Shakespeare

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Shakespeare Page 14

by Paul Edmondson


  INDEX

  ‘S’ indicates William Shakespeare.

  A

  Act of Supremacy (1559) 16

  Act of Uniformity in religion (1559) 16–17

  actors

  basic company 68

  casting 65–6

  connections with the audience 130

  cue-lines 65

  female roles played by boys 68–9

  making S’s language comprehensible to modern ears 134

  S wrote for actors he knew 64, 74

  Shakespearian stage 66–7

  stage directions 65

  staging S in modern dress 132–3

  Adams, John Quincy 153

  America, Shakespeare in 153–4

  American Declaration of Independence (1776) 153

  Angelou, Maya 168

  Anne Hathaway’s Cottage, Shottery, Stratford-upon-Avon 7

  ‘anti-Shakespearian’ 75

  ‘anti-Stratfordians’ 75

  Ariosto: Orlando Furioso 53

  Aristotle 80

  Arne, Thomas 152

  Astor Place Opera House, New York: riots (1849) 153–4

  Aubrey, John 23

  Auden, W.H. 164

  audiences

  in Blackfriars Theatre 67

  capacity in the Globe 23

  challenging their expectations of genre 79

  connections with the actors 130

  and Earl of Essex’s rebellion 34

  holding their attention 167

  tastes 69

  white and black 154

  Austen, Jane: Mansfield Park 150–51

  Avon, River 152

  B

  Bankside, London 26–7

  baptism 13–14

  Barton, John 91

  Beethoven, Ludwig van 157

  Bell Inn, Carter Lane, London 32

  Belleforest, François de: Histoires Tragiques 53

  Belott, Stephen 38

  Belsey, Catherine 167

  Betterton, Thomas 24

  Bible, the 54–5

  Bishopton, Warwickshire 37

  Blackfriars, London: S’s gatehouse 38

  Blackfriars Theatre, London 37

  indoor playhouse 5, 37

  King’s Men take over its running 37, 67

  lighting and special effects 37, 67

  music 37

  Blake, William

  The Book of Job 165

  ‘Pity’ 120

  Prophetic Books 165

  Boar’s Head Inn, Eastcheap, London 114

  Boccaccio, Giovanni: Decameron 53

  Bodleian Library, Oxford 55, 93

  Bogdanov, Michael 132–3

  Book of Common Prayer 13

  Booth, John Wilkes 155–6

  Boswell, James 152

  Botticelli, Sandro: Venus and Mars 105

  British Empire 153

  British Library, London 55

  Broadway Theatre, New York 154

  Brooke, Arthur: The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet 53–4

  Burbage, Richard 35–6, 38, 43, 64, 66

  C

  Caird, John 7

  Campion, Edmund 20

  Cardinal Cap Alley, London 27

  Cardinal’s Hat brothel, Bankside, London 27

  Castro, Fidel 155

  censorship 33, 70–71, 154–5

  Chapel Lane, Stratford-upon-Avon 47

  Chapel Street, Stratford-upon-Avon 10, 31

  Charlecote Park, Warwickshire 24

  Chaucer, Geoffrey 20

  The Canterbury Tales 52

  Troilus and Criseyde 52

  Chester, Robert: Love’s Martyr: or Rosalind’s Complaint 100

  Chettle, Henry 70

  Chichester Cathedral 68

  chronology of Shakespeare’s works 1–3

  Church of England 16, 18

  Cicero 20

  Cinthio, Giraldi: Gl’Ecatommiti (The One Hundred Tales) 53, 59–60

  City of London 26

  Clark, Charles Cowden 159

  Clifford Chambers 41

  Clinton, Bill 155

  Clopton, Edward 47

  Clopton, Hugh (descendent of New Place owner) 31

  Clopton, Hugh (New Place original owner) 10–11, 30

  complaints (laments) 99

  Condell, Henry 43, 76, 77, 79, 80, 82

  Coombe, John 41, 43

  Coombe, Thomas 43

  Coriolanus (film) 154

