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Blackfriars Theatre

Blackfriars Theatre was the name given to two separate theatres located in the former Blackfriars Dominican priory in the City of London during the Renaissance. The first theatre began as a venue for the Children of the Chapel Royal, child actors associated with the Queen's chapel choirs, and who from 1576 to 1584 staged plays in the vast hall of the former monastery.[1] The second theatre dates from the purchase of the upper part of the priory and another building by James Burbage in 1596, which included the Parliament Chamber on the upper floor that was converted into the playhouse.[2] The Children of the Chapel played in the theatre beginning in the autumn of 1600 until the King's Men took over in 1608.[3] They successfully used it as their winter playhouse until all the theatres were closed in 1642 when the English Civil War began.[4] In 1666, the entire area was destroyed in the Great Fire of London.

Theatre Map of early modern London. Blackfriars Theatre is to the south-west of
St Paul's Cathedral, which is left of centre

First theatre edit

Blackfriars Theatre was built on the grounds of the former Dominican monastery. The monastery was located between the Thames and Ludgate Hill within London proper.[5] The black robes worn by members of this order lent the neighbourhood, and theatres, their name. In the pre-Reformation Tudor years, the site was used not only for religious but also for political functions, such as the annulment trial of Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII which, some eight decades later, would be reenacted in the same room by Shakespeare's company.[6] After Henry's expropriation of monastic property, the monastery became the property of the crown; control of the property was granted to Sir Thomas Cawarden, Master of the Revels. Cawarden used part of the monastery as Revels offices; other parts he sold or leased to the neighbourhood's wealthy residents, including Lord Cobham and John Cheke. After Cawarden's death in 1559, the property was sold by Lady Cawarden to Sir William More. In 1576, Richard Farrant, then Master of Windsor Chapel leased part of the former buttery from More in order to stage plays. As often in the theatrical practice of the time, this commercial enterprise was justified by the convenient fiction of royal necessity; Farrant claimed to need the space for his child choristers to practice plays for the Queen, but he also staged plays for paying audiences. The theatre was small, perhaps 46 feet (14 m) long and 25 feet (7.6 m) wide, and admission, compared to public theatres, expensive (six pence in the gallery, rising in stages to three shillings for a seat in a box close to the stage); both these factors limited attendance at the theatre to a fairly select group of well-to-do gentry and nobles.[7]

For his playing company, Farrant combined his Windsor children with the Children of the Chapel Royal, then directed by William Hunnis. On Farrant's death in 1580, Hunnis took on John Newman as a partner and they subleased the property from Farrant's widow, putting up a £100 bond on the promise to promptly pay the rent and to make needed repairs. But the venture did not go well financially, which put Farrant's widow in jeopardy of defaulting on the rent to More. In November 1583, Farrant brought suit against Hunnis and Newman for default on the bond. To escape a suit by her or More, Hunnis and Newman transferred their sublease to Henry Evans, a Welsh scrivener and theatrical affectionado. This unauthorised assignment of the sublease gave More an excuse to bring suit to retake possession of the property, but Evans used legal delays and finally escaped legal action by selling the sublease to Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, sometime after Michaelmas Term (November) of 1583, who then gave it to his secretary, the writer John Lyly.[8]

As proprietor of the playhouse, Lyly installed Evans as the manager of the new company of Oxford's Boys, composed of the Children of the Chapel and the Children of Paul's, and turned his talents to play writing. Lyly's Campaspe was performed at Blackfriars[9] and subsequently at Court on New Year's Day 1584; likewise, his Sapho and Phao was produced first at Blackfriars on Shrove Tuesday[9] and then at court on 3 March, with Lyly listed as the payee for both Court appearances. In November 1583, Hunnis, still Master of the Chapel Children, successfully petitioned the Queen to increase the stipend to house, feed, and clothe the company. More finally obtained a legal judgement voiding the original lease at the end of Easter Term (June) of 1584, thereby ending the First Blackfriars Playhouse after eight years and postponing the performance of Lyly's third play, Gallathea.[10]

Second theatre edit

 
Conjectural reconstruction of the second Blackfriars Theatre from contemporary documents.

