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Overview of the Historical Context of Elizabethan Drama

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Title: Overview of the Historical Context of Elizabethan Drama


1
Overview of the Historical Context of Elizabethan
Drama
  • Dramas before the Renaissance period were
    confined within the church and later moved into
    the streets (strolling players).
  • These dramas focused mostly on biblical stories
    and staged on temporary/makeshift stage (plays
    were performed on carts that the players pushed
    around from village to village )
  • The kind of temporary stage that was dominant in
    England about 1575 was the booth stage of the
    marketplace a small rectangular stage mounted
    on trestles or barrels and open in the sense
    being surrounded by spectators on 3 sides
  • The backdrop was a cloth, usually open at the top
    and served as the changing room for actors.
  • Before the Elizabethan period, there was no
    paying profession of writing and there were no
    specially-designed buildings for presenting plays
    until the last quarter of the sixteenth century.

2
A little bit more about strolling players
  • They were actors, tumblers, jugglers, all rolled
    into one they performed plays, they walked on
    stilts, they juggled, they created slapstick
    scenes - anything to please, to entertain and, of
    course, to earn themselves not only applause but
    money on which to live.
  • At the end of their performance they called upon
    the audience to be generous and went round with
    their hats collecting whatever was thrown to
    them.
  • If their performance pleased the crowd they would
    be well rewarded if they did badly they would
    not have much for supper that night. Life was
    pretty hard and rewards unreliable for actors.

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5
From makeshift stage to great halls
  • More refined performances took place in the great
    halls of noblemen's houses, of the Inns of Court,
    or of Oxford and Cambridge Colleges.
  • In 1603 during the Great Plague, the King and his
    Court left London to stay at Hampton Court Palace
    and there Shakespeare's company performed their
    plays to entertain them. 
  • The Great Halls were, again, make-shift theatres
    and the Players would act in such places by
    invitation.
  • A screen would be erected at one end of the hall
    and behind it there would be room for the actors
    to dress in front, they would perform their
    play. In general, these would be more serious
    performances, often in celebration of a special
    occasion.

6
Advantages and disadvantages of playing in the
inns
  • Players were in no way responsible for their
    upkeep
  • In both Inn-Yards and the Great Halls there would
    be a ready-made audience
  • Players always had to rely on the hospitality of
    inn-keepers or of the noblemen and others who
    owned the Great Houses
  • They had no storage space, so they had to carry
    all their properties and costumes with them
  • The City of London authorities were hostile to
    them. Then as now, London was like a magnet and
    the Players in particular, were drawn to it since
    the population was such that they could perform
    the same play a number of times and still get an
    audience furthermore, there was some prestige in
    playing in London everybody who was anybody went
    to London to make his name

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8
A need for a proper playhouse
  • Eventually the public appetite for drama became
    huge and playhouses were erected on the south
    bank of Thames, where most illegal businesses
    operated.
  • The London theatre scenario during the last years
    of the reign of Elizabeth was an exciting place
    since QE supported the activity.
  • Elizabethan plays are meant to be performed on a
    stage where the needs and reactions of an
    audience always to be considered (entertainment
    sake).
  • In a city of some 100,000 people, perhaps as many
    as 15 to 20,000 people attended the theatre each
    week, even though play were presented during
    mid-day, when practically everyone had to work.

9
  • From 1594 to 1600, 2 companies of actors operated
    in London
  • a) The Chamberlains Men (for whom Shakespeare
    wrote and performed)
  • b) The Admirals Men.
  • Unlike their predecessors (strolling players),
    actors played in structured facilities i.e.
    theatres/playhouses
  • The theatres/playhouses were similar large,
    octagonal buildings with 3 levels of spectators.
  • The stage was especially large (ampitheatre) a
    thrust stage that projected out into an open
    area.
  • Cheapest seats (yard) at the front and spectators
    in this area did not sit. They only paid a penny
    and stood (2-3 hours) throughout the performance.

10
  • These people are called groundlings. They
    endured the sun, rain and snow because the
    playhouses were open at the top (open-air
    ampitheatre)
  • Only those who can afford to pay slightly more
    can sit under cover (in one of the 3 tiers)
  • The back of the stage for actors was called
    tiring house (short for attiring)
  • Audience were large, excited, expectant, noisy,
    and demanding (unruly)
  • Plays had to entertain them, whether comedy or
    tragedy, or they became restless, disruptive, and
    even violent (even throw things on stage)

11
Elizabethan Playhouses
  • It is customary to distinguish 2 major classes of
    permanent Elizabethan playhouse public
    (outdoor/open-air) and private (indoor)

12
Public (outdoor/open-air playhouse)
  • Large, round outdoor theatres
  • Maximum capacity 3,000 spectators
  • Were found only in the suburbs (outside London)
  • Majority of spectators stood in the yard for a
    penny (groundlings lower class)
  • The remainder sitting in galleries and boxes for
    2 pence or more (middle class)
  • Audiences were socially heterogeneous, mainly
    drawn from the lower classes

13
Private (indoor) playhouse
  • Smaller, rectangular, indoor theatres
  • Maximum capacity 700 spectators
  • Used exclusively by Boys companies
  • Were found only within the city of London
  • Audiences tended to be better educated and of
    higher social rank (high class)
  • Plays usually catered for the eyes of the Queen
    or King in reign
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