  Corpus Christi College, Oxford 69

  Cottom, John 20

  Cowley, Richard 66

  Crispin, St 61

  Crown Inn, Oxford 28

  Cultural Olympiad (2012) 168

  D

  Davenant, William 28

  Davies, Richard 25

  Dekker, Thomas 70–71

  Dench, Jeffrey 138

  Dench, Judi 137, 138

  Deptford, London 58

  St Nicholas’s Church 75

  Dickens, Charles 147

  Nicholas Nickleby 147

  ‘discovery space’ 66

  Dodd, William: The Beauties of Shakespeare 151

  Donne, John 49

  Doran, Gregory 127

  Drabble, Margaret 137

  Drayton, Michael 41

  Duffy, Carol Ann 147

  Durham Cathedral 68

  E

  Earl of Worcester’s Men 13

  Edward VI, King 16, 19

  Eliot, T.S.: ‘Little Gidding’ (in The Four Quartets) 116

  Elizabeth I, Queen

  attends theatrical performances 29

  on coinage 5

  death 34

  Essex’s rebellion 33

  excommunicated 17

  head of the Church of England 16

  and Richard II 34

  Erasmus, Desiderius 20

  Essex, Earl of 33, 34

  Evans, Edith 142

  F

  Famous Victories of Henry V, The 54

  Field, Richard 28

  Fiennes, Ralph 154

  Fletcher, John 39, 40, 67, 72

  Florio, John 55

  Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C. 55

  Forde, Emmanuel: The Famous History of Parismus 54

  forgiveness, making 124–7

  Malvolio’s and Antonio’s inability to forgive 124

  and The Winter’s Tale 124–7

  Forrest, Edwin 154

  Franco, General Francisco 155

  G

  Garrick, David

  Shakespeare Ode 152

  Stratford Jubilee 10, 152–3

  Gascoigne, George: Supposes 53

  German Romanticism 155

  German Shakespeare Society 155

  G’Ingannati (The Deceived) 49, 54

  Globe Theatre, The, London 67

  audience capacity 33

  burnt to the ground in a fire 38–9, 68

  investment in 32, 33, 37, 39

  Lords’ Room 5, 32–3

  opens (1599) 32

  rebuilt 39

  Goethe, Johann von 155

  Golding, Arthur 51

  Goldwyn, Samuel 75

  Gower, John: Confessio Amantis 52

  grammar-school system 19–22

  Green family 13

  Greene, Rev. Joseph 31

  Greene, Robert

  Greene’s Groatsworth of Wit Bought with a Million of Repentance 25–6

  Pandosto 54, 127

  Greene, Thomas (S’s cousin) 40

  Greenhill Street, Stratford-upon-Avon 11, 15

  Greenwich Palace, London 29

  Grimmitt, Richard 47

  Guild Chapel, Stratford-upon-Avon 13, 30, 41

  Gurr, Andrew 29

  H

  Hall, Edward: The Union of the Two Noble and Illustrious Families of Lancaster and York 53

  Hall, Elizabeth (S’s granddaughter) 37, 43

  Hall, John (S’s son-in-law) 37, 43, 45

  Hall, Susanna (née Shakespeare; S’s daughter) 23, 37, 42, 43, 45, 103 Hamlet (film) 130–31


  Hammond, Lieutenant 46

  Harington, Sir John 53

  Hart, Joan (née Shakespeare; S’s sister) 9, 14

  Hart, Shakespeare (S’s great-great-nephew) 9–10

  Harvey, Gabriel 94

  Hathaway, Anne see Shakespeare, Anne (S’s wife) Hawkes, Terence 157

  Heminges, John 43, 76–7, 79, 80, 82

  Henley Street, Stratford-upon-Avon 9, 11

  Henry IV, King 114

  Henry VI, King 113

  Henry VIII, King 16, 68

  Heywood, Thomas 71

  Hiccox, Lewis 9

  High Street, Stratford-upon-Avon 23

  history, making 114–16

  role of Falstaff character 114–15

  in the two parts of Henry IV 114–16

  the world of the ordinary made extraordinary 114, 115, 116

  Hitler, Adolf 155

  Holinshed, Raphael: Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland 53, 60, 61, 80

