The study of repertory has greatly illuminated practices among playwrights and playing companies in the later sixteenth century. The repertory approach has yet to be applied to early and mid-Tudor drama, although this method holds out the promise of recovering the collaborative practices connected with John Rastell's stage -- the first public stage in London. This article urges scholars active in repertory studies to take a fresh look at Henrician drama and theatrical practices, and employs Heywood and Rastell's play Gentylnes and Nobylyte as a case study in the forces that shape repertory in this earlier period
As a consequence of the development of playwriting into an established profession in early modern Lo...
In "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London," I argue that the specific working practice...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
The study of repertory has greatly illuminated practices among playwrights and playing companies in ...
The study of repertory has greatly illuminated practices among playwrights and playing companies in ...
This essay situates the Issues in Review section as a whole in relation to the growing field of repe...
This introduction outlines the essays in the Early Theatre Issues in Review forum ‘Playing in Repert...
The article, in order to investigate the pioneering achievements of John Rastell’s printing of inter...
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onwa...
Over the last ten years there has been a struggle within Shakespeare studies between the vast majori...
How does our understanding of early modern performance, culture and identity change when we decentre...
The staging of Shakespeare?s plays was revolutionized by Granville-Barker?s productions at the Savoy...
This article examines what the emerging field of rehearsal studies can offer scholars of Shakespeare...
When we talk about anonymously written plays, we often regard them as stuck out of time; we have no ...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
As a consequence of the development of playwriting into an established profession in early modern Lo...
In "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London," I argue that the specific working practice...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...
The study of repertory has greatly illuminated practices among playwrights and playing companies in ...
The study of repertory has greatly illuminated practices among playwrights and playing companies in ...
This essay situates the Issues in Review section as a whole in relation to the growing field of repe...
This introduction outlines the essays in the Early Theatre Issues in Review forum ‘Playing in Repert...
The article, in order to investigate the pioneering achievements of John Rastell’s printing of inter...
Early modern drama was a product of the new theatrical spaces that began to open from the 1560s onwa...
Over the last ten years there has been a struggle within Shakespeare studies between the vast majori...
How does our understanding of early modern performance, culture and identity change when we decentre...
The staging of Shakespeare?s plays was revolutionized by Granville-Barker?s productions at the Savoy...
This article examines what the emerging field of rehearsal studies can offer scholars of Shakespeare...
When we talk about anonymously written plays, we often regard them as stuck out of time; we have no ...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
As a consequence of the development of playwriting into an established profession in early modern Lo...
In "Heterodox Drama: Theater in Post-Reformation London," I argue that the specific working practice...
This thesis addresses three aspects of the relationship between audience, playhouse and play in Rest...