A Lecture on
Elizabethan Theatre
Elizabethan Theatre
(A lecture originally given to BTEC in Performing Arts students
as part of their course in 2001)
as part of their course in 2001)
This lecture is intended as a rapid introduction to Elizabethan Theatre,
and the way that it was written and performed in the Elizabethan period
itself. This lecture was written for a BTEC in Performing Arts course,
which I was invited to address as a specialist guest lecturer, and the lecture
was a formal part of the students' course. Since this lecture was
originally intended to be spoken and not read it does not contain any detailed
footnotes or references, and much of the information contained in the lecture
is drawn from various books and authors (most of which are listed in the
"Further Reading" section) as well as containing comments and
opinions of my own.
1. Drama Before Theatres
When Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558 there were no specially
designed theatre buildings in England. Companies of actors toured the country
and performed in a wide variety of temporary acting spaces, sometimes building
stages and scenery for a particular series of performances, and sometimes
simply using an unaltered hall or open space. There are records of actors
performing in churches, in the great halls of Royal Palaces and other great
houses, in Inn Yards, in Town Halls, in Town Squares and anywhere else that a
large crowd could be gathered to view a performance. Acting companies were
usually small and mobile. Records suggest that an average touring company
consisted of five to eight players, often consisting of four adult men and a
single boy to play all the female parts. Although we are mostly concerned with
the larger companies that inhabited the large theatre buildings that were built
later in Elizabeth’s reign, touring companies of this kind (using temporary
acting spaces throughout the country) continued to perform throughout
Elizabeth’s reign, and even the major companies could be forced to tour to the
Provinces when Plague shut the London theatres or money was low.
Soon after Elizabeth came to the throne laws began to be passed to
control wandering beggars and vagrants. These made criminals of any actors who
toured and performed without the support of a member of the highest ranks of
the nobility. Many actors were driven out of the profession or criminalised,
while those who continued were forced to become officially servants to Lords
and Ladies of the realm. Touring was increasingly discouraged and many of the
remaining companies were encouraged to settle down with permanent bases in
London. The first permanent theatres in England were old inns which had been
used as temporary acting areas when the companies had been touring - the Cross Keys,
the Bull, the Bel Savage and the Bell were all originally built as inns. Some
of the Inns that became theatres had substantial alterations made to their
structure to allow them to be used as playhouses. The Red Lion in Stepney, in
particular, had a rough auditorium with scaffolding galleries built around the
stage area - a design that may have influenced the building of later purpose
built theatres such as the Theatre and the Globe.
2. The First Theatre
The first purpose built Theatre building in England - originally and
solely intended for performance - was called “The Theatre”, eventually giving
its name to all such buildings. It was built in 1576 by the Earl of Leicester’s
Players who were led by James Burbage - a carpenter turned actor. The design of
the Theatre was based on that of bull baiting and bear baiting yards (where
crowds of spectators watched animals torn to pieces for sport) which had
sometimes been used by actors as convenient performance venues in the past. Not
much is known about the design of the Theatre, but it appears to have been
wooden and polygonal (with many straight sides making up a rough circle of
walls) and may have had three galleries full of seating stacked one above
another. The main area of the theatre was open to the sky, with a large yard
for spectators to stand and watch the action if they could not afford a seat.
In 1599 Burbage’s sons became involved in a dispute over the land on which the
Theatre stood and solved their problems by secretly and suddenly tearing down
the Theatre building and carrying away the timbers to build a new playhouse on
the Bankside, which they named The Globe. By this time the Burbages had become
members of the Lord Chamberlain’s Company, along with William Shakespeare, and
the Globe is famously remembered as the theatre in which many of Shakespeare’s
plays were first performed.
Although the Globe is the most famous Elizabethan Theatre, and the
building which we will concentrate upon, there were many other theatres built
during this period - each one different from the others in the way in which it
was designed and built. The theatres fell into two main types, however, the
“public” amphitheatre buildings (such as the Theatre, the Globe, the Curtain
and the Swan) which were open to the air, and the smaller and more expensive
“private” theatres (such as Blackfriars and the Cockpit) which were built to a
hall design in enclosed and usually rectangular buildings more like the
theatres we know today. The private theatres had a more exclusive audience
since they charged considerably more - the cheapest seat in a private theatre
cost sixpence, while public theatres like the Globe charged twopence for a seat
in the galleries or a single penny to stand in the yard. The adult companies
did not start to use the private hall theatres until after Elizabeth’s death -
which technically puts them beyond our consideration of Elizabethan Theatre -
but they were used by the boy companies (made up entirely of child and teenage
actors) in Elizabeth’s reign and were used by Shakespeare’s Company - by this
time the King’s Men - and other adult companies in the Jacobean period, so we
will consider them in passing.
3. The Globe
The original Globe Theatre was built in 1599 with a thatched roof above
the galleries (covering the seats: the yard - where poorer spectators stood -
was still open to the air). This roof caught fire in 1613 when cannon fired off
during a performance of Shakespeare’s Henry VIII sent sparks
into the thatch and the whole theatre burned to the ground. A second Globe was
built with a tiled roof, and this was finally demolished in 1644 when all plays
had been banned by the Roundhead Parliament during the Civil War. In modern
times several replica Globe Theatres have been built around the world, including
the new Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre in London, which was completed in 1997.