  Holy Trinity Church,

  Stratford-upon-Avon Anne Shakespeare’s grave 45

  Hamnet’s grave 29

  S’s baptism (26 April 1564) 14

  S’s grave 14, 41, 45, 46, 147

  S’s memorial 41–2, 74

  Hopkins, Gerard Manley 164

  Horace 20, 80

  Hughes, Ted 165

  Hunt, Simon 20

  Huntington Library, Los Angeles 55

  I

  impresa (heraldic-like device) 38

  J

  Jaber, Corinne 154

  Jackson, Henry 69

  James I, King

  coronation 34, 42

  fascinated with witchcraft and the supernatural 70

  tenth anniversary of his accession 38

  Janssen, Geerhart 41

  Jefferson, Thomas 153

  Jenkins, Thomas 20

  Jesuits 17, 20

  Jonson, Ben 41, 44–5, 57, 77

  Timber, or Discoveries Made Upon Men and Matter 45, 76

  Juvenal 20

  K

  Kabul, Afghanistan 154

  Katherine of Aragon, Queen 16

  Keats, George 6, 161

  Keats, Georgiana 6

  Keats, John 5–6, 147–8, 159–60, 161–2

  ‘On sitting down to read King Lear once again’ 165

  Keats, Tom 161

  Kemp, Will 66

  King Edward VI School, Stratford-upon-Avon 19–22, 49

  King’s Men (previously the Lord

  Chamberlain’s Men) 59, 73

  Fletcher’s role of leading dramatist 72

  and James I’s coronation 34, 42

  takes over running of Blackfriars Theatre 37, 67

  L

  Lane, John 37

  leather making 12

  Levin, Bernard 51

  Liebestod (love-death narrative) 105

  Lincoln, Abraham 155

  Lodge, Thomas: Rosalynde 54

  London

  location of playhouses in 26–7

  plague in 27, 33, 94

  S goes to 15, 25

  Lord Chamberlain’s Men (later the King’s Men) 89

  and Essex rebellion 33–4

  formed (1594) 15, 29, 64

  love, making 101–9

  Cleopatra 104–5

  comic lovemaking 105–6

  Romeo and Juliet 101–4

  same-sex 106–7

  in the Sonnets 108–9

  Titania and Nick Bottom 105–6

  Lucy, Sir Thomas 24, 25

  Lyly, John 56

  M

  Macdonald, Mairi 42

  Machiavelli, Niccolò 86

  Macready, William Charles 154

  Maidenhead, The (pub) see under Shakespeare’s Birthplace

  Manningham, John 35–6, 47, 49

  Mantuanus 20

  Market Theatre, Johannesburg 154

  Marlowe, Christopher

  and authorship of S’s plays 74

  death 58, 74–5

  influence on S 56, 57–9

  popularity of his plays 56–7

  Dr Faustus 26, 57, 58

  Edward II 57

  Hero and Leander 57

  The Jew of Malta 26, 57

  Tamburlaine the Great 26

  Mary, Queen 16

  Master of the Revels (state censor) 33, 71

  May Day riots against foreigners (1517) 71

  Meres, Francis: Palladis Tamia: Wit’s Treasury 98

  Middle Temple, London 35, 47

  Middleton, Thomas 72

  The Witch 72

  Milton, John 165

  Monkswell Street, London 30

  Montagne, Michel de 55

  Montemayor, Jorge de: Diana 53

  More, Sir Thomas 71

  mortality, making 116–19

  acceptance of life and death 118–19

  in All’s Well That Ends Well 118

  a defiant life force 116–18

  in Hamlet 119

  in Measure for Measure 116–18

  Mountjoy, Christopher 38

  Mountjoy family 30

  Mountjoy, Mary 38

  Munday, Antony and Chettle, Henry: The Book of Sir Thomas More 70–71

  Mussolini, Benito 155

  mystery plays 55

  N

  Nashe, Thomas 72

  National Assembly of Local Arts agencies (Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1985) 168

  New Place, Chapel Street, Stratford-upon-Avon becomes S’s family home 10–11, 15, 30