The second Blackfriars was an indoor theatre built elsewhere on the property at the instigation of James Burbage, father of Richard Burbage, and impresario of the Lord Chamberlain's Men. In 1596, Burbage purchased, for £600, the frater of the former priory and rooms below. This large space, perhaps 100 feet (30 m) long and 50 wide (15 metres), with high ceilings allowed Burbage to construct two galleries, substantially increasing potential attendance. The nature of Burbage's modifications to his purchase is not clear, and the many contemporary references to the theatre do not offer a precise picture of its design. Once fitted for playing, the space may have been about 69 feet (21 m) long and 46 feet (14 m) wide (20 by 14 metres), including tiring areas. There were at least two and possibly three galleries, and perhaps a number of stage boxes adjacent to the stage. Estimates of its capacity have varied from below 600 to almost 1000, depending on the number of galleries and boxes.[11] Perhaps as many as ten spectators would have encumbered the stage.

As Burbage built, however, a petition from the residents of the wealthy neighbourhood and led by Lady Elizabeth Russell,[12] persuaded the Privy Council to forbid playing there.[12] Referring to "divers both honorable and others then inhabiting the said precinct" and "what inconveniences were likely to fall upon them from a common playhouse"[12] the letter was signed even by Lord Hunsdon, patron of Burbage's company, and by Richard Field, the Blackfriars printer and hometown neighbour of William Shakespeare.[13] The company was absolutely forbidden to perform there. Three years later, Richard Burbage was able to lease the property to Henry Evans, who had been among those ejected more than fifteen years earlier. Evans entered a partnership with Nathaniel Giles, Hunnis's successor at the Chapel Royal. They used the theatre for a commercial enterprise with a group called the Children of the Chapel, which combined the choristers of the chapel with other boys, many taken up from local grammar schools under colour of Giles's warrant to provide entertainment for the Queen. The dubious legality of these dramatic impressments led to a challenge from a father in 1600; however, this method brought the company some of its most famous actors, including Nathaniel Field and Salmon Pavy. The residents did not protest at this use, probably because of perceived social differences between the adult and child companies.

While it housed this company, Blackfriars was the site of an explosion of innovative drama and staging. Together with its competitor, Paul's Children, the Blackfriars company produced plays by a number of the most talented young dramatists of Jacobean literature, among them Thomas Middleton, Ben Jonson, George Chapman, and John Marston. Chapman and Jonson wrote almost exclusively for Blackfriars in this period, while Marston began with Paul's but switched to Blackfriars, in which he appears to have been a sharer, by around 1605. In the latter half of the decade, the company at Blackfriars premiered plays by Francis Beaumont (The Knight of the Burning Pestle) and John Fletcher (The Faithful Shepherdess) that, although failures in their first production, marked the first significant appearance of these two dramatists, whose work would profoundly affect early Stuart drama. The new plays of all these playwrights deliberately pushed the accepted boundaries of personal and social satire, of violence on stage, and of sexual frankness. These plays appear to have attracted members of a higher social class than was the norm at the Bankside and Shoreditch theatres, and the admission price (sixpence for a cheap seat) probably excluded the poorer patrons of the amphitheatres. Prefaces and internal references speak of gallants and Inns of Court men, who came not only to see a play but also, of course, to be seen; the private theatres sold seats on the stage itself.

The Blackfriars playhouse was also the source of other innovations which would profoundly change the nature of English commercial staging: it was among the first commercial theatrical enterprises to rely on artificial lighting, and it featured music between acts, a practice which the induction to Marston's The Malcontent (1604) indicates was not common in the public theatres at that time.

In the years around the turn of the century, the children's companies were something of a phenomenon; a reference in Hamlet to "little eyasses" suggests that even the adult companies felt threatened by them.[14] By the later half of that decade, the fashion had changed somewhat. In 1608, Burbage's company (by this time, the King's Men) took possession of the theatre, which they still owned, this time without objections from the neighbourhood. There were originally seven sharers in the reorganised theatre: Richard Burbage, William Shakespeare, Henry Condell, John Heminges, and William Sly, all members of the King's Men, plus Cuthbert Burbage and Thomas Evans, agent for the theatre manager Henry Evans. This arrangement of shareholders (or "housekeepers) was similar to how the Globe Theatre was operated.[5] Sly, however, died soon after the arrangement was made, and his share was divided among the other six.

