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The Masque of Blackness

The Masque of Blackness was an early Jacobean era masque, first performed at the Stuart Court in the Banqueting Hall of Whitehall Palace on Twelfth Night, 6 January 1605. It was written by Ben Jonson at the request of Anne of Denmark, the queen consort of King James I, who wished the masquers to be disguised as Africans. Anne was one of the performers in the masque along with her court ladies, all of whom appeared in blackface makeup. In a ceremony earlier on the day, Prince Charles, Anne's second son (who was still in Scotland at Dunfermline Palace) was given the title of Duke of York.[1]

Daughter of Niger - costume design by Inigo Jones for The Masque of Blackness

Plot and themes edit

The plot of the masque follows the ladies arriving at the royal court to be "cleansed" of their blackness by King James; a stage direction that was impossible to fulfill on stage. They had been instructed by a riddle to seek the land "Britannia". The theme of the masque was a commentary on the Jacobean debate on the Union and the disparate identities of the people of Britain.[2] The Masque of Beauty was written as a sequel to The Masque of Blackness, and originally intended for the following holiday season. It was displaced by Hymenaei, the masque for the wedding of the Earl of Essex and Frances Howard. Beauty was finally performed in 1608.[3]

Design edit

The sets, costumes, and stage effects were designed by Inigo Jones; Blackness was the first of many masques for the Stuart Court on which Jonson and Jones would collaborate.[4] The music for Blackness was composed by Alfonso Ferrabosco.

Jones designed a raised and mobile stage for the masque, forty feet square and four feet off the floor; this was employed for many subsequent masques. The stage contained inner space for the machines that produced stage effects and the technicians who operated them. The King was often stilling on a stool, resembling the sun. Blackness introduced effects that Jones would repeat with variation throughout his career as a stage designer: it opened with a tempestuous seascape, simulated by flowing and billowing cloths.

The opening stormy sea was populated with six blue-haired merman-like tritons. The gods Oceanus ("blue") and Niger (black) entered, mounted upon giant seahorses. The twelve daughters of Niger, played by the Queen and her ladies in waiting, entered in the company of a dozen nymphs of Oceanus as torchbearers; the ladies of the Court were dressed in tones of silver and azure to contrast with the blackness of the makeup, with pearls and feathers in their hair, while the torchbearers, in green doublets with gold puffed sleeves, had their faces, hands, and hair dyed blue.[5] The ladies rode in a great hollow seashell, which seemed to float upon and move with the waves, and was accompanied by six large sea monsters carrying more torchbearers.[6] (With Blackness as with many subsequent masques designed by Jones, one of the aspects of the show most commented upon by witnesses was the dazzling intensity of light involved...which inevitably says something about the normal conditions of life in the Jacobean era.)

Plot summary edit

The text begins with Niger talking to his father Oceanus. Oceanus asks him why he has left his usual eastward course and flowed westward, into the Atlantic. Niger tells him that he has come to request help. Niger's daughters are upset because they thought themselves to be the most beautiful goddesses in the world, only to discover that paleness is thought more attractive - and so no longer feel beautiful.[7] The moon goddess, Aethiopia, tells the daughters that, if they can find a country whose name ends in "tannia", they will be beautiful once more.

The daughters try desperately to find the country whose name ends in "tannia", travelling as far as Mauritania (North Africa), Lusitania (Portugal), and Aquitania (France) in their quest. Despondent at their lack of success they pray once more to Aethiopia, who tells them that the country is Britannia and that they should seek out its sun-like king, who has the power to bleach their black complexions white. Aethiopia further advises the daughters that once a month for the next year, they should bathe in sea-dew and, thus prepared, at the same time next year, they should appear before the king again, whereupon his light will make them beautiful and white.[8]

Cast edit

The principal cast of the masque:

A newsletter from court described the cast of the "Queen's mask" in December 1604, noting that three women were excused because of illness, the Countess of Nottingham, the Countess of Richmond who had measles, and the Countess of Northumberland. Lady Hatton was not invited to perform and left court.[9] "Lady Herbert" was Anne Herbert, a daughter of Henry Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke and Mary Sidney.[10]

