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The Shakespearean Stage Space PDF

236 Pages·2013·3.067 MB·English
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THE SHAKESPEAREAN STAGE SPACE How did Renaissance theatre create its powerful effects with so few resources?InTheShakespeareanStageSpace,MarikoIchikawaexplores theoriginalstagingofplaysbyShakespeareandhiscontemporariesto build a new picture of the artistry of the Renaissance stage. Dealing withproblematicscenesandstagedirections,Ichikawacloselyexam- ines the playing conditions in early modern playhouses toreveal the ways in which the structure of the stage was used to ensure the audibilityofoffstagesounds,tocontrolthevisibilityofcharacters,to conveyfictionallocales,tocreatespecificmoodsandatmospheresand tomaintainafrequentlyshiftingbalancebetweenfictionalandtheat- rical realities. She argues that basic theatrical terms were used in a much broader and more flexible way than we usually assume and demonstratesthat,ratherthanimposinglimitations,thebarestageof the Shakespearean theatre offered dramatists and actors a variety of imaginativepossibilities. mariko ichikawa is Professor of English at the University of Tohoku, Japan. Her previous publications include Staging in Shakespeare’s Theatres (co-authored with Andrew Gurr, 2000) and ShakespeareanEntrances(2002). THE SHAKESPEAREAN STAGE SPACE MARIKO ICHIKAWA cambridge university press Cambridge,NewYork,Melbourne,Madrid,CapeTown, Singapore,SãoPaulo,Delhi,MexicoCity CambridgeUniversityPress TheEdinburghBuilding,CambridgeCB28RU,UK PublishedintheUnitedStatesofAmericabyCambridgeUniversityPress,NewYork www.cambridge.org Informationonthistitle:www.cambridge.org/9781107020351 ©MarikoIchikawa2013 Thispublicationisincopyright.Subjecttostatutoryexception andtotheprovisionsofrelevantcollectivelicensingagreements, noreproductionofanypartmaytakeplacewithoutthewritten permissionofCambridgeUniversityPress. Firstpublished2013 PrintedandboundintheUnitedKingdombytheMPGBooksGroup AcataloguerecordforthispublicationisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary LibraryofCongressCataloguinginPublicationdata Ichikawa,Mariko. TheShakespeareanstagespace/MarikoIchikawa. pages cm isbn978-1-107-02035-1 1. Shakespeare,William,1564–1616–Stagehistory–To1625. 2. Shakespeare,William,1564–1616– Stagehistory–England–London. 3. Theaters–Stage-settingandscenery–England–History– 16thcentury. 4. Theaters–Stage-settingandscenery–England–History–17thcentury. 5. Theater–England–London–History–16thcentury. 6. Theater–England–London– History–17thcentury. 7. Englishdrama–EarlymodernandElizabethan,1500–1600–History andcriticism 8. Englishdrama–17thcentury–Historyandcriticism. I. Title. PR3095.I28 2012 792.0942009031–dc23 2012018845 isbn978-1-107-02035-1Hardback CambridgeUniversityPresshasnoresponsibilityforthepersistenceor accuracyofURLsforexternalorthird-partyinternetwebsitesreferredto inthispublication,anddoesnotguaranteethatanycontentonsuch websitesis,orwillremain,accurateorappropriate. To Andy Gurr, Alan Dessen and Ray Powell Contents Listoffiguresandtable page viii Acknowledgements ix Noteontextsandoldspelling;systemofdating xi Editorialabbreviations xiii 1 Playhouses,playtextsandthetheatricallanguage 1 2 ‘Maluoliowithin’ 29 3 ‘Musicwithin’and‘Musicabove’ 52 4 Werethedoorsopenorclosed? 72 5 ‘EnterBrutusinhisOrchard’ 100 6 Whattodowithonstagecorpses? 129 Conclusion:theShakespeareanstagespaceandstagedirections 151 Notes 158 Playscited 194 Otherworkscited 204 Index 217 vii Figures and Table FIGURES 1a. TheRoseTheatre:Phase1(bypermissionofMuseumof LondonArchaeology) page 2 1b. TheRoseTheatre:Phase2(bypermissionofMuseumof LondonArchaeology) 3 2. DeWitt’ssketchoftheSwanTheatre(bypermissionof UtrechtUniversityLibrary.MS842,fol.132r) 5 3a. InigoJones/JohnWebbdrawings:elevationandplanfor anindoorplayhouse(bypermissionoftheProvostand FellowsofWorcesterCollege,Oxford.HarrisandTait 10(Gotch1/7B)) 10 3b. InigoJones/JohnWebbdrawings:twotransversesections ofthesameplayhouse(bypermissionoftheProvostand FellowsofWorcesterCollege,Oxford.HarrisandTait11 (Gotch1/7C)) 11 4. ThenewGlobeTheatre,Bankside,London(photoby MarikoIchikawa) 36 5. ThefrontispiecetoFrancisKirkman’sTheWits,orSport uponSport(bypermissionoftheFolgerShakespeare Library.WingW3218) 54 6. AwoodcutfromThomasHill’sTheGardener’sLabyrinth (bypermissionoftheFolgerShakespeareLibrary.STC 13483,sig.G3r) 102 TABLE 1. Positionswhichmightbereferredtobythestagedirections ‘enter’,‘within’and‘above’ 155 viii Acknowledgements Ihavereceivedhelpandsupportfrommanyindividualsandinstitutionsin theprocessofwritingandrewritingthemanuscript.Itisagreatpleasureto acknowledgemyindebtednessandexpressmygratitude. This book is mainly based upon my essays that have been published in journals and collections of essays. I wish to thank the editors and the publishersfortheirpermissiontouserevisedversionsoftheseessays: ‘What to do with a Corpse?: Physical Reality and the Fictional World in the ShakespeareanTheatre’,TheatreResearchInternational,Volume29(3),pp.201–15, (2004)©InternationalFederationforTheatreResearch,publishedbyCambridge UniversityPress,reproducedwithpermission. ‘“Maluolio within”: Acting on the Threshold between Onstage and Offstage Spaces’,inS.P.Cerasano(ed.),MedievalandRenaissanceDramainEngland,vol.18 (FairleighDickinsonUniversityPress,2005),pp.123–45. ‘“Music Within” and “Music Above”’, Shakespearean International Yearbook, Volume 5, ed. Graham Bradshaw and Tom Bishop (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005), pp.314–35.Copyright©2005,reproducedbypermissionofthepublishers. ‘Were the Doors Open or Closed?: The Use of the Stage Doors in the ShakespeareanTheatre’,TheatreNotebook,60(2006),5–29. ‘“EnterBrutusinhisOrchard”:GardenScenesinEarlyModernEnglishPlays’, Shakespearean International Yearbook, Volume 9, ed. Graham Bradshaw, Tom Bishop and Laurence Wright (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009), pp. 214–47. Copyright ©2009,reproducedbypermissionofthepublishers. ‘A Special Meaning of “Within”?’, in Frank Occhiogrosso (ed.), Shakespeare Closely Read: A Collection of Essays (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2011), pp.9–17. ‘ShakespeareanSpeeches:ThePhysicalRealityofthePlayhouseandtheFictional RealityoftheDramaticWorld’,inShakespeareandTheatreCulture:ACollectionof Essays inCommemoration ofthe 50thAnniversaryofthe Founding ofthe Shakespeare SocietyofJapan(Tokyo:Kenkyusha,2012),pp.180–95[writteninJapanese]. TheawardofascholarshipfromtheFulbrightProgramintheacademic year 2004–5 made possible a substantial period of research at the Folger ix

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