After renovations, the King's Men began using the theatre for performances in 1609. Thereafter the King's Men played in Blackfriars for the seven months in winter, and at the Globe during the summer. Blackfriars appears to have brought in a little over twice the revenue of the Globe; the shareholders could earn as much as £13 from a single performance, apart from what went to the actors.[15]

In the reign of Charles I, even Queen Henrietta Maria was in the Blackfriars audience. On 13 May 1634 she and her attendants saw a play by Philip Massinger; in late 1635 or early 1636 they saw Lodowick Carlell's Arviragus and Philicia, part 2; and they attended a third performance in May 1636.[16]

The theatre closed at the onset of the English Civil War, and was demolished on 6 August 1655.[17]

Reconstructions edit

Blackfriars Playhouse edit

 
The American Shakespeare Center's Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton, Virginia

The American Shakespeare Center's Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton, Virginia, is a re-creation of a Jacobean theatre based on what is known of the original Blackfriars.[18] Completed at a cost of $3.7 million,[19] the 300-seat theatre opened in September 2001.[18] Architect Tom McLaughlin based the design on plans for other 17th-century theatres, his own trips to England to view surviving halls of the period, Shakespeare's stage directions and other research and consultation.[20] The lighting imitates that of the original Blackfriars.[21]

Sam Wanamaker Playhouse edit

 
The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse on Bankside, London, adjoining Shakespeare's Globe

During the construction of Shakespeare's Globe, London, in the 1990s, the shell for an indoor theatre was built next door, to house a "simulacrum" of the Blackfriars Theatre.[22] As no reliable plans of the Blackfriars are known, the plan for the new theatre was based on drawings found in the 1960s at Worcester College, Oxford, at first thought to date from the early 17th century,[23] and to be the work of Inigo Jones. The shell was built to accommodate a theatre as specified by the drawings, and the planned name was the Inigo Jones Theatre.[24] In 2005, the drawings were dated to 1660 and attributed to John Webb.[23] They nevertheless represent the earliest known plan for an English theatre, and are thought to approximate the layout of the Blackfriars Theatre.[22] Some features believed to be typical of earlier in the 17th century were added to the new theatre's design.[23]

Completed at a cost of £7.5 million, the theatre opened as the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse in January 2014.[25] Designed by Jon Greenfield, in collaboration with Allies and Morrison, it is an oak structure built inside the building's brick shell.[26] The thrust stage is surmounted by a musicians' gallery, and the theatre has an ornately painted ceiling. The seating capacity is 340, with benches in a pit and two horse-shoe galleries,[25] placing the audience close to the actors.[27] Shutters around the first gallery admit artificial daylight. When the shutters are closed, lighting is provided by beeswax candles mounted in sconces, as well as on six height-adjustable chandeliers and even held by the actors.[25]

