Playgoing in Shakespeare's London

Playgoing in Shakespeare's London

by Andrew Gurr (Author)

Synopsis

Who were the people for whom Shakespeare wrote his plays? What was it like to go to a play in the London playhouses between 1567 and 1642? What were the social and cultural backgrounds of these playgoers? Assembling all the evidence from the writings of the time to answer these questions, Gurr describes the structure of the playhouses, the cost of entry, the size of crowds, the smells, and the pickpockets, identifying who went to which plays and at which theater. In contrast to previous oversimplified accounts of Shakespeare's audience, which have portrayed typical playgoers as either London artisans or wealthy gallants, Gurr emphasizes the radical divergence of different playhouses catering to different sections of society and the way in which popular tastes in plays grew and diversified during the period. The core of the evidence is contained in two appendices, one listing all the people known to have attended plays, the other listing all the significant contemporary comments on playgoing. Illustrations depict the location and shape of the different playhouses and include portraits of some of the personalities involved.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 302
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 08 Sep 1988

ISBN 10: 0521368243
ISBN 13: 9780521368247

Media Reviews
This amusing glimpse into the habits of the London audiences, and the use to which Gurr puts it, are characteristic of his informative study. The Times Literary Supplement