Responses edit

The masque was controversial in its day, in part for the production's use of body paint instead of masks to simulate dark skin. One observer, Sir Dudley Carleton expressed his displeasure with the play as such:

Instead of Vizzards, their Faces, and Arms up to the Elbows, were painted black, which was a Disguise sufficient, for they were hard to be known; ... and you cannot imagine a more ugly Sight, than a Troop of lean-cheek'd Moors.[11][12]

Carleton also made a topical joke, comparing the huge sea-monsters that flanked the shell that housed the nymphs with an unusual sighting of a seal in the Thames at Isleworth, "it came in company with the Sea-fish that drew in our Lady-Moors, and carried a Waiting Gentlewoman and some baggage!".[13]

Another writer described the masque dancers' appearance and the expense; "the Queen and some dozen ladies all paynted like Blackamores, face and neck bare, and for the rest strangely attired in Barbaresque mantells to the halfe legge, having buskins all to be sett with jewells, ... it took the King betweene 4 or £5,000 to execute to Queen's fancy".[14]

A poem, perhaps by John Donne or Henry Goodere, was addressed to one of the masquers, possibly Lucy, Countess of Bedford. It begins, "Why chose shee black; was it that in whitenes, She did Leda equall".[15]

The make-up used could not be quickly removed, so a metamorphosis from black to white was not staged.[16] Anne of Denmark's apothecary John Wolfgang Rumler is known to have devised a more easily removeable blackface make-up for a masque in 1621, The Gypsies Metamorphosed.[17]

The masque was expensive, costing £3000. It caused consternation among some English observers due to the perceived impropriety of the performance. Controversy also stemmed from the predominant role of female actresses playing what were considered traditionally male roles.[18]

The texts of The Masque of Blackness and The Masque of Beauty were published together in quarto form in 1608, by the bookseller Thomas Thorpe; they were reprinted in the first folio collection of Jonson's works in 1616.

Modern criticism edit

The representation of African people in court masques had precedents both in England and Scotland.[19] Anne of Denmark had African servants.[20] There was a masque involving blackface at the coronation of Christian IV of Denmark in 1596, witnessed by Anne of Denmark's brother, the Duke of Holstein and perhaps, by Inigo Jones.[21]