Although the modern Globe Theatre is an inexact imitation of the real Globe -
with many of its characteristics based on guesswork, and others altered to pass
modern fire regulations and accommodate a modern audience (taller, fatter and
expecting more luxurious surroundings than their Elizabethan ancestors) - the
design, building and use of the new Globe has given much useful information
about how an Elizabethan Theatre works and how it affects the performances of
actors who use such a stage.
The size and exact shape of the original Globe can only really be
guessed at, but surviving records about the Globe and other Elizabethan
theatres (including some very rough drawings of the outside of the Globe in
drawings of the city) together with archaeological examination of parts of the
Globe’s remains (most of which are unfortunately buried under modern London
buildings and cannot be examined) have allowed the people who built the modern
Globe Theatre reconstruction to make what they hope is a faithful reproduction
of the original theatre. The modern Globe is a hundred feet (30 metres) in
diameter. Instead of being circular, as some early scholars believed it to be,
the building is a polygon with 20 straight walls. There are three layers of
seating in galleries on all sides of the stage except directly behind it.
Directly in front of the stage is a large yard nearly 80 feet (24 metres) in
diameter for the groundlings (standing spectators who pay a cheaper entry price
than those who have seats). The stage itself is unusually wide by modern
standards - 44 feet (13.2 metres) wide, 25 feet (7.5 metres) deep, and 5 feet
(1.5 metres) high. There is roofing over the gallery seating and over the stage
itself, the stage roof being held up by two huge pillars that stand on the
stage - obstructing the view of audience members from various angles - but the
yard is open to the air. Behind the stage there is a curtained “discovery
space” - a small room behind a curtain - which allows characters to be suddenly
revealed by opening the curtain (as Ferdinand and Miranda are suddenly revealed
in Shakespeare’s The Tempest, playing chess). There are two other
entrances in the upstage wall, on the left and right. Behind the entrances is
the tiring house, for actors to dress, prepare and wait offstage. There is a
balcony above the stage which was sometimes used in the performance (it was
probably Juliet’s balcony in Romeo and Juliet), sometimes housed
the theatre musicians and was sometimes used for more audience seating. There
is a trapdoor in the centre of the stage and the Elizabethans had simple
machinery to allow ghosts, devils and similar characters to be raised up
through the trapdoor and gods and spirits to be lowered from the “heavens” in
the stage roof.
Visiting the reconstructed Globe is a magical experience, but it is
important to remember that it does not exactly resemble the conditions of the
original theatre. The modern Globe can hold 1500 spectators: the original Globe
(which had smaller and less comfortable visitors) packed twice as many people
into the same space. Modern fire regulations force the modern Globe to have
four six foot wide entrances. The original Globe had only two narrow doorways. Similarly
the modern Directors did not like the original positioning of the two
obstructive stage pillars and insisted that they should be further back on the
stage and closer together than the architects, builders and historians thought
they really should have been. The modern reconstructed stage is designed to
allow two columns of soldiers to march abreast in front of the stage pillars.
The pillars in the original theatre were probably further apart and much closer
to the front of the stage, restricting the number of actors passing in front of
the pillars and causing more frequent obstructions to audience sightlines.
4. The Players
The number and type of actor involved in Elizabethan Theatre varied from
one performance to the next, but there were invariably many more parts than
actors. The London companies with their fixed theatres tended to use many more
actors than the touring companies we considered earlier. In a performance of
Shakespeare’sJulius Caesar, for example, a spectator remembered that he
had seen “about fifteen” actors perform the play. There are 40 named roles
in Julius Caesar along with an unspecified number of extra
“Plebeians” and “Senators, Guards, Attendants etc.” all played by members of
the fifteen strong cast. Elizabethan Theatre, therefore, demanded that an actor
be able to play numerous roles and make it obvious to the audience by changes
in his acting style and costume that he was a new person each time. When the
same character came on disguised (as, for example, many of Shakespeare’s female
characters disguise themselves as boys) speeches had to be included making it
very clear that this was the same character in a new costume, and not a
completely new character.
All of the actors in an Elizabethan Theatre company were male. There were
laws in England against women acting onstage and English travellers abroad were
amused and amazed by the strange customs of Continental European countries that
allowed women to play female roles - at least one Englishman recorded his
surprise at finding that the female actors were as good at playing female parts
as the male actors back home. One woman - Mary Frith, better known as Moll
Cutpurse - was arrested in the Jacobean period for singing and playing
instruments onstage during a performance of a play about her life (Middleton
and Dekker’sThe Roaring Girl) and some suggest that she may actually
have been illegally playing herself in the performance, and women sometimes
took part in Court Masques (a very stylised and spectacular sort of performance
for the Court, usually dominated by singing and dancing), but otherwise English
women had no part in the performance of Elizabethan plays. The male actors who
played female parts have traditionally been described as “Boy Actors”, but
there is now an academic controversy about exactly how old these actors would
have been. Some academics are convinced that very young actors could not
possibly have played such important, complex and emotionally difficult parts as
Shakespeare and his fellow playwrights wrote for women, and argue that
references to “men” playing women’s parts prove that these actors were in fact
fully grown adults. My friend Dave Kathman, however, has researched this issue
and points out that whenever we know or can guess the age of an actor who was
known to be playing a female part in a particular performance, that actor was a
teenager - most between the ages of roughly fourteen to nineteen. Because of
differences in diet and upbringing, boys’ voices broke much later in the
Elizabethan period than they do now, which made it possible for boys to play
women’s parts convincingly for much longer than some modern scholars assume
possible.
