Shakespeare's Serial History PlaysCambridge University Press, 3. jan. 2002 - 278 sider Shakespeare's Serial History Plays provides a re-reading of the two sequences of English history plays, Henry VI-Richard III and Richard II-Henry V. Reconsidering the chronicle sources and the staging practices of Shakespeare's time, Grene argues that the history plays were originally designed for serial performance. The book looks both at their original creation in the 1590s and at modern serial productions or adaptations, from famous stagings such as the Royal Shakespeare Company's 1960s Wars of the Roses through to the present day. |
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Side vi
... York , NY 10011-4211 , USA , 477 Williamstown Road , Port Melbourne , VIC 3207 , Australia Ruiz de Alarcón 13 , 28014 Madrid , Spain Dock House , The Waterfront , Cape Town 8001 , South Africa http://www.cambridge.org © Nicholas Grene ...
... York , NY 10011-4211 , USA , 477 Williamstown Road , Port Melbourne , VIC 3207 , Australia Ruiz de Alarcón 13 , 28014 Madrid , Spain Dock House , The Waterfront , Cape Town 8001 , South Africa http://www.cambridge.org © Nicholas Grene ...
Side xvi
... York : Norton , 1968 ) . I have quoted source materials wherever possible from : Geoffrey Bullough ( ed . ) , Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare ( London : Routledge & Kegan Paul , 1960–2 ) , vols . III - IV . For chronicle ...
... York : Norton , 1968 ) . I have quoted source materials wherever possible from : Geoffrey Bullough ( ed . ) , Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare ( London : Routledge & Kegan Paul , 1960–2 ) , vols . III - IV . For chronicle ...
Side 8
... York were the early unadapted versions of the plays by other drama- tists which , when re - written by Shakespeare , became 2 Henry VI and 3 Henry VI.4 However , the bibliographical work in the 1920s which estab- lished 1 Contention and ...
... York were the early unadapted versions of the plays by other drama- tists which , when re - written by Shakespeare , became 2 Henry VI and 3 Henry VI.4 However , the bibliographical work in the 1920s which estab- lished 1 Contention and ...
Side 9
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Side 13
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Indhold
Serialising the chronicles | 9 |
Staging the national epic | 33 |
Henry VI RICHARD III | 65 |
War imagined | 67 |
The emergence of character | 98 |
Curses and prophecies | 132 |
Richard II HENRY V | 163 |
Looking back | 165 |
Hybrid histories | 193 |
Change and identity | 220 |
Conclusion | 248 |
Notes | 253 |
266 | |
272 | |
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action actors Age of Kings audience Bardolph Barton and Hall Barton-Hall battle battlefield BBC Television Bullingbrook Bullough Cade character characterisation Chorus chronicles Clifford comedy comic crown curse David Troughton David Warner death dramatic dramatised Duke of York earlier Eastcheap Edward Elizabethan England English Shakespeare Company Falstaff Famous Victories father figure France French Gloucester Gloucester's Hal's Henry IV Henry VI plays Henry's Henslowe Holinshed Hotspur Joan John killed King Henry King's kyng Lancaster London Lord Margaret Merry Wives Michael Michael Attenborough Michael Bogdanov Mortimer murder narrative Percy performance Plantagenets Poins political Prince prompt-book prophecies Pucelle Queen reign Richard III plays Roses Royal Shakespeare Royal Shakespeare Company scene Schlachten sequence serial production Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Shakespeare's History Plays Shrewsbury Somerset speech stage Stratford Suffolk Talbot Tamburlaine Terry Hands tetralogy theatrical thou three plays throne Tillyard two-part play Wars Warwick York's Yorkist