Kim F. Hall draws attention to The Masque of Blackness and the documented reactions of its audience, in the context of the "growth of actual contact with Africans, Native Americans, and other ethnically different foreigners" and a "collision of the dark lady tradition with the actual African difference encountered in the quest for empire".[22] A "pride in the revival of ancient Britain is continually yoked to the glorification of whiteness".[23] For Bernadette Andrea the masque reveals "complicity with an emerging institutional racism as England's increasing investment in the transatlantic slave trade underwrote its imperialist expansion in to the Americas".[24]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Edmund Sawyer, Memorials of Affairs of State, vol. 2 (London, 1725), pp. 43-4.
  2. ^ Martin Butler, The Stuart Court Masque and Political Culture (Cambridge, 2008), p. 111.
  3. ^ Leapman, p. 94.
  4. ^ Giles Worsley, Inigo Jones and the European Classical Tradition (Yale, 2007), p. 6.
  5. ^ Lesley Mickel, 'Glorious Spangs and Rich Embroidery: Costume in The Masque of Blackness and Hymenaei', Studies in the Literary Imagination, 36:2 (2003).
  6. ^ Leapman, pp. 73–7.
  7. ^ Sujata Iyengar, Shades of Difference: Mythologies of Skin Color in Early Modern England (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005), p. 84.
  8. ^ Butler, Martin. "The Court Masque | The Cambridge Works of Ben Jonson". universitypublishingonline.org. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  9. ^ Memorials of Affairs of State from the papers of Ralph Winwood, vol. 2 (London, 1725), pp. 39–40, John Packer to Winwood, 12 December 1604.
  10. ^ Leeds Barroll, Anna of Denmark, Queen of England: A Cultural Biography (Philadelphia, 2001), pp. 102, 200 fn.53.
  11. ^ Memorials of Affairs of State from the papers of Ralph Winwood, vol. 2 (London, 1725), p. 44.
  12. ^ Susan Dunn-Hensley, Anna of Denmark and Henrietta Maria, Virgins, Witches, and Catholic Queens (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), p. 89.
  13. ^ John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, vol. 1 (London, 1828), p. 474.
  14. ^ Carol Chillington Rutter, Enter The Body: Women and Representation on Shakespeare's Stage (Routledge, 2001), p. 97: Mary Anne Everett Green, Calendar State Papers Domestic, 1603-1610 (London, 1857), p. 187 citing TNA SP14/12 f.28.
  15. ^ Arthur F. Marotti, 'Neighbourhood, Social Networks and a Manuscript Collection', James Daybell & Peter Hinds, Material Readings of Early Modern Culture: Texts and Social Practices (Basingstoke, 2010), p. 188: Daniel Starza Smith, John Donne and the Conway Papers: Patronage and Manuscript Circulation (Oxford, 2014), p. 218: British Library Add MS 25707 f34r
  16. ^ Morwenna Carr, 'Material / Blackness: Race and Its Material Reconstructions on the Seventeenth-Century English Stage', Early Theatre, 20:1 (2017), p. 79.
  17. ^ Andrea Stevens, 'Mastering Masques of Blackness: Jonson's "Masque of Blackness", The Windsor text of "The Gypsies Metamorphosed", and Brome's "The English Moor"', English Literary Renaissance, 39:2 (Spring 2009), pp. 396-426 , 414-420.
  18. ^ Oroszlan, Aniko (2005). ""Actors" in "Barbaresque mantells": the blackness of the female performers in Ben Jonson's Masque of Blackness" (PDF). The AnaChronisT: 23+ – via Literature Resource Center.
  19. ^ Martin Butler, The Stuart Court Masque and Political Culture (Cambridge, 2008), p. 114.
  20. ^ Jemma Field, Anna of Denmark: The Material and Visual Culture of the Stuart Courts (Manchester, 2020), pp. 169-71.
  21. ^ Eva Griffith, A Jacobean Company and its Playhouse: The Queen's Servants at the Red Bull Theatre (Cambridge, 2013), p. 158.
  22. ^ Kim F. Hall, Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England (Cornell University Press, 1996), p. 129.
  23. ^ Kim F. Hall, Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England (Cornell University Press, 1996), p. 133.
  24. ^ Bernadette Andrea, 'Black Skin, The Queen's Masques: Africanist Ambivalence and Feminine Author(ity) in the Masques of Blackness and Beauty', English Literary Renaissance, 29:2 (Spring 1999), pp. 246-281 at p. 247.

References edit

  • Gurr, Andrew. The Shakespearean Stage 1574–1642. Third edition, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
  • Jonson, Ben. The Masque of Blackness. 1608. In Ben Jonson: Complete Masques. Ed. Stephen Orgel. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969. pp. 61–74.
  • Leapman, Michael. Inigo: The Troubled Life of Inigo Jones, Architect of the English Renaissance. London, Headline Book Publishing, 2003.

External links edit

  • The Masque of Blackness.
  • Masque of Blackness, Cambridge edition online

masque, blackness, early, jacobean, masque, first, performed, stuart, court, banqueting, hall, whitehall, palace, twelfth, night, january, 1605, written, jonson, request, anne, denmark, queen, consort, king, james, wished, masquers, disguised, africans, anne, . The Masque of Blackness was an early Jacobean era masque first performed at the Stuart Court in the Banqueting Hall of Whitehall Palace on Twelfth Night 6 January 1605 It was written by Ben Jonson at the request of Anne of Denmark the queen consort of King James I who wished the masquers to be disguised as Africans Anne was one of the performers in the masque along with her court ladies all of whom appeared in blackface makeup In a ceremony earlier on the day Prince Charles