The rehearsal and performance schedule that Elizabethan Players followed
was intense and demanding. Unlike modern theatres, where a successful play can
run for years at a time, Elizabethan theatres normally performed six different
plays in their six day week, and a particularly successful play might only be
repeated once a month or so. There were exceptions to this rule, such as
Middleton’s immensely successful Jacobean play A Game At Chess which
played for nine days in a row before being banned for political reasons, but
runs of this kind were reserved for plays which were an immense success and
were viewed as extremely unusual. In a typical season Henslowe’s Company
performed thirty-eight different plays, twenty-one of which were entirely new
and seventeen of which had been performed in previous years. The Elizabethan
actor did not have much time, therefore, to prepare for each new play, and must
have had to learn lines and prepare his blocking largely on his own and in his
spare time - probably helped by the tendency of writers to have particular
actors in mind for each part, and to write roles which were suited to the
particular strengths and habits of individual actors. There were few formal
rehearsals for each play and no equivalent of the modern Director (although
presumably the writer, theatre managers, and the most important actors - who
owned shares in the theatre company - would have given some direction to other
actors). Instead of being given full scripts, each actor had a written “part”,
a long scroll with nothing more than his own lines and minimal cue lines (the
lines spoken by another actor just before his own) to tell him when to speak -
this saved on the labourious task of copying out the full play repeatedly by
hand. There was a bookholder or prompter who held a complete script and who
helped actors who had forgotten their lines. The bookholder usually also had a
“plot” or a brief summary of the play, scene by scene, listing the various
entrances and exits and telling which characters and properties were required
upon the stage at any one time. Surviving plots have a square hole to allow
them to be hung upon a peg in the playhouse.
We know little more about most Elizabethan actors than their name, when
this has happened to survive on theatrical records, in cast lists, or elsewhere
- but there were a few star actors who have left a more detailed reputation
behind them. The two most famous Elizabethan actors normally played tragic and
romantic heroes. They were Edward Alleyn, lead actor of the Admiral’s Men, and
Richard Burbage who was the lead actor in Shakespeare’s Company (belonging at
various times to Leicester, Lord Strange, the Lord Chamberlain and finally
becoming - in the Jacobean period - the King’s Men). Alleyn was probably the
most famous Elizabethan actor, who was best known for his performances in
Christopher Marlowe’s plays - playing Tamburlaine a shepherd who became a
mighty military leader and conquered vast swathes of territory, Doctor Faustus
who made a pact with the devil, and Barabas the villainous Jew in
Marlowe’s Jew of Malta. Alleyn made so much money from his acting
and his share in the theatre company to which he belonged that he was able to
buy the Manor of Dulwich on his retirement (costing £10,000 - an unbelievably
huge sum of money at the time) and established Dulwich College, where the
papers of his father-in-law, the famous theatre manager Philip Henslowe, were
stored - the most important cache of theatrical documents to have survived the
Elizabethan period. Richard Burbage is now probably better known than Edward
Alleyn because of his connection with Shakespeare and he originated most of
Shakespeare’s famous lead roles including Romeo, Hamlet, Othello, Richard III,
Henry V, King Lear and others. It is suggested that the contradictions in
Shakespeare’s Hamlet, where the lead character is apparently a
young student at the beginning of the play but is referred to as “fat” and aged
thirty towards the end of the play, were particularly added to suit the
middle-aged and portly figure of Burbage himself. Burbage also became wealthy
on the profits of his profession, although not nearly so well off as Alleyn.
Both were admired and remembered by numerous Elizabethan writers. The other
actors to become household names were the Clowns or Fools, and we will consider
them later.
The income of actors varied enormously according to their position in
the Company, and the type of Company to which they belonged. The least well
paid actors were the boys, who were apprenticed to adult actors and whose small
wage (the Admiral’s Men paid one boy player three shillings a week) was paid to
their masters. In return they were given board and lodging and a very meagre
allowance to spend on themselves. Next lowest in the acting hierarchy were the
hired men, adult actors who were paid a fixed wage for each working day. Actors
in Henslowe’s London Company received ten shillings a week, but those
performing in smaller companies or touring outside London could receive half
that. The most important actors in a theatre company, however, were taken on as
sharers - owning a particular portion of the theatre company or its theatre
building and subsequently earning a proportion of the Company’s profits from
every performance. Shakespeare earned enough from his share in the Globe
Theatre to buy the second most expensive house in his home village of Stratford
and to invest in lands and property, and he was also able to buy himself a coat
of arms and the right to refer to himself as a Gentleman (an important step up
the social ladder in class conscious Elizabethan times).
