Shakespeare’s Influence
By 1600, London had more playhouses than any other European capital. The Globe was the most successful,thanks to actor, poet, and playwright William Shakespeare. Tremendously versatile and prolific, Shakespeare contributed 37 plays to the theater’s repertory: tragedies,such as Othello; comedies,such as A Midsummer Night’s Dream; and historiesabout the kings of England. Shakespeare’s clever wordplay, memorable characters, and complex plots appealed to everyone in his audience, from the uneducated “groundlings,” who paid a penny to stand and watch, to the royal family, who received special private performances. Being an actor himself, Shakespeare knew well the capabilities and limitations of the theater building and of the acting company for whom he wrote his plays. It wasn’t easy putting on a crowd-pleasing performance in Elizabethan times. Besides having to memorize their lines, actors had to be able to sing and dance, wrestle and fence, clown and weep. Because the stage had no front curtain, the actors always walked on and off the stage in full view of the audience. Plays had to be written so that any character who died on stage could be unobtrusively hauled off.
By the time of Elizabeth’s death in 1603, the influence of the Puritans had begun to grow in England. Puritans, who believed that the Elizabethan dramas and the rowdy crowds they attracted were highly immoral, worked to close all the theaters. They were not immediately successful. Shakespeare wrote some of his greatest tragedies, including Macbeth, during the reign of Elizabeth’s successor, James I. Shakespeare’s interest in issues of power may have been sparked by the intense conflicts between the king and Parliament. When the Puritans overthrew James’s son Charles in 1649, however, they finally closed all the playhouses. This act brought the final curtain down on the golden age of drama. ©2015 arhivinfo.ru Все права принадлежат авторам размещенных материалов.
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