See also edit

  • Mermaid Theatre (1959), a modern theatre built on, or near the original site

Notes edit

  1. ^ Menzer & Cohen 2006, p. 11.
  2. ^ Smith 1964, pp. 162, 172.
  3. ^ Smith 1964, pp. 177, 172.
  4. ^ Gurr 2006, p. 17.
  5. ^ a b "Blackfriars Theatre". Britannica Online. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  6. ^ Henry VIII, apparently a collaboration between Shakespeare and John Fletcher, probably dates to 1613.
  7. ^ Sturgess, Keith (1987). Jacobean private theatre. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. pp. 15–16. ISBN 0-7102-1017-5.
  8. ^ Smith 1964, pp. 150–1.
  9. ^ a b Bond, III, p. 310.
  10. ^ Smith 1964, pp. 151–2; Hunter 2004.
  11. ^ In 1609 Francis Beaumont described the Blackfriars as a place in which "a thousand men in judgment sit"—Gurr, p. 213. His figure may be hyperbole.
  12. ^ a b c Laoutaris, Chris (2023). Shakespeare's Book. William Collins. p. 29. ISBN 9780008238414.
  13. ^ Stopes, p. 12.
  14. ^ Bradbrook, Muriel (1978). Shakespeare The Poet in His World (2005 ed.). London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 137. ISBN 9780297775041.
  15. ^ Cook, p. 210.
  16. ^ Cook, p. 115.
  17. ^ Halliday, p. 235.
  18. ^ a b Menzer, Paul (2006). "Afterword: Discovery Spaces? Research at the Globe and Blackfriars". In Menzer, Paul (ed.). Inside Shakespeare: Essays on the Blackfriars Stage. Cranberry NJ: Associated University Presses. p. 223. ISBN 1-57591-077-2.
  19. ^ Klein, Michael (14 July 2002). "There's much ado about the Bard in Virginia". philly.com. Philadelphia Media Network. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  20. ^ Lebovich, William (14 November 2001). "Blackfriars Shakespearean Playhouse". Architecture Week. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  21. ^ Menzer, Paul (2016). Shakespeare in the Theatre: The American Shakespeare Center. London: Bloomsbury Arden Shakespeare.
  22. ^ a b "Shakespeare's Globe Announces Plans to Build an Indoor Jacobean Theatre" (PDF) (Press release). Shakespeare's Globe. 20 January 2011. Retrieved 24 October 2011.
  23. ^ a b c Williams, Holly (22 June 2013). "All the world's a stage (or two): Shakespeare's Globe to be joined by a candlelit indoor theatre". The Independent. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  24. ^ "Innovation in the theatre: Old spaces and new globes". The Economist. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  25. ^ a b c Coveney, Michael (16 January 2014). "The Duchess of Malfi (Sam Wanamaker Playhouse)". What's on Stage. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  26. ^ Moore, Rowan (12 January 2014). "Sam Wanamaker Playhouse – review". The Observer. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  27. ^ Spencer, Charles (16 January 2014). "The Duchess of Malfi, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, review". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 January 2014.

References edit

  • "Blackfriars Theatre". Britannica Online. EBSCOhost. n.d.
  • Bond, R. Warwick (1902). The Complete Works of John Lyly. Oxford at the Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0559897986.
  • Cook, Ann Jennalie (1981). The Privileged Playgoers of Shakespeare's London, 1576–1642. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-06454-3.
  • Gurr, Andrew (1992). The Shakespearean Stage, 1574–1642 (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-41005-3. Retrieved 25 January 2012.
  • Gurr, Andrew (2006). "London's Blackfriars Playhouse and the Chamberlain's Men". In Menzer, Paul (ed.). Inside Shakespeare: Essays on the Blackfriars Stage. Susquehanna University Press. pp. 17–30. ISBN 1-57591-077-2. Retrieved 25 January 2012.
  • Menzer, Paul; Cohen, Ralph Alan (2006). "Introduction". In Menzer, Paul (ed.). Inside Shakespeare: Essays on the Blackfriars Stage. Susquehanna University Press. pp. 7–16. ISBN 1-57591-077-2. Retrieved 25 January 2012.
  • Hunter, G. K. (2004). "Lyly, John (1554–1606)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17251. Retrieved 23 January 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Robison, William B. (2008). "Cawarden, Sir Thomas (c.1514–1559)'". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37270. Retrieved 15 February 2013. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) (subscription required)
  • Smith, Irwin (1964). Shakespeare's Blackfriars Playhouse: Its History and Design. New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-0391-5.
  • Stern, Tiffany (2006). "Actors and Audiences on the Stage at Blackfriars". In Menzer, Paul (ed.). Inside Shakespeare: Essays on the Blackfriars Stage. Susquehanna University Press. pp. 35–53. ISBN 1-57591-077-2.
  • Stopes, Charlotte Carmichael (1907). Shakespeare's Warwickshire Contemporaries. Stratford-upon-Avon: Shakespeare Head Press.
  • Wallace, Charles William (1912). The Evolution of the English Drama up to Shakespeare With a History of the First Blackfriars Theatre. Berlin: George Reimer. Retrieved 17 February 2013.