5. The Playwrights
During the Middle Ages nobody is known who could be referred to as a
professional English playwright. Pageants and Church plays were often written
by members of the Clergy and the writers of plays for touring companies were
largely anonymous and few of their works have survived. In the Tudor period,
and a little before it, men who earned their living as writers and poets began
to be recognisably connected with plays. The earliest professional playwright
of whom we know may have been Henry Medwall who wrote a Morality Play and an
Interlude, that survive, for performance in the house of his master, John
Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury. John Heywood, during the reign of Henry VIII,
wrote a large number of Interludes for performance at the Court, but when Elizabeth’s
reign began most plays were still written by people we would regard as amateurs
or occasional playwrights. The increasing professionalism of the acting
companies, however, meant that they increasingly needed to employ professional
dramatists to provide them with the large and continually changing repertory
that they required. The first wave of professional playwrights were mostly
University educated men who earned a living from their pens. These men were
incredulous and envious when subsequently confronted by less well educated
playwrights - such as Shakespeare, the son of a glover, who seems to have
learned his skills as a member of the acting profession and became a writer
without being educated in the great Universities, who became rich through his
connection with the theatre while many of the better qualified University
playwrights lived and died in poverty, given only a few pounds for each of
their plays. Shakespeare earned money as a Sharer in the Theatre Company (given
a proportion of the Theatre’s profits for every production rather than just a
wage), a position that he probably gained largely because of his acting
background.
The form which Elizabethan plays took was still developing at the
beginning of Elizabeth’s reign. Elizabethan Universities studied Greek and
Roman plays in the original language, and the students sometimes performed them
within the University. During Elizabeth’s reign translations of these Greek and
Roman plays became widely available and began to have a heavy influence upon
English playwrights. Greek and Roman Plays were largely divided into two
genres, Comedy and Tragedy. The first full length English Comedy, written in
about 1553, was Ralph Roister Doister - written by Nicholas
Udall, former headmaster of Eton - in which Ralph, a character based on the
Roman Dramatist Plautus’ stereotypical Braggart, pursues a widow who is
betrothed to an absent sea captain, until the widow finally drives him off with
the help of her maids armed with mops and pails. The first full length English
Tragedy was Gorboduc - written in 1561 by Thomas Norton and
Thomas Sackville - which tells the story of a mythical English King in a style
in imitation of the Roman Dramatist Seneca, complete with choruses and long
rhetorical speeches.Gorboduc also influenced the later creation of
a peculiarly English dramatic genre, not based on Classical examples, the
Chronicle or History play which was neither Comedy nor Tragedy, but told the
story of a genuine Historical period - usually the reign of a particular
English Monarch. It is not known which was the first English History play, but
early examples included Shakespeare’s Henry VI (eventually a
trilogy of plays) and Marlowe’s Edward II. Originally English
Tragedies and Comedies tended to be written in close imitation of Greek and
Roman models and much was made of the Classical rules of writing plays - rules
which Renaissance writers took from Aristotle’s Poetics and expanded upon.
These rules included the assumption that Tragedy and Comedy should never mix
and that a play should take place according to the Unities of Time and Place -
meaning that the stage should represent a single place and all of the play’s
action should take place within a single fictional day at most. Fortunately
English playwrights increasingly rejected the restrictions of slavishly
following Classical models and began to write Tragedies and Comedies in a much
looser and more relaxed style. Thomas Kyd’s The Spanish Tragedy,
for example, a bloodthirsty tale of murder and revenge, generally ignored the
Classical rules and strongly influenced many subsequent Elizabethan plays
including Shakespeare’s early Titus Andronicus and his
later Hamlet (it is even suspected that Thomas Kyd may have
been the author of an early Hamlet play that existed before Shakespeare’s). It
also became traditional for comic characters to appear in even the most serious
of Tragedies, like the comic gravedigger in Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
At the same time that the genres of English plays were becoming fixed
and accepted, a particular form of dramatic poetry was discovered to be ideal
for dramatic composition. This was blank verse - first used in Gorboduc.
Blank verse was usually unrhymed (except for occasional couplets in significant
places) and used ten syllables a line divided into five iambic feet of
alternately unstressed and stressed syllables. The main advantage of blank
verse was that despite being regular and poetical it could be made to sound
very much like natural English speech. Early blank verse was very regular, with
all sentences end-stopped (finishing exactly at the end of the blank verse
line) and with very little variation in the stresses and pauses in the lines.
As time passed Marlowe, Shakespeare and other dramatists began to use blank
verse in a much more flexible and inventive manner - allowing sentences to run
from one line into the next and finish wherever in the line was necessary,
breaking the blank verse rules when it suited them to allow extra syllables in
the line or irregular stresses and pauses. Generally speaking the later a blank
verse play was written the more natural its language sounds. Shakespeare and
other Elizabethan dramatists often used a mixture of blank verse and prose,
usually giving the unstructured prose (following no poetical rules and without
line endings) to their comical or rustic characters or those who for some other
reason were considered more casual in their speech than the significant or
serious characters who routinely spoke verse. The majority of Elizabethan and Jacobean
plays were written in blank verse after Gorboduc, but some were
written in other forms, such as prose or rhyming couplets.