  built (1490) 30

  renovated and later demolished 31

  S’s library 47

  Susanna inherits 42

  North, Sir Thomas 52, 61

  Nuttall, A.D. 160

  O

  Oath of Succession (1534) 71

  Old Stratford parish, Warwickshire 36, 40

  Olivier, Laurence 130–31

  Ovid 20–21, 93

  The Fasti 51

  Metamorphoses 21, 51

  Owen, Wilfred 113–14

  Oxford Shakespeare, The: The Complete Works 1, 82, 128

  P

  Painter, William: Palace of Pleasure 53

  Palingenius 20

  Parnassus plays 94

  Pecorone, Il (The Dance) 53

  Peele, George 72

  Petrarchan love 108

  Petty School, Stratford-upon-Avon 19

  Pius V, Pope 17

  plague 27, 33, 94

  Plautus

  Amphitryon 51

  Menaechmi 49, 51

  Plutarch: Lives 51–2, 61–2, 63, 64

  prompt book 134

  Protestantism 13, 16

  Puritans 26, 37, 42

  Q

  Queen’s Men, The 25

  first visit to Stratford 12–13

  Quiller-Couch, Arthur 90

  Quiney, Judith (née Shakespeare; S’s daughter) 23, 43, 45

  Quiney, Richard 32

  Quiney, Richard (S’s grandson) 45

  Quiney, Shakespeare (S’s grandson) 45

  Quiney, Thomas (S’s grandson) 45

  Quiney, Thomas (S’s son-in-law) 43

  Quintilian 20

  R

  recusancy 16–17

  religious crises 16–19

  Rialto Bridge, Venice 5

  Richard II, King 114

  Riche, Barnaby: His Farewell to Military Profession 54

  Robinson, John 38

  Rogers, John 41

  Roman Catholicism 13, 16, 17, 61

  Rose theatre, The, Bankside, London 26

  Rowe, Nicholas 24, 28

  Royal Shakespeare Company 91, 127

  Rutland, Francis Manners, 6th Earl of 38

  S

  Sadler, Hamnet and Judith 23

  St Andrew’s primary school, Shottery, near Stratford-upon-Avon 166–7

  St George’s Day 14

  St Giles Cripplegate parish, London 30

  St Helen’s Bishopgate parish, London 30

  St John’s College, Oxford 20

  St Mark’s Day 13–14

/>   St Saviour parish, Southwark, London 30

  Sallust 20

  Salusbury, Sir John 99–100

  Scheemaker, Peter 152

  Schiller, Friedrich 155

  Scott, Walter 46

  Scott, William: The Model of Poesie 33

  Secchi, Nicolò: G’Inganni (The Mistakes) 49

  Seneca 51

  Shakespeare, Anne (née Hathaway; S’s wife)

  death and burial 45

  marries S 22–3

  pregnancies 22, 23

  and S’s will 42–3

  Shakespeare, Anne (S’s sister) 14

  Shakespeare, Edmund (S’s brother) 14

  Shakespeare, Gilbert (S’s brother) 14

  Shakespeare, Hamnet (S’s son) 23, 29

  Shakespeare, Henry (S’s uncle) 10

  Shakespeare, Joan see Hart, Joan Shakespeare, Joan (S’s sister, dies in infancy) 14

  Shakespeare, John (S’s father) 9, 10

  born in Snitterfield before 1530 10

  death (1601) 9, 15

  financial problems 14, 15

  and first visit of professional actors to Stratford 12–13

  granted a coat of arms 29–30

  house purchases 11, 14, 15

  leather-working and glove-making trade 12, 23, 25

  marries Mary Arden 11, 12

  public offices 12

  sells property and land 15

  and S’s education 19

  and whitewashing of Guild Chapel’s medieval wall paintings 13

  Shakespeare, Margaret (S’s sister) 14

  Shakespeare, Mary (née Arden; S’s mother) 11–12, 15, 37

  Shakespeare, Richard (S’s brother) 14, 30

  Shakespeare, William

  appearance 42

  baptism 14

  birthday (23 April 1564) 14, 151–2

  as a ‘black hole’ 157

  Britain’s national poet 153

  celebration of 151–3

  choice of reading 51–6

  co-founds Lord Chamberlain’s

  Men 15, 29

  death (23 April 1616) 5, 14, 40–41

  death of his father 9

  deer-poaching story 24–5

  education 19–22, 49

  first mentioned in London 5

  goes to London 15, 25

  Holy Trinity Church grave 14, 41, 45, 46, 147

  invests in the Globe 32, 39

  lack of an heir 30

  literary influences on 56–9

  ‘lost’ years 23–5

  marries a pregnant Anne Hathaway (1582) 22–3

  New Place becomes the family home 10–11, 15, 30

  political sensitivity 154–5

  revisions 73–4

  success of first work printed 28

  ways into S 148–56

  wealth 32, 42

  his will 38, 39, 40, 42–3

  plays

  audience taste and censorship 79–81

  authorship 74–5

  banishment theme 86

  categorisation 79–80, 82

  collaborative work 39–40, 71–3, 74

 

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