External links edit

  • Blackfriars Theatre article from The Map of Early Modern London project at The University of Victoria
  • The Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton, Virginia
  • Shakespeare's Globe and the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse in London
  • East London Theatre Archive Digitised Posters and Flyers from the Second BlackFriars Theatre, held by the University of East London
  • Shakespearean Playhouses, by Joseph Quincy Adams Jr. from Project Gutenberg

51°30′46″N 0°06′09″W / 51.51278°N 0.10250°W / 51.51278; -0.10250

blackfriars, theatre, name, given, separate, theatres, located, former, blackfriars, dominican, priory, city, london, during, renaissance, first, theatre, began, venue, children, chapel, royal, child, actors, associated, with, queen, chapel, choirs, from, 1576. Blackfriars Theatre was the name given to two separate theatres located in the former Blackfriars Dominican priory in the City of London during the Renaissance The first theatre began as a venue for the Children of the Chapel Royal child actors associated with the Queen s chapel choirs and who from 1576 to 1584 staged plays in the vast hall of the former monastery 1 The second theatre dates from the purchase of the upper part of the priory and another building by James Burbage in 1596 which included the Parliament Chamber on the upper floor that was converted into the playhouse 2 The Children of the Chapel played in the theatre beginning in the autumn of 1600 until the King s Men took over in 1608 3 They successfully used it as their winter playhouse until all the theatres were closed in 1642 when the English Civil War began 4 In 1666 the entire area was destroyed in the Great Fire of London Theatre Map of early modern London Blackfriars Theatre is to the south west of St Paul s Cathedral which is left of centre Contents 1 First theatre 2 Second theatre 3 Reconstructions 3 1 Blackfriars Playhouse 3 2 Sam Wanamaker Playhouse 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksFirst theatre editBlackfriars Theatre was built on the grounds of the former Dominican monastery The monastery was located between the Thames and Ludgate Hill within London proper 5 The black robes worn by members of this order lent the neighbourhood and theatres their name In the pre Reformation Tudor years the site was used not only for religious but also for political functions such as the annulment trial of Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII which some eight decades later would be reenacted in the same room by Shakespeare s company 6 After Henry s expropriation of monastic property the monastery became the property of the crown control of the property was granted to Sir Thomas Cawarden Master of the Revels Cawarden used part of the monastery as Revels offices other parts he sold or leased to the neighbourhood s wealthy residents including Lord Cobham and John Cheke After Cawarden s death in 1559 the property was sold by Lady Cawarden to Sir William More In 1576 Richard Farrant then Master of Windsor Chapel leased part of the former buttery from More in order to stage plays As often in the theatrical practice of the time this commercial enterprise was justified by the convenient fiction of royal necessity Farrant claimed to need the space for his child choristers to practice plays for the Queen but he also staged plays for paying audiences The theatre was small perhaps 46 feet 14 m long and 25 feet 7 6 m wide and admission compared to public theatres expensive six pence in the gallery rising in stages to three shillings for a seat in a box close to the stage both these factors limited attendance at the theatre to a fairly select group of well to do gentry and nobles 7 For his playing company Farrant combined his Windsor children with the Children of the Chapel Royal then directed by William Hunnis On Farrant s death in 1580 Hunnis took on John Newman as a partner and they subleased the property from Farrant s widow putting up a 100 bond on the promise to promptly pay the rent and to make needed repairs But the venture did not go well financially which put Farrant s widow in jeopardy of defaulting on the rent to More In November 1583 Farrant brought suit against Hunnis and Newman for default on the bond To escape a suit by her or More Hunnis and Newman transferred their sublease to Henry Evans a Welsh scrivener and theatrical affectionado This unauthorised assignment of the sublease gave More an excuse to bring suit to retake possession of the property but Evans used legal delays and finally escaped legal action by selling the sublease to Edward de Vere 17th Earl of Oxford sometime after Michaelmas Term November of 1583 who then gave it to his secretary the writer John Lyly 8 As proprietor of the