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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).
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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.
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.
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.
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
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.
From 1594 to 1600, 2 companies of actors operated in London: a) The Chamberlain’s Men (for whom Shakespeare wrote and performed) b) The Admiral’s 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.
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)
Elizabethan Playhouses It is customary to distinguish 2 major classes of permanent Elizabethan playhouse: ‘public’ (outdoor/open-air) and ‘private’ (indoor)
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
Private (indoor) playhouse • Smaller, rectangular, indoor theatres • Maximum capacity 700 spectators • Used exclusively by Boy’s 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