- [UNTITLED]
- Dedication
- Preface
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors
- Introduction: Early Modern Theater History: Where We Are Now, How We Got Here, Where We Go Next
- Adult Playing Companies to 1583
- Adult Playing Companies 1583–1593
- Adult Playing Companies 1593–1603
- Adult Playing Companies 1603–1613
- Adult Playing Companies 1613–1625
- Adult and Boy Playing Companies 1625–1642
- Early (Pre-1590) Boy Companies and their Acting Venues
- The Boy Companies 1599–1613
- Inn-Yard Playhouses
- The Theatre in Shoreditch 1576–1599
- Why the Globe Is Famous
- The Most Convenient Place: The Second Blackfriars Theater and its Appeal
- The Red Bull Playhouse
- The Phoenix and the Cockpit-in-Court Playhouses
- ‘He who pays the piper calls the tune’: Household Entertainments
- The Universities and the Inns of Court
- Touring
- Court Theatre
- London Street Theater
- Not Just Sir Oliver Owlet: From Patrons to ‘Patronage’ of Early Modern Theatre
- The Court, the Master of the Revels, and the Players
- Theater Entrepreneurs and Theatrical Economics
- The City of London and the Theatre
- Players, Livery Companies, and Apprentices
- Materiality and the Market: The Lady Elizabeth's Men and the Challenge of Theatre History
- ‘For the author's credit’: Issues of Authorship in English Renaissance Drama
- Women in the Theater
- Early Modern Naturalistic Acting: The Role of the Globe in the Development of Personation
- Actors' Parts
- Stage Directions and the Theater Historian
- Lighting
- Music and Sound
- Properties
- Eyewitnesses to History: Visual Evidence for Theater in Early Modern England
- Christopher Beeston: His Property and Properties
- Bibliography
- Index
- People and Things
Abstract and Keywords
By any measure, 1593 was a very bad year for the playhouse business in England. The late summer outbreak of plague in 1592 continued in the suburbs of London. Adult playing companies took to the road, visiting towns as widespread as Newcastle upon Tyne, Lyme Regis in Dorset, and Norwich. Strange's Men mounted a tour in the summer of 1593 along a route apparently plague-safe and financially rewarding. The company of Pembroke's Men was not so lucky. Also, companies were geographically estranged from their playwrights, who for the most part stayed in London. One in particular, William Shakespeare, apparently considered a change of focus for his skills from drama to poetry. No one therefore could have predicted that the business of playing would enjoy unprecedented commercial success and expansion in the next decade. Theatre historians construct differing narratives about this decade in the theatrical marketplace, but they generally agree that the salient issues are the companies' business models; patrons and political critics; playing venues; the repertory; the book trade; and audiences.
Keywords: England, plague, adult playing companies, business models, patrons, political critics, playing venues, repertory, book trade, audiences
Roslyn L. Knutson , Emerita Professor of English at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, is the author of Playing Companies and Commerce in Shakespeare's Time (2001), and The Repertory of Shakespeare's Company, 1594–1613 (1991). She has published on theatre history in numerous journals, annuals, and essay collections including ones on the Queen's Men and Blackfriars Theatre. Her current projects include a repertorial analysis of the commercial theatrical marketplace in 1587–1593, when Christopher Marlowe's plays were new; and the wiki‐style Lost Plays Database (www.lostplays.org), which she co‐edits with David McInnis (University of Melbourne).
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- [UNTITLED]
- Dedication
- Preface
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors
- Introduction: Early Modern Theater History: Where We Are Now, How We Got Here, Where We Go Next
- Adult Playing Companies to 1583
- Adult Playing Companies 1583–1593
- Adult Playing Companies 1593–1603
- Adult Playing Companies 1603–1613
- Adult Playing Companies 1613–1625
- Adult and Boy Playing Companies 1625–1642
- Early (Pre-1590) Boy Companies and their Acting Venues
- The Boy Companies 1599–1613
- Inn-Yard Playhouses
- The Theatre in Shoreditch 1576–1599
- Why the Globe Is Famous
- The Most Convenient Place: The Second Blackfriars Theater and its Appeal
- The Red Bull Playhouse
- The Phoenix and the Cockpit-in-Court Playhouses
- ‘He who pays the piper calls the tune’: Household Entertainments
- The Universities and the Inns of Court
- Touring
- Court Theatre
- London Street Theater
- Not Just Sir Oliver Owlet: From Patrons to ‘Patronage’ of Early Modern Theatre
- The Court, the Master of the Revels, and the Players
- Theater Entrepreneurs and Theatrical Economics
- The City of London and the Theatre
- Players, Livery Companies, and Apprentices
- Materiality and the Market: The Lady Elizabeth's Men and the Challenge of Theatre History
- ‘For the author's credit’: Issues of Authorship in English Renaissance Drama
- Women in the Theater
- Early Modern Naturalistic Acting: The Role of the Globe in the Development of Personation
- Actors' Parts
- Stage Directions and the Theater Historian
- Lighting
- Music and Sound
- Properties
- Eyewitnesses to History: Visual Evidence for Theater in Early Modern England
- Christopher Beeston: His Property and Properties
- Bibliography
- Index
- People and Things