6. Politics and Religion
Elizabeth began her reign in a fast changing and dangerous period for
the English nation. Elizabeth’s father, Henry VIII, had broken off from the
Catholic Church and established the Protestant Church of England. After the
death of Henry and his sickly son Edward the throne had passed on to
Elizabeth’s older sister Mary, a Catholic - who had brought England back into
the Church of Rome, and had married the firmly Catholic King of Spain. When
Mary died without children the Protestant Elizabeth inherited the throne and
England became a Protestant Nation once more. Each stage in this process involved
bloody trials and executions of those following the wrong religion - and
Elizabeth had to consider the fact that a large proportion of her population
had been or still was Catholic. While some Catholics continued their religion
secretly and otherwise supported Elizabeth, others were openly rebellious.
Elizabeth was excommunicated by the Pope who encouraged all Catholic Kings and
subjects to work to assassinate Elizabeth and overthrow her regime. Elizabeth
managed to resist the Northern Rebellion - where Catholic Lords and subjects in
the North rose up against her - and escaped a number of planned assassination
attempts. She also fought off the Spanish Armada, an invasion force blessed by
the Pope.
In times such as these, plays, which gathered huge crowds and exposed
them to a particular view of the world - which could be an excellent form of
propaganda - were viewed with a great deal of concern. This is hardly
surprising since a single performance at a playhouse could attract 3000
spectators when the population of London was only 200,000. This meant that one
and a half percent of the London population were gathered in one place and
exposed to the same influence at every performance - enough people to begin a
riot or even a rebellion. To protect against these threats, the Elizabethan
authorities imposed a range of laws and systems to ensure that they could
control just about every word that was spoken onstage. The official in charge
of this control was the Lord Chamberlain, but most of the real work was carried
out by his subordinate, the Master of the Revels. Before the performance of any
play, the script had to be submitted to the Revels Office for checking and the
Master of the Revels made any alterations in the script that he felt necessary
- making sure that the play remained morally and politically safe and did not
trespass into religious matters or use inappropriate blasphemies. The
punishments for writers whose works were felt to be seditious or offensive
could be extreme, including imprisonment, torture and mutilation - but in fact
the Elizabethan Censors were more lenient than is sometimes suggested and did
not come down heavily on many actors or dramatists during this period.
One of the major incidents of suppression during the Elizabethan period
was prompted by the production of Thomas Nashe and Ben Jonson’s The
Isle of Dogs. The exact content of this play is not known, as it was
ruthlessly suppressed and never printed, but it has been suggested that it may
have been a satirical attack on Elizabeth’s courtiers. After the play had been
performed in 1597, the players - Pembroke’s Men - and the playwright Ben Jonson
were arrested and imprisoned while Thomas Nashe fled to Yarmouth. Nashe’s house
was searched for papers and Jonson was questioned and then secretly imprisoned
with two informers who encouraged him to betray himself to them. The Privy
Council was so outraged by the performance that it went as far as to ban all
plays in London and its surroundings for much of the rest of the year. After
having failed to incriminate himself, however, Jonson was released and his
imprisonment did not damage his future reputation or prospects in any
significant way.
Another major scandal involved Shakespeare’s Richard II, a
performance of which was specially commissioned by followers of the Earl of
Essex, who - unknown to the Players - were planning to stir up support in
London for a rebellion against Elizabeth the following day. The Earl, who had
lost the Queen’s favour and been discredited, led a small band of armed
followers through London with the intention of capturing the Queen, but they
were not supported by the London populace and the rebellion failed. The reason
for choosing the play was that it showed the decline and fall of Richard II, a
weak King closely connected to corrupt favourites, who was overthrown by a
rebellion led by the Earl of Bolingbroke who had the King murdered and took his
crown. Elizabeth was vastly upset by the rebellion and particularly commented
upon the attempts to compare her to the corrupt and successfully overthrown
Richard II of the play. “I am Richard II, know you not that?” she told Francis
Bacon and complained “This tragedy has been played forty times in open streets
and houses”. Augustine Phillips, one of the leading actors of Shakespeare’s
Company, was called in and interrogated about the actors’ role in the affair,
but he maintained that they had known nothing about any seditious intent and
that they had simply been encouraged to reprise an old play - so old that they
didn’t expect much of an audience - and had been paid ten shillings over the
ordinary to perform it. The authorities treated the actors leniently and no
punishment seems to have been forthcoming. On the day before Essex was executed
Shakespeare’s Company, perhaps as a sign of forgiveness, was invited to perform
before the Queen.
