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- 2. British drama came of age as James Burbage built the Theatre: - professional acting; - dramatic
- 3. The medieval Church and stage together had provided the necessary visions about the purpose of life.
- 4. Dramatic form began to change. The old Interlude had a binary structure: most scenes had two
- 5. John Lyly was an English writer, poet, dramatist, playwright, and politician, best known for his books
- 6. John Lyly authored prose narratives, plays for the private Elizabethan stage, and religious tracts. Born in
- 7. Later, Lyly sat on four Parliaments, as the member for Hinden in 1589, for Aylesbury in
- 9. This style became very fashionable during the 1580s and was ridiculed (nevetség tárgya) afterwards, especially in
- 10. Lyly also wrote his plays for the Boys' Companies of the Blackfriars Theater beginning in 1583;
- 11. English dramatist who, with his The Spanish Tragedy (sometimes called Hieronimo, or Jeronimo, after its protagonist),
- 13. The son of a scrivener, Kyd was educated at the Merchant Taylors School in London. There
- 14. It is not known which company first played it, nor when; but Strange’s company played Hieronimo
- 15. About 1591 Kyd was sharing lodgings with Christopher Marlowe, and on May 13, 1593, he was
- 16. The play opens with a soliloquy of a ghost and continues into a tale of love
- 17. Though The Spanish Tragedy was popular in its day, succeeding generations have found it extravagant and
- 18. Around the turn of 16th century, Shakespeare’s drama fell into neglect. He got eclipsed by Ben
- 19. Period of decline of the Renaissance; The 17th century was the great century of English thinking
- 20. Shakespeare set the fashion in tragedy and romance, But an other ‘Elizabethan’, Ben Jonson did the
- 21. The theatre could not keep away from the changing social, political and economic conditions for a
- 22. The distance between the tastes and demands of the upper classes and of those of the
- 23. These private theatres enjoyed a higher social status, and did their best to satisfy the demands
- 24. In accordance with the Puritan views all forms of merrymaking, dances, singing, and most especially, theatres
- 25. The immorality and sinfulness of the playhouses, irrespective of being popular or private, were attacked in
- 26. In 1642 London theatres, long frowned upon by the Puritans, were closed by Act of Parliament
- 27. (At birth he got the name Benjamin, but he never used it. He used the name
- 28. Ben Johnson After Abraham van Blyenberch, 1618. ©National Portrait Gallery, London.
- 29. His first popular success was in the field of comedy. He left behind 17 plays, 35
- 30. Jonson’s dramatic technique differs from that of his contemporaries. He invented his stories and prided himself
- 31. In his comedy Jonson presents a satirical survey of human characteristics. People are usually depicted in
- 32. The theme of Volpone is the degrading effect of money on human character. The morality tradition
- 33. They all commit perjury (hamis tanúzás). Corbaccio disinherits his son and accuses him of intended murder;
- 34. After the Prologue, the play opens with Volpone’s sacrilegious (szentségtörő9 hymn to gold, an example of
- 35. Volpone was written by a master of stage effects – firmness of construction is one of
- 36. In Volpone Jonson achieved his greatest artistic effect though The Alchemist (1610) is even more perfect
- 37. Mammon: I have a place of Jason’s fleece, too, Which was no other than a book
- 38. But this lyric yearning (lírai sóvárgás) is set by Jonson into comic perspectives. The ironic imagery,
- 39. Jonson’s technique is essentially that of late Renaissance or Baroque art, with many features that remind
- 40. Thomas Dekker is noted also as a pamphleteer, “the first literary artist of London street life”.
