen's Men and their plays' (Cambridge: Cambr...
Despite the popular aphorism that ‘the Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton’, hi...
Governing the Pen to the Capacity of the Stage: Reading the Red Bull and Clerkenwell by Lucy Munro: ...
Review of Scott McMillin and Sally-Beth MacLean The Queen's Men and Their Plays, 1583-1603 (Cambridg...
Honorable Mention, 2012 Joe A. Callaway Prize in Drama and TheaterFirst Place, Large Not-for-Profit ...
How did early modern actors convey meaning on stage without speaking? A few plays of the Caroline pe...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
The article discusses the use of minor characters in the theatrical production "Cymbeline" by Willia...
This collection of essays is part of a series coordinated by Palgrave Macmillan under the title War,...
ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: STAGING AN EMPIRE: HOW LATE VICTORIAN THEATRE REPRESENTS PUBLIC PERCEPTIO...
This chapter brings Charles Dibdin the Younger centre stage, facilitating an assessment of longer-te...
At the centre of David Worrall’s Theatric Revolution a striking tableau is unveiled. It is around 18...
Most of the plays are preceded by a brief history of the play, dramatis personae, etc.General title-...
In 1603 the world as England knew it changed. After forty-five years Elizabeth I, Queen of England, ...
One of the most striking features of performances at the reconstructed Shakespeare’s Globe has been ...
Review of Scott McMillin and Sally-Beth MacLean, 'The Queen's Men and their plays' (Cambridge: Cambr...
Despite the popular aphorism that ‘the Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton’, hi...
Governing the Pen to the Capacity of the Stage: Reading the Red Bull and Clerkenwell by Lucy Munro: ...
Review of Scott McMillin and Sally-Beth MacLean The Queen's Men and Their Plays, 1583-1603 (Cambridg...
Honorable Mention, 2012 Joe A. Callaway Prize in Drama and TheaterFirst Place, Large Not-for-Profit ...
How did early modern actors convey meaning on stage without speaking? A few plays of the Caroline pe...
For a thousand years after the departure of the Romans in the fifth-century CE no theatres were buil...
The article discusses the use of minor characters in the theatrical production "Cymbeline" by Willia...