In his 2004 essay, ‘The Sharer and His Boy’, Scott McMillin hypothesized that what he called ‘restricted roles’ in early modern English drama, roles in which female characters take cue lines only from a small group of other characters, resulted from moments when new leading boy actors were being trained by their masters. This essay applies McMillin’s hypothesis to two new plays that entered the King’s Men’s repertory around 1610, Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale and Beaumont and Fletcher’s The Maid’s Tragedy, asking how they might have interacted with earlier plays within the company’s repertory to shape the training of Richard Robinson as a new leading tragic boy
By examining William Briton’s extracts from Gorboduc in the Houghton manuscript (BL Add MS 61822), E...
The issue of boy actors playing female roles in English Renaissance drama has been widely discussed ...
The theory of the king’s two bodies was a mid-16th century political theory articulated in the Inns ...
In his 2004 essay, ‘The Sharer and His Boy’, Scott McMillin hypothesized that what he called ‘restri...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Johns Hopkins University...
The traditional vision of Middleton as a playwright depicted him as an author of city comedies and t...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
Although Elizabethan and Jacobean drama as a whole has provoked more study from critics than almost ...
The staging of regicide in the early modern English theaters was commonplace by 1611, when Francis B...
In two plays of the Lord Admiral’s Men, Englishmen for My Money and The Two Angry Women of Abingdon,...
textWhile scholars have argued that Shakespeare’s Hamlet was modeled after two earlier plays by Thom...
Since her death in 1603, Queen Elizabeth I has been remembered in ways that increasingly depart from...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
This thesis explores early forms of tragedy in the professional English playhouses. Tragedy was pred...
The Masque of Queens by Ben Jonson was written in 1609, and is a play about chaos and order. My rese...
By examining William Briton’s extracts from Gorboduc in the Houghton manuscript (BL Add MS 61822), E...
The issue of boy actors playing female roles in English Renaissance drama has been widely discussed ...
The theory of the king’s two bodies was a mid-16th century political theory articulated in the Inns ...
In his 2004 essay, ‘The Sharer and His Boy’, Scott McMillin hypothesized that what he called ‘restri...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Johns Hopkins University...
The traditional vision of Middleton as a playwright depicted him as an author of city comedies and t...
The adaptations of Shakespeare‘s plays that were written and staged during the English Restoration a...
Although Elizabethan and Jacobean drama as a whole has provoked more study from critics than almost ...
The staging of regicide in the early modern English theaters was commonplace by 1611, when Francis B...
In two plays of the Lord Admiral’s Men, Englishmen for My Money and The Two Angry Women of Abingdon,...
textWhile scholars have argued that Shakespeare’s Hamlet was modeled after two earlier plays by Thom...
Since her death in 1603, Queen Elizabeth I has been remembered in ways that increasingly depart from...
This collection of new essays explores the social, political, and economic pressures under which the...
This thesis explores early forms of tragedy in the professional English playhouses. Tragedy was pred...
The Masque of Queens by Ben Jonson was written in 1609, and is a play about chaos and order. My rese...
By examining William Briton’s extracts from Gorboduc in the Houghton manuscript (BL Add MS 61822), E...
The issue of boy actors playing female roles in English Renaissance drama has been widely discussed ...
The theory of the king’s two bodies was a mid-16th century political theory articulated in the Inns ...