playhouse Lyly installed Evans as the manager of the new company of Oxford s Boys composed of the Children of the Chapel and the Children of Paul s and turned his talents to play writing Lyly s Campaspe was performed at Blackfriars 9 and subsequently at Court on New Year s Day 1584 likewise his Sapho and Phao was produced first at Blackfriars on Shrove Tuesday 9 and then at court on 3 March with Lyly listed as the payee for both Court appearances In November 1583 Hunnis still Master of the Chapel Children successfully petitioned the Queen to increase the stipend to house feed and clothe the company More finally obtained a legal judgement voiding the original lease at the end of Easter Term June of 1584 thereby ending the First Blackfriars Playhouse after eight years and postponing the performance of Lyly s third play Gallathea 10 Second theatre edit nbsp Conjectural reconstruction of the second Blackfriars Theatre from contemporary documents The second Blackfriars was an indoor theatre built elsewhere on the property at the instigation of James Burbage father of Richard Burbage and impresario of the Lord Chamberlain s Men In 1596 Burbage purchased for 600 the frater of the former priory and rooms below This large space perhaps 100 feet 30 m long and 50 wide 15 metres with high ceilings allowed Burbage to construct two galleries substantially increasing potential attendance The nature of Burbage s modifications to his purchase is not clear and the many contemporary references to the theatre do not offer a precise picture of its design Once fitted for playing the space may have been about 69 feet 21 m long and 46 feet 14 m wide 20 by 14 metres including tiring areas There were at least two and possibly three galleries and perhaps a number of stage boxes adjacent to the stage Estimates of its capacity have varied from below 600 to almost 1000 depending on the number of galleries and boxes 11 Perhaps as many as ten spectators would have encumbered the stage As Burbage built however a petition from the residents of the wealthy neighbourhood and led by Lady Elizabeth Russell 12 persuaded the Privy Council to forbid playing there 12 Referring to divers both honorable and others then inhabiting the said precinct and what inconveniences were likely to fall upon them from a common playhouse 12 the letter was signed even by Lord Hunsdon patron of Burbage s company and by Richard Field the Blackfriars printer and hometown neighbour of William Shakespeare 13 The company was absolutely forbidden to perform there Three years later Richard Burbage was able to lease the property to Henry Evans who had been among those ejected more than fifteen years earlier Evans entered a partnership with Nathaniel Giles Hunnis s successor at the Chapel Royal They used the theatre for a commercial enterprise with a group called the Children of the Chapel which combined the choristers of the chapel with other boys many taken up from local grammar schools under colour of Giles s warrant to provide entertainment for the Queen The dubious legality of these dramatic impressments led to a challenge from a father in 1600 however this method brought the company some of its most famous actors including Nathaniel Field and Salmon Pavy The residents did not protest at this use probably because of perceived social differences between the adult and child companies While it housed this company Blackfriars was the site of an explosion of innovative drama and staging Together with its competitor Paul s Children the Blackfriars company produced plays by a number of the most talented young dramatists of Jacobean literature among them Thomas Middleton Ben Jonson George Chapman and John Marston Chapman and Jonson wrote almost exclusively for Blackfriars in this period while Marston began with Paul s but switched to Blackfriars in which he appears to have been a sharer by around 1605 In the latter half of the decade the company at Blackfriars premiered plays by Francis Beaumont The Knight of the Burning Pestle and John Fletcher The Faithful Shepherdess that although failures in their first production marked the first significant appearance of these two dramatists whose work would profoundly affect early Stuart drama The new plays of all these playwrights deliberately pushed the accepted boundaries of personal and social satire of violence on stage and of sexual frankness These plays appear to have attracted members of a higher social class than was the norm at the Bankside and Shoreditch theatres and the admission price sixpence for a cheap seat probably excluded the poorer patrons of the amphitheatres Prefaces and internal references speak of gallants and Inns of Court men who came not only to see a play but also of course to be seen the private theatres sold seats on the stage