- 41. Old Fortunatus, based on a German folk-tale, is a charming but loosely constructed poetical piece full
- 42. By a stroke of fortune he suddenly becomes rich, is elected sheriff of the city and
- 43. The realistic scenes are intertwined with two love-stories; the life of tradesmen, journeymen apprentices is portrayed
- 44. The comedy is indeed the most perfect presentation of the brightness and social interest of the
- 45. Rhys touches here on the fundamental difference between the realism of Jonson and Dekker: the method
- 46. Satire is not entirely missing from Dekker’s armoury. His next play published in 1602, was Satiromastix,
- 47. With Dekker and Heywood we reach a new variety of domestic drama: attempts at the expression
- 48. Thomas Heywood was noted for his many-sidedness and versatility (sokoldalúság) Lamb called him a ‘prose Shakespeare’.
- 49. The Four Prentices of London, Heywood’s earliest extant play (1592), belongs to the last type. Its
- 50. In the Introduction to the Mermaid edition of Heywood’s plays, John Addington Symonds wonders if this
- 51. But Heywood’s greatest achievement is undoubtedly in the field of domestic drama. His best known plays
- 52. In this play Heywood drew neither from romantic imaginings nor from classical sources. He concentrated on
- 53. Instead of killing them both, as the conventions of ordinary tragedy would have demanded, he sends
- 54. Both dramatists came from the higher strata of society. Beaumont was Shakespeare’s junior by twenty years
- 55. A collection of thirty-four plays was published in 1647 under the names of Beaumont and Fletcher,
- 56. Shakespeare’s stories are often silly and improbable, yet he tells them without violently offending against truth
- 57. The structure of their plays is extremely skilful. The dramatic material is constructed into theatrically telling
- 58. Many attempts have been made to separate the work of the two playwrights. Some suggest that
- 59. But Beaumont was also a master of the burlesque as is shown by the delightful play,
- 60. In The Knight of the Burning Pestle , Beaumont created two audience members who move their
- 61. In The Knight of the Burning Pestle, which was written for the Blackfriars Playhouse, George and
- 62. The Knight of the Burning Pestle similarly, if not much more definitively, explores this idea that
- 63. These two characters explicitly question the actors’ play and suggest different ways to please the audience.
- 64. Little is known about the personal history of John Webster. Webster’s best work is concentrated in
- 65. Webster’s plays live by their author’s gift on poetry –not only the poetry of word and
- 66. Webster’s plays reveal the powerful individualism of the Renaissance together with the despair of its later
- 67. His tragic masterpiece is The Duchess of Malfi, “the only play of which it is possible
- 68. Her ‘proud Aragonian’ brothers, the Cardinal and Ferdinand, Duke of Calabria, set the melancholy malcontent Bosola
- 69. Elizabethan drama, as has been stressed by M. G. Bradbrook, usually works with rigid, static characters,
- 70. Here the Duchess concentrates the whole play in herself, her speeches have timeless impersonal character like
- 71. VIDEO
- 72. By contrast The White Devil is a more unequal, if more dynamic, play, with a definite
- 73. Cyril Tourneur’s has much in common with Webster but his world is even darker. Pity which
- 74. Touneur’s characters are humorous, created after Jonson’s fashion. The generic Italian names (Lussurioso, Ambitioso, Supervacuo, etc)
- 75. The Revenger’s Tragedy is the greater play but it should be mentioned that it is of
- 76. The play opens with an abrupt, explosive force as the central figure Vindice, enters clasping the
- 77. The society it depicts is almost fully corrupt, and where goodness does appear it is either
- 78. The plays of Tourneur and Webster reveal a Satanic universe in which the forces of evil
- 79. Charles I and his French queen Henrietta Maria were great lovers of the arts. Music, painting,
- 80. Inigo Jones, the architect of the Queen's House at Greenwich, designed elaborate and dramatic scenery, involving
- 81. Stories often linked the Stuart court to the legendary King Arthur or to Imperial Rome. Themes
- 82. Characters such as the satyrs were known as 'Anti-Masquers' and were played by professional actors –
- 83. Yes. Charles I and his young queen Henrietta Maria loved presenting masques for each other. Both
- 84. In 1640, a masque was held that was to be the last, for they did not
- 85. Music was a central part of court life. It had been regarded since the Renaissance as
- 86. Dances for formal occasions were often composed in suites of four dances each with a different
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