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Shakespeare’s Bottom. Folk Comedy and Authority. Mystery plays. Who?: members of the town Guilds; paid for their performances Where?: pageant wagons on the streets of the town (also the streets themselves) When?: religious festivals like Corpus Christi day or St. George’s day.
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Shakespeare’s Bottom FolkComedy and Authority
Mystery plays • Who?: members of the town Guilds; paid for their performances • Where?: pageant wagons on the streets of the town (also the streets themselves) • When?: religious festivals like Corpus Christi day or St. George’s day
Mystery plays • Corpus Christi festival (‘Body of Christ’): officially recognised in 1311 • Stories from the Bible, from the Creation to Doomsday • York, Chester, Coventry, Towneley; many others now lost • Pageant wagons (e.g. 24 at Chester, 32 at Towneley, 48 at York) • Guilds: often appropriate to story, e.g. Shipwrights present Noah’s Ark, Bakers present the Last Supper, Pinners the crucifixion, etc. • Community celebration • Performed until late 1570s
The Second Shepherds’ Pageant:class 1 SHEPHERD. Lord, what these weathers are cold!And I am ill happed.I am near-hand dold, so long have I napped;My legs they fold, my fingers are chapped.[…]We are so hammed,Fortaxed and rammed,We are made hand-tamedWith these gentlery-men. (1-18) 1 SHEP. Patriarchs that have been, and prophets beforn,They desired to have seen this child that is born.They are gone full clean; that have they lorn. (692-4)
The Second Shepherds’ Pageant:anachronism Names: Mak, Gill, ‘Parkin, and Gibbon Waller … / And gentle John Horne’ (562-3) MAK. Christ’s cross me speed! […] Now Christ’s holy name be us among! (268, 278) 3 SHEP. Now trow me, if ye will – by Saint Thomas of Kent,Either Makor Gill was at that assent. (458-9) 1 SHEP. But, Mak, is that sooth?Now take out that Southern tooth,And set in a turd! (214-16) 1 SHEP. I thought that we laid us full near England. (353)
The Second Shepherds’ Pageant:the trickster MAK. Lord, what they sleep hard! – that may ye all hear.Was I never a shepherd, but now I will lere… (287-8) MAK. Do way!I am worthy my meat,For in a strait I can getMore than they that swink and sweat All the day long. (309-12)
The Second Shepherds’ Pageant:burlesque 3 SHEP. Mak, take it to no grief, if I come to thy bairn. MAK. Nay, thou dost me great reprief, and foul hast thou farn. 3 SHEP. The child will it not grieve, that little day-starn.Mak, with your leave, let me give your bairnBut sixpence. MAK. Nay, do way! He sleeps. 3 SHEP.Methinkhe peeps. MAK. When he wakens he weeps.I pray you go hence. 3 SHEP.Give me leave him to kiss, and lift up the clout.What the devil is this? He has a long snout! (575-85)
The Second Shepherds’ Pageant:burlesque MAK. Now, Lord, for thy names seven, that made both moon and starnsWell more than I can neven, thy will, Lord, of me tharns.I am all uneven; that moves oft my harns.Now would God I were in heaven, for there weep no bairnsSo still. (190-4) MARY. The Father of Heaven, God omnipotent, That set all on seven, his Son has he sent.My name could he neven, and light ere he went.I conceived him full even through might, as he meant;And now is he born. (737-41)
Locus and platea • In his influential study Shakespeare and the Popular Tradition in the Theatre (1978, reprinted 1987), Robert Weimann identified a ‘dual perspective’ in both medieval and Elizabethan drama which ‘encompasses conflicting views of experience’ (1987: 243). • Weimann analysed this in terms of locus and platea.
Locus Localised setting (e.g. a palace, a house): “a rudimentary element of verisimilitude” (Weimann 1987: 75); Mimesis; High status characters: royalty, nobility; Sacred; Heightened language (usually verse); Officially sanctioned historical narratives; Elevation Platea Unlocalised setting (literally a ‘place’): “a theatrical dimension of the real world” (Weimann 1987: 76); Direct address and audience interaction; Low status characters: rustics, servants; Profane; Vernacular language (prose); Anachronistic subversion and reference to the present; Debasement and satire Locus and platea
Locus and platea • ‘What is involved is not the confrontation of the world and time of the play with that of the audience, or any serious opposition between representational and non-representational standards of acting, but the most intense interplay of both’ (Weimann 1987: 80-1).
