Shakespeare and the power of performance : stage and page in the Elizabethan theatre
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Shakespeare and the power of performance : stage and page in the Elizabethan theatre
Cambridge University Press, 2008
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-255) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Focusing on the practical means and media of Shakespeare's stage, this study envisions horizons for his achievement in the theatre. Bridging the gap between today's page- and stage-centred interpretations, two renowned Shakespeareans demonstrate the artful means by which Shakespeare responded to the competing claims of acting and writing in the Elizabethan era. They examine how the playwright explored issues of performance through the resonant trio of clown, fool and cross-dressed boy actor. Like this trio, his deepest and most captivating characters often attain their power through the highly performative mode of 'personation' - through playing the character as an open secret. Surveying the whole of the playwright's career in the theatre, Shakespeare and the Power of Performance offers not only compelling ways of approaching the relation of performance and print in Shakespeare's works, but also new models for understanding dramatic character itself.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. 'Moralize two meanings' in one play: contrariety on the Tudor stage
- 2. Performance, game, and representation in Richard III
- 3. Mingling vice and 'worthiness' in King John
- 4. Clowning: agencies between voice and pen
- 5. Clowning at the frontiers of representation
- 6. Cross-dressing and performance in disguise
- 7. Personation and playing: 'secretly open' role-playing
- 8. Character/actor: the deep matrix
- 9. Character: depth, dialogue, page
- 10. King Lear: representations on stage and page.
by "Nielsen BookData"