More typical of the censorship of Elizabethan plays was the suppression
of Sir Thomas More - a play which was written and then amended
by a large group of different playwrights, possibly including Shakespeare - who
may have written scenes in his own handwriting in the manuscript. It was an odd
choice of a subject for a play, since Thomas More was a Catholic Martyr who had
been executed by Elizabeth’s father for opposing his divorce and establishment
of the Church of England. The Master of the Revels disliked many of the scenes
within the play and sent it back repeatedly for alterations - particularly to a
scene in which More talked with poor rioters, which was seen as particularly
dangerous in its presentation of More himself and its dangerous sympathy with
rebellious poor people who opposed the Tudor regime. Despite many such
alterations the play was never considered acceptable and so was never granted a
licence to be performed or published. We know the play only because the
original manuscript survives.
7. Costume, Scenery and Effects
Some modern companies consider the Elizabethan performance style to have
been very close to what we now call Minimalism. Companies like the Shenandoah
Shakespeare Express claim to be closer to the original Elizabethan performance
style because they perform in modern dress, with no scenery and few props, and
without using modern lighting, sound or stage effects. Although Minimalist
performances of this kind may be closer to the Elizabethan originals than, for
example, the spectacular Victorian performances of Shakespeare’s plays (with
detailed painted backdrops and archaeologically correct costumes and stage
designs, and sometimes even real horses, real boats and real canals) they are
still very far from Elizabethan performances. In reality the Elizabethans used
far more sophisticated props, costumes and stage effects than is sometimes
assumed.
Elizabethan costuming seems to have been a strange combination of what
was (for the Elizabethans) modern dress, and costumes which - while not being
genuinely historically or culturally accurate - had a historical or foreign
flavour. A famous picture of a performance of Shakespeare’s Titus
Andronicus (one of the few pictures of Elizabethan actors at work)
shows Titus in a breastplate and a supposedly historical garment, very loosely
based on the Roman toga, while one of his guards (in a play set in Roman times)
wears the familiar armour of an Elizabethan soldier and another wears a foreign
looking, possibly Turkish influenced, suit of armour. Many of the authentic
Elizabethan garments owned by a Theatre Company had been passed onto them,
secondhand, by members of the nobility. Strict laws were in force about what
materials and types of clothes could be worn by members of each social class -
laws which the actors were allowed to break onstage - so it would be
immediately obvious to the Elizabethan audience that actors wearing particular
types of clothes were playing people of particular backgrounds and types.
Extensive make-up was almost certainly used, particularly for the boys playing
female parts and with dark make-up on the face and hands for actors playing
“blackamoors” or “Turks”. There were also conventions for playing a number of
roles - some of which we know from printed play scripts. Mad women, like
Ophelia, wore their hair loose and mad people of both sexes had disordered
clothing. Night scenes were often signalled by characters wearing nightdresses
(even the Ghost of Hamlet’s father appears in his nightgown, when Hamlet is
talking with his Mother in her chamber).
The Elizabethans did not use fixed scenery or painted backdrops of the
sort that became popular in the Victorian period, but those who claim that the
Elizabethans performed on a completely bare stage are wrong. A wide variety of
furniture and props were brought onstage to set the scene as necessary -
ranging from simple beds, tables, chairs and thrones to whole trees, grassy
banks, prop dragons, an unpleasant looking cave to represent the mouth of hell,
and so forth. Such props often played a major part in the play, as in The
Spanish Tragedy where a man is spectacularly hanged by the neck from
an arbour, apparently a complex wooden frame with a bench and leaves - a scene
illustrated in a published copy of the play.
Death brought out a particular ingenuity in Elizabethan actors and they
apparently used copious quantities of animal blood, fake heads and tables with
holes in to stage decapitations (an illustration of an Elizabethan conjuring
trick shows a table with two holes in it, one boy sitting hidden under the
table with only his - apparently decapitated - head above it another lying on
the top of the table with his - apparently missing - head hidden below it:
tricks of this kind were almost certainly used on the Elizabethan stage). Heads,
hands, eyes, tongues and limbs were dramatically cut off onstage, and probably
involved some sort of blood-drenched stage trick.
A number of other simple special effects were used. Real cannons and
pistols (loaded with powder but no bullet) were fired off when ceremonial
salutes or battles were required. Thunder was imitated by rolling large metal
cannon balls backstage or by drumming, while lightning was imitated by
fireworks set off in the “heavens” above the stage. Shakespeare’s A
Winter’s Tale calls for a man to be pursued across the stage by a bear
and there is much academic argument about whether a real (tame) bear would have
been used or whether it would have been a man in a bear costume (probably a
real bear skin). Some plays bring dogs onstage, although it has been suggested
that Shakespeare only once used a dog in his plays because the animal proved to
be more trouble than it was worth.
One thing that Elizabethan theatres almost completely lacked was
lighting effects. In the outdoor theatres, like the Globe, plays were performed
from two o’clock until about four or four thirty in the afternoon (these were
the times fixed by law, but plays may sometimes have run for longer) in order
to take advantage of the best daylight (earlier or later performances would
have cast distracting shadows onto the stage). Evening performances, without
daylight, were impossible. In the hall theatres, on the other hand, the stages
were lit by candlelight - which forced them to hold occasional, probably
musical, breaks while the candles were trimmed and tended or replaced as they
burned down. Elizabethan actors carried flaming torches to indicate that a
scene was taking place at night, but this would have made little difference to
the actual lighting of the stage, and spectators simply had to use their
imagination. The nearest that the Elizabethans came to lighting effects were
fireworks, used to imitate lightening or magical effects - the devils in
Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus apparently cavorted around the stage
with squibs, small exploding fireworks, held in their mouths.