itself The Blackfriars playhouse was also the source of other innovations which would profoundly change the nature of English commercial staging it was among the first commercial theatrical enterprises to rely on artificial lighting and it featured music between acts a practice which the induction to Marston s The Malcontent 1604 indicates was not common in the public theatres at that time In the years around the turn of the century the children s companies were something of a phenomenon a reference in Hamlet to little eyasses suggests that even the adult companies felt threatened by them 14 By the later half of that decade the fashion had changed somewhat In 1608 Burbage s company by this time the King s Men took possession of the theatre which they still owned this time without objections from the neighbourhood There were originally seven sharers in the reorganised theatre Richard Burbage William Shakespeare Henry Condell John Heminges and William Sly all members of the King s Men plus Cuthbert Burbage and Thomas Evans agent for the theatre manager Henry Evans This arrangement of shareholders or housekeepers was similar to how the Globe Theatre was operated 5 Sly however died soon after the arrangement was made and his share was divided among the other six After renovations the King s Men began using the theatre for performances in 1609 Thereafter the King s Men played in Blackfriars for the seven months in winter and at the Globe during the summer Blackfriars appears to have brought in a little over twice the revenue of the Globe the shareholders could earn as much as 13 from a single performance apart from what went to the actors 15 In the reign of Charles I even Queen Henrietta Maria was in the Blackfriars audience On 13 May 1634 she and her attendants saw a play by Philip Massinger in late 1635 or early 1636 they saw Lodowick Carlell s Arviragus and Philicia part 2 and they attended a third performance in May 1636 16 The theatre closed at the onset of the English Civil War and was demolished on 6 August 1655 17 Reconstructions editBlackfriars Playhouse edit nbsp The American Shakespeare Center s Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton VirginiaThe American Shakespeare Center s Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton Virginia is a re creation of a Jacobean theatre based on what is known of the original Blackfriars 18 Completed at a cost of 3 7 million 19 the 300 seat theatre opened in September 2001 18 Architect Tom McLaughlin based the design on plans for other 17th century theatres his own trips to England to view surviving halls of the period Shakespeare s stage directions and other research and consultation 20 The lighting imitates that of the original Blackfriars 21 Sam Wanamaker Playhouse edit nbsp The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse on Bankside London adjoining Shakespeare s GlobeMain article Sam Wanamaker Playhouse During the construction of Shakespeare s Globe London in the 1990s the shell for an indoor theatre was built next door to house a simulacrum of the Blackfriars Theatre 22 As no reliable plans of the Blackfriars are known the plan for the new theatre was based on drawings found in the 1960s at Worcester College Oxford at first thought to date from the early 17th century 23 and to be the work of Inigo Jones The shell was built to accommodate a theatre as specified by the drawings and the planned name was the Inigo Jones Theatre 24 In 2005 the drawings were dated to 1660 and attributed to John Webb 23 They nevertheless represent the earliest known plan for an English theatre and are thought to approximate the layout of the Blackfriars Theatre 22 Some features believed to be typical of earlier in the 17th century were added to the new theatre s design 23 Completed at a cost of 7 5 million the theatre opened as the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse in January 2014 25 Designed by Jon Greenfield in collaboration with Allies and Morrison it is an oak structure built inside the building s brick shell 26 The thrust stage is surmounted by a musicians gallery and the theatre has an ornately painted ceiling The seating capacity is 340 with benches in a pit and two horse shoe galleries 25 placing the audience close to the actors 27 Shutters around the first gallery admit artificial daylight When the shutters are closed lighting is provided by beeswax candles mounted in sconces as well as on six height adjustable chandeliers and even held by the actors 25 See also editMermaid Theatre 1959 a modern theatre built on or near the original siteNotes edit Menzer amp Cohen 2006 p 11 Smith 1964 pp 162 172 Smith 1964 pp 177 172 Gurr 2006 p 17 a b Blackfriars Theatre Britannica Online Retrieved 16 March 2017 Henry VIII apparently a collaboration between