coughingbear: im in ur shipz debauchin ur slothz (happy ships)
[personal profile] coughingbear
Just a quick post about a book on Shakespeare's London that I was told about last night, which might be of interest to readers of the Players books. The Guardian short review:

Part of the Arden Shakespeare series, this fascinating study argues that although Shakespeare rarely wrote about London – none of his plays is set in the city of his own day – it played a central role in shaping his imagination: “The size, diversity, noise, smell, chaos, anarchy and sheer excitement of London can be felt in all that Shakespeare writes.” The exact date when the playwright moved to London is not known, but it’s clear that by 1592 he was living and working in the capital and would remain there for the next 20 years. The eight chapters (each on a separate play) explore the symbolic power of key locations, beginning in the west of the city and moving east. The first tackles Tyburn – the city’s place of execution where as many as 60,000 died – using London’s bloodiest site to frame his most violent play: Titus Andronicus. Later chapters move to Whitehall, then along the Strand, and finish at the Tower. It is an evocative journey that places Shakespeare’s plays in a revealing urban context.


Available from Amazon or better still your local independent bookshop!

ETA: Full title and details - Shakespeare in London by Hannah Crawforth, Sarah Dustagheer, Jennifer Young.
[identity profile] jumpingpowder.livejournal.com
Sorry to interrupt the readthrough! I recently saw an all-female Shakespeare production and it struck me that all the parts Lawrie longs for are the male parts. The ones she will never get another chance at after the gender-freedom of a girls' school. In fact Tim (?)points this out re Caliban. - "'she won't [get another chance], you know. It's a man's part'. This was incontrovertible..." I bet Hotspur would have suited her, too. Poor Lawrie!
[identity profile] widgetfox.livejournal.com
Forest people in and around London might be interested in the Searching for Shakespeare exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, which I went to see this morning. As well as Will himself, there is lots on the theatre of the time, its culture, the patrons and the actors. There's also a distinguished-looking portrait of Richard Burbage (and a portrait of Christopher Marlowe that looks rather like Johnny Depp). I enjoyed it a lot and found it evocative of the Players books.

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