8. Performance Techniques
We know very little, unfortunately, about how Elizabethan actors actually
played their roles. Performances probably ran continuously without any sort of
interval or Act Breaks. Occasionally music may have been played between Acts or
certain scenes, but scholars think this was quite unusual except in the hall
playhouses, where candles had to be trimmed and replaced between Acts. We do
not even know how long Elizabethan plays usually ran. The law (mentioned above)
expected plays to last between two and two and a half hours, and Shakespeare
talks about “the two hours traffic of our stage” in Romeo and Juliet,
but some plays - such as Hamlet, which in modern times runs for
more than four hours - seem much too long to have been performed in such a
short time. It is possible that the scripts which have been passed down to us
are the playwright’s first draft and that they would have been cut considerably
for performance. It is also possible that Elizabethan actors performed at a
much faster speed than modern actors without so many pauses and without
speaking slowly for emphasis. What props and scenery there were in the
Elizabethan Theatre were probably carried on and off while the scenes
continued, which means that there would have been no need to wait for scene
changes - something which could double the length of a spectacular Victorian
performance.
Some idea of the sort of hand gestures that an Elizabethan actor may
have used may have been preserved in a peculiar book called Chirologia
or the Naturall Language of the Hand. This was supposed to explain hand
gestures used to show emotions or give emphasis in normal conversation rather
than in stage performance, but if gestures of this kind were used offstage then
they were almost certainly used on it as well. Some of the gestures seem very
odd and extravagant to modern eyes, but may well have seemed perfectly natural
to an Elizabethan.
Another aspect of Elizabethan performance that we know a little about
was the use of clowns or fools. Shakespeare complains in Hamlet about
the fact that the fool often spoke a great deal that was not included in his
script, and in the early Elizabethan period especially it seems to have been
normal for the fool to include a great deal of improvised repartee and jokes in
his performance, especially responding to hecklers in the audience. At the end of
the play the Elizabethan actors often danced, and sometimes the fool and other
comic actors would perform a jig - which could be anything from a simple ballad
to a quite complicated musical play, normally a farce involving adultery and
other bawdy topics. Some time was apparently put aside for the fool to respond
to challenges from the audience - with spectators inventing rhymes and
challenging the fool to complete them, asking riddles and questions and
demanding witty answers, or simply arguing and criticising the fool so that he
could respond. One of the famous clown Tarlton’s jokes, for example, was given
in response to a woman in the audience threatening to cuff him. She should only
reverse the spelling of the word, he told her, and she could have her will
immediately. It has been suggested that the first fool in Shakespeare’s company
- William Kempe - was famous for improvisational humour of this kind and for
rejecting Shakespeare’s scripts in order to make his own jests, and that his
replacement Robert Armin may have been more of an actor and less of an
improvisational comedian, respecting the words that Shakespeare had set down
for him.
Performances by modern actors at the reconstructed Globe have given us
some insight into aspects of performance on a stage of this kind which may help
us to reconstruct the behaviour of Elizabethan actors, but may sometimes be
misleading - since the modern Globe actors are a 21st Century company
performing for 21st Century audiences. Modern Globe actors have found the Globe
to be an excellent performing space which actors find very appealing, but it is
also very different from the modern stages that they are used to and requires a
very different style of performance to make use of the theatres strengths and
alleviate its weaknesses.
Companies performing on the Globe stage have to take into account the
strange positioning of the audience. The Globe seating almost completely
surrounds the stage, with audience members at the extreme ends of the circle
almost behind the upstage corners of the stage and looking at the action from
the back forwards - and with the views of all parts of the audience
occasionally blocked by the obtrusive stage pillars. The modern Globe Directors
have found that, as a result, they need to keep their actors in constant
motion. They also need to have actors facing in as many different directions as
possible during a scene. When I went to see King Learthis Summer I
was surprised to find that despite sitting in the worst position, at the most
extreme upstage left corner of the stage, behind the actors, I was always able
to see at least one actor’s face throughout the performance and was therefore
included in the play’s action and not frustrated by seeing only backs. The
actors also found that even when conversing privately the Globe stage
encouraged them to stand at a distance from one another, in a long diagonal,
rather than standing close together as they would on a more intimate modern
stage. Similarly while modern stages encourage actors giving soliloquies to
step to downstage centre and address the audience, the more powerful positions
on the Globe stage turned out to be in the front corners of the stage rather
than downstage centre, or best of all upstage centre - which turned out to be
the most powerful position on the stage. Before performing on the stage it had
been assumed that the actors would need to use big voices and broad gestures,
but they found that clarity of speech and movement was more important than
volume or size, and much more subtle acting was possible. The acoustics of the
stage (once all of the genuine oak had been installed) turned out to be
excellent, although actors tended to misjudge the effect of their own voices at
first and were tricked into shouting when they didn’t need to.