Shakespeare and John Fletcher probably dates to 1613 Sturgess Keith 1987 Jacobean private theatre London Routledge and Kegan Paul pp 15 16 ISBN 0 7102 1017 5 Smith 1964 pp 150 1 a b Bond III p 310 Smith 1964 pp 151 2 Hunter 2004 In 1609 Francis Beaumont described the Blackfriars as a place in which a thousand men in judgment sit Gurr p 213 His figure may be hyperbole a b c Laoutaris Chris 2023 Shakespeare s Book William Collins p 29 ISBN 9780008238414 Stopes p 12 Bradbrook Muriel 1978 Shakespeare The Poet in His World 2005 ed London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 137 ISBN 9780297775041 Cook p 210 Cook p 115 Halliday p 235 a b Menzer Paul 2006 Afterword Discovery Spaces Research at the Globe and Blackfriars In Menzer Paul ed Inside Shakespeare Essays on the Blackfriars Stage Cranberry NJ Associated University Presses p 223 ISBN 1 57591 077 2 Klein Michael 14 July 2002 There s much ado about the Bard in Virginia philly com Philadelphia Media Network Retrieved 2 February 2014 Lebovich William 14 November 2001 Blackfriars Shakespearean Playhouse Architecture Week Retrieved 2 February 2014 Menzer Paul 2016 Shakespeare in the Theatre The American Shakespeare Center London Bloomsbury Arden Shakespeare a b Shakespeare s Globe Announces Plans to Build an Indoor Jacobean Theatre PDF Press release Shakespeare s Globe 20 January 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2011 a b c Williams Holly 22 June 2013 All the world s a stage or two Shakespeare s Globe to be joined by a candlelit indoor theatre The Independent Retrieved 30 January 2014 Innovation in the theatre Old spaces and new globes The Economist 19 May 2005 Retrieved 30 January 2014 a b c Coveney Michael 16 January 2014 The Duchess of Malfi Sam Wanamaker Playhouse What s on Stage Retrieved 21 January 2014 Moore Rowan 12 January 2014 Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review The Observer Retrieved 21 January 2014 Spencer Charles 16 January 2014 The Duchess of Malfi Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 21 January 2014 References edit Blackfriars Theatre Britannica Online EBSCOhost n d Bond R Warwick 1902 The Complete Works of John Lyly Oxford at the Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0559897986 Cook Ann Jennalie 1981 The Privileged Playgoers of Shakespeare s London 1576 1642 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 06454 3 Gurr Andrew 1992 The Shakespearean Stage 1574 1642 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 41005 3 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Gurr Andrew 2006 London s Blackfriars Playhouse and the Chamberlain s Men In Menzer Paul ed Inside Shakespeare Essays on the Blackfriars Stage Susquehanna University Press pp 17 30 ISBN 1 57591 077 2 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Menzer Paul Cohen Ralph Alan 2006 Introduction In Menzer Paul ed Inside Shakespeare Essays on the Blackfriars Stage Susquehanna University Press pp 7 16 ISBN 1 57591 077 2 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Hunter G K 2004 Lyly John 1554 1606 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17251 Retrieved 23 January 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Robison William B 2008 Cawarden Sir Thomas c 1514 1559 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 37270 Retrieved 15 February 2013 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription required Smith Irwin 1964 Shakespeare s Blackfriars Playhouse Its History and Design New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 0391 5 Stern Tiffany 2006 Actors and Audiences on the Stage at Blackfriars In Menzer Paul ed Inside Shakespeare Essays on the Blackfriars Stage Susquehanna University Press pp 35 53 ISBN 1 57591 077 2 Stopes Charlotte Carmichael 1907 Shakespeare s Warwickshire Contemporaries Stratford upon Avon Shakespeare Head Press Wallace Charles William 1912 The Evolution of the English Drama up to Shakespeare With a History of the First Blackfriars Theatre Berlin George Reimer Retrieved 17 February 2013 External links editBlackfriars Theatre article from The Map of Early Modern London project at The University of Victoria The Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton Virginia Shakespeare s Globe and the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse in London East London Theatre Archive Digitised Posters and Flyers from the Second BlackFriars Theatre held by the University of East London Shakespearean Playhouses by Joseph Quincy Adams Jr from Project Gutenberg51 30 46 N 0 06 09 W 51 51278 N 0 10250 W 51 51278 0 10250 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blackfriars Theatre amp oldid 1217592239, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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