Platea dramaturgy in Titus Andronicus Enter the Clown with a basket and two pigeons in it TITUS. News, news from heaven; Marcus, the post is come. Sirrah, what tidings? Have you any letters?Shall I have justice? What says Jupiter? CLOWN. Ho, the gibbet-maker? He says that he hath taken them down again, for the man must not be hanged till the next week. TITUS. But what says Jupiter, I ask thee? CLOWN. Alas, sir, I know not Jupiter; I never drank with him in all my life. (4.3.77-85) CLOWN. God and Saint Stephen give you good-e’en. (4.4.42-3)
Platea dramaturgy in Titus Andronicus • Phyllis Rackin: • ‘Shakespeare locates his highborn men in a variety of historical worlds, but his commoners belong to the ephemeral present moment of theatrical performance, the modern, and socially degraded, world of the Renaissance public theatre’ (1991: 98). • ‘…women and commoners have no history because both are excluded from the aristocratic masculine world of written historical representation’ (1991: 103).
Will Kempe • Played many of Shakespeare’s first great clown roles, probably including: • Dogberry • Bottom • Falstaff • Clowns like Lance, Lancelot Gobbo • Actor and shareholder in Shakespeare’s company • Famed for his improvisations: Richard Brome’s 1638 play The Antipodes refers to Kempe as having held ‘interloquutions with the Audients… to move mirth and laughter’ (Gurr 2002: 256).
Kempe as platea figure Left: from the first quarto of Much Ado About Nothing (1600). Below: from the second quarto of Romeo and Juliet (1599).
Kempe as platea figure • David Wiles points out that all of the roles Kemp is thought to have played ‘are structured in order to allow for at least one short scene in which he speaks directly to the audience’ (2005: 107). • This monologue, he notes, • ‘is normally placed at the end of a scene, and thus seems to provide a format within which the clown may extemporise without risk to the rhythm of the play or direction of the narrative’ (2005: 107).
Platea dramaturgy in A Midsummer Night’s Dream From the first quarto of A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1600).
Platea dramaturgy in A Midsummer Night’s Dream From the first quarto of A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1600).
Platea dramaturgy in A Midsummer Night’s Dream • Francois Laroque: • ‘The function of the clown was thus to cut down intellectual pretension and to draw attention to what Mikhail Bakhtin has called “the material bodily lower stratum,” that is, the world below the belt and the sphere of human appetite, thus allowing the spectator to distance himself/herself from high-minded activity and discourse. The opposition functions particularly well… in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, where the myth of romantic love is subverted through the debunking and the bungling of Pyramusand Thisbeby the mechanicals’ (2002: 70).
‘The material bodily lower stratum’ • In carnivalesque imagery, according to Mikhail Bakhtin, the human body ‘is presented not in a private, egotistic form, severed from the other spheres of life, but as something universal, representing all the people’: • ‘The people’s laughter which characterized all the forms of grotesque realism from immemorial times was linked with the bodily lower stratum. Laughter degrades and materializes. […] To degrade also means to concern oneself with the lower stratum of the body, the life of the belly and the reproductive organs; it therefore relates to acts of defecation and copulation, conception, pregnancy, and birth. Degradation digs a bodily grave for a new birth; it has not only a destructive, negative aspect, but also a regenerating one.’ (1965: 19-21)
Carnival and Elizabethan society • Elizabethan society was strictly hierarchical: • Every degree of people in their vocation, calling, and office hath appointed to them, their duty and order. Some are in high degree, some in low, some kings and princes, some inferiors and subjects, priests, and laymen, Masters and Servants, Fathers and children, husbands and wives, rich and poor, and everyone hath need of other: so that in all things is to be lauded and praised the goodly order of god, without the which, no house, no city, no commonwealth can continue and endure or last. (From Homily on Obedience, 1559)
Carnival and Elizabethan society • Built into the structure of Elizabethan society were a series of ‘safety valves’: periods of licence in which the strict social order would be temporarily reversed: • Shrove Tuesday • Misrule (Christmas – especially Twelfth Night) • May Day • summer games • These festivals often involved an invasion of the local church or churchyard with music, singing, dancing, joking, bawdy humour, role-play and outrageous costume.