Oddly, when casting male actors to play the female role of Princess
Katherine in Henry V, the Globe casting directors felt that teenage
actors’ voices didn’t carry well in the Globe space and selected an actor in
his early twenties. The historical records seem to show that the same view was
not held in Shakespeare’s day since Dave Kathman’s research suggests that
teenage boy actors were the norm. The modern Globe staff were very satisfied by
audience reactions to the cross-dressing boy actor, however. Some failed to
realise that the actor was male and apart from knowing laughs at lines about
being a woman, the audience seemed able to suspend its disbelief and view the
character as a normal and convincing female even when the actor was not.
Naturally, the set up of the Globe encourages intimacy with the audience
and it has been found that Globe audiences are enthusiastic to take part in the
production in ways that the actors sometimes find distracting. This may in part
be explained by the atmosphere of the Globe itself - the Globe’s Artistic
Director actively encouraged audiences to shout back at the actors before the
first performance was given - but it is also probably explained by the great
visibility of the Globe audience. With no modern stage lighting to enhance the
actors and put the audience into darkness, Globe audience members can see each
other exactly as well as they can see the performers and the Groundlings in
particular are near enough to the stage to be able to touch the actors if they
wanted to and the front row of the Groundlings routinely lean their arms and
heads onto the front of the stage itself. The Groundlings are also forced to
stand for two or three hours without much movement, which encourages short
attention spans and a desire to take action rather than remain completely
immobile. This means that the Groundlings frequently shout up at the actors or
hiss the villains and cheer the goodies. During King Lear the
audience were quick to offer their advice when Edmund (Gloucester’s bastard
son) asked himself which of Lear’s competing daughters he should accept as his
lover. Elizabethan audiences seem to have been very responsive in this way - as
their interactions with the Fool suggests - and were particularly well known
for hurling nut shells and fruit when they disliked an actor or a performance.
The Elizabethan audience was still more distracted, however, since beer and
food were being sold and consumed throughout the performance, prostitutes were
actively soliciting for trade, and pickpockets were busy stealing goods as the
play progressed.
It is important to remember, however, that the opinions of modern actors
may bear little relationship to the way in which Elizabethan actors viewed
their stage and gave their performances. One hint that Elizabethan audiences
may have viewed plays very differently gave us the origin of the word
“audience” itself. The Elizabethans did not speak of going to see a
play, they went to hear one - and it is possible that in the
densely crowded theatre - obstructed by the pillars and the extravagant
headgear that richer members of the audience were wearing - the Elizabethan
audience was more concerned to hear the words spoken than to be able to see the
action. This idea is given extra weight by the fact that in the public outdoor
theatres, like the Globe, the most expensive seats were not the ones with the
best views (in fact the best view is to be had by the Groundlings, standing
directly in front of the stage), but those which were most easily seen by other
audience members. The most expensive seating was in the Lord’s box or balcony
behind the stage - looking at the action from behind - and otherwise the higher
the seats the more an audience member had to pay (a seat in the Lord’s Room
cost one shilling or twelve pence, a seat in a Gentleman’s Room cost sixpence,
a seat in the galleries cost twopence and it cost only a penny to stand in the
pit) . Some Elizabethan documents suggest that the reason for this range of
prices was the richer patron’s desire to be as far from the stink of the
Groundlings as possible.
9. Further Reading
The one book suggested by the BTEC syllabus is The Shakespearean
Stage by Andrew Gurr, and this gives a very detailed description of
Elizabethan theatre and performance. I would also suggest that you look
at Staging Shakespeare at the New Globe by Pauline Kiernan if
you want to find out a bit more about the reconstructed Globe and the way in
which the modern actors and directors responded to it.
Some of the other books that I used to write this lecture were:
The Development of the English Playhouse by Richard Leacroft.
Shakespeare’s Stage by A.M. Nagler.
Shakespeare’s England edited by Sidney Lee (Vol. 2 has chapters on
Actors and Playhouses)
The Design of the Globe by the Bankside Globe Project.
This Wooden ‘O’ by Barry Day.
Rebuilding Shakespeare’s Globe by Andrew Gurr.
If you want to read some Elizabethan plays then some of the more
interesting scripts include the following (unfortunately many of the best
Renaissance plays were Jacobean, so do not appear here):
Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare.
Hamlet by William Shakespeare.
Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare.
Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare.
Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare.
Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare.
Henry V by William Shakespeare.
Richard III by William Shakespeare.
Edward II by Christopher Marlowe.
Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe.
Jew of Malta by Christopher Marlowe.
The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd.
Every Man in His Humour by Ben Jonson - the version set in Italy,
the other was Jacobean.
The Shoemaker’s Holiday by Thomas Dekker.
A Woman Killed with Kindness by Thomas Heywood.
King Leir (Anonymous) - the play on which Shakespeare based his own
Jacobean King Lear.
Arden of Faversham (Anonymous).
It is best when you are first reading Renaissance plays to try and find
editions with plenty of notes and glossaries to explain what you are reading.
The Arden editions of Shakespeare’s plays have particularly detailed and interesting
notes and introductions.
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