Clowning and Authorship in Early Modern Theatre

£24.00

Clowning and Authorship in Early Modern Theatre

Theatre studies Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval Literary studies: general Literary studies: plays and playwrights Literary studies: plays and playwrights

Author: Richard Preiss

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 6th March 2014

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 5 Mb

ISBN: 9781107779587


To early modern audiences, the clown was much more than a minor play character.

A celebrity performer, he was a one-man sideshow whose interactive entertainments - face-pulling, farce interludes, jigs, rhyming contests with the crowd - were the main event. Clowning epitomized a theatre that was heterogeneous, improvised, participatory, and irreducible to dramatic texts. How, then, did those texts emerge? Why did playgoers buy books that deleted not only the clown, but them as well?

Challenging the narrative that clowns were banished by playwrights like Shakespeare and Jonson, Richard Preiss argues that clowns such as Richard Tarlton, Will Kemp, and Robert Armin actually made playwrights possible - bridging, through the publication of their routines, the experience of live and scripted performance.

Clowning and Authorship tells the story of how, as the clown's presence decayed into print, he bequeathed the new categories around which theatre would organize: the author, and the actor.

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