May-games • From Philip Stubbes, The Anatomie of Abuses (1583): • ‘Against May, Whitsunday, or other time, old men and wives run gadding overnight to the woods, groves, hills and mountains, where they spend all night in pleasant pastimes; and in the morning they return, bringing with them birch and branches of trees, to deck their assemblies withal. … I have heard it credibly reported (and that viva voce) by men of great gravity and reputation, that of forty, threescore, or a hundred maids going to the wood over-night, there have scarcely the third of them returned home again undefiled.’
Misrule • Stubbes again: • ‘First, all the wildheads of the parish, conventing together, choose them a grand captain (of all mischief) whom they ennoble with the title of “my Lord of Misrule”, and him they crown with great solemnity, and adopt for their king. This king anointed chooseth forth twenty, forty, threescore or a hundred lusty guts, like to himself, to wait upon his lordly majesty… Then march these heathen company towards the church and churchyard, their pipers piping, their drummers thundering, their stumps dancing, their bells jingling, their handkerchiefs swinging about their heads like madmen, their hobbyhorses and other monsters skirmishing amongst the rout. And in this sort they go to the church (I say) and into the church (though the minister be at prayer or preaching) dancing and swinging their handkerchiefs over their heads in the church, like devils incarnate, with such a confused noise, that no man can hear his own voice.’
Carnival • As Michael Bristol explains: • ‘Central to the experience of Carnival is a particular use of symbols, costumes and masks, in which the ordinary relationship between signifier and signified is disrupted and conventional meaning is parodied. Parody and travesty, the rude, foolish, sometimes abusive mimicry of everyday categories, create the topsy-turvy world of carnivalesque misrule.’ (Bristol 1983: 641)
Misrule in the theatre From John Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi(c. 1613): ANTONIO. I must lie here. DUCHESS. Must! You are a lord of misrule. ANTONIO. Indeed, my rule is only in the night. (3.2.9-10) From A Midsummer Night’s Dream: OBERON. How now, mad spirit?What nightrulenow about this haunted grove? PUCK. My mistress with a monster is in love. (3.2.4-6)
May-games in A Midsummer Night’s Dream LYSANDER. If thou lov’stme then,Steal forth thy father’s house tomorrow night,And in the wood, a league without the town,Where I did meet thee once with HelenaTo do observance to a morn of May,There will I stay for thee. (1.1.163-8) OBERON. …she his hairy temples then had roundedWith a coronet of fresh and fragrant flowers… (4.1.50-1) EGEUS. I wonder of their being here together. THESEUS. No doubt they rose up early to observeThe rite of May… (4.1.130-2)
References • Bakhtin, M. (1965) Rabelais and His World, trans. H. Iswolsky, Bloomington: Indiana University Press. • Barber, C. L. (1972) Shakespeare’s Festive Comedy: A Study of Form and its Relation to Social Custom, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. • Bristol, M. D. (1983) ‘Carnival and the Institutions of Theatre in Elizabethan England’, ELH, 50: 4, 637-654. • Eagleton, T. (1986) William Shakespeare, London: Basil Blackwell. • Gurr, A. (2002) Playgoing in Shakespeare’s London (2nd ed.), Cambridge: C. U. P. • Kershaw, B. (1992) The Politics of Performance: Radical theatre as cultural intervention, London: Routledge.
References • Laroque, F. (2002) ‘Popular Festivity’ in Leggatt, A. [ed.] The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean Comedy, Cambridge: C. U. P., pp. 64-78. • Palmer, D. J [ed.] (1984) Comedy: Developments in Criticism, London: Macmillan. • Rackin, P. (1991) Stages of History: Shakespeare’s English Chronicles, London: Routledge. • Weimann, R. (1987) Shakespeare and the Popular Tradition in the Theater: Studies in the Social Dimension of Dramatic Form and Function, Baltimore/London: Johns Hopkins University Press. • Wiles, D. (2005) Shakespeare’s Clown: Actor and Text in the Elizabethan Playhouse, Cambridge: C. U. P.