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Reading History

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 1352    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

repudiated the jeremiads of the ultra-pious, and instantaneously became an enthusiastic playgoer. During the last year of the sixteenth century, an intelligent visitor to London,

tages included the privileges of eating and drinking while the play was in progress. After

ere only to be found in the two galleries, the larger portions of which were separated into "rooms" or boxes; prices there ranged from twopence to half-a-crown. If the playgoer had plenty of money at his command he could, according to the German visitor, hire not only a seat but a cushion to elevate his stature; "so that," says our author, "he might not only see the play, but"-what is also often more important for rich people-"be seen" by the audience

roduced, present a further series of disadvantages which, from our modern point of v

, that the actors spoke in the very centre of the house. Trap-doors were in use for the entrance of "ghosts" and other mysterious personages. At the back of the stage was a raised platform or balcony, from which often hung loose curtains; through them the actors passed to the forepart of the stage. The balcony was pressed into the service when the text of the play indicated that the speakers were not actually standing on the same level. From the raised platform Juliet addressed Ro

n of rich material, and in the height of the current fashion. False hair and beards, crowns and sceptres, mitres and croziers, armour, helmets, shiel

y the splendour of the actors' costumes. He accounted for it i

lemen or knights die, they leave their finest clothes to their servants, who, since it would not be fit

view, in grace and seemliness. But the standard of propriety in such matters varies from age to age. Shakespeare alludes quite complacently to the appearance of boys and men in women's parts. He makes Rosalind say, laughingly and saucily, to the men of the audience in the epilogue

ick co

ll stage us ...

Cleopatra boy

aracter,-it seems almost sacrilegious to submit Cleopatra's sublimity of passion to interpretation by an unfledged representative of the other sex. Yet such solecisms were imperative under the theatrical system of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Men taking women's parts seem to have worn masks, but that can hardly have improved matters. Flute, when he complains

d was acknowledged and deplored. It was the character of Desdemona which was first undertaken by a woman, and the absurdity of the old practice was noticed

uth, men act, t

fty, wenche

arge and nerve

l Desdemona,

tage of a brawny, broad-shouldered athlete, masquerading in her sweet name. Boys or men of all shapes and sizes squeaking or bawling out the tender and pathetic lines of Shakespear

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Contents

Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 1 No.1
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 2 No.2
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 3 No.3
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 4 No.4
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 5 No.5
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 6 No.6
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 7 No.7
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 8 No.8
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 9 No.9
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 10 No.10
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 11 No.11
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 12 No.12
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 13 No.13
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 14 No.14
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 15 No.15
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 16 No.16
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 17 No.17
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 18 No.18
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 19 No.19
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 20 No.20
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 21 No.21
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 22 No.22
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 23 No.23
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 24 No.24
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 25 No.25
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 26 No.26
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 27 No.27
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 28 No.28
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 29 No.29
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 30 No.30
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 31 No.31
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 32 No.32
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 33 No.33
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 34 No.34
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 35 No.35
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 36 No.36
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 37 No.37
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 38 No.38
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 39 No.39
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 40 No.40
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 41 No.41
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 42 No.42
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 43 No.43
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 44 No.44
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 45 No.45
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 46 No.46
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 47 No.47
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 48 No.48
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 49 No.49
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 50 No.50
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 51 No.51
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 52 No.52
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 53 No.53
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 54 No.54
01/12/2017
Shakespeare and the Modern Stage; with Other Essays
Chapter 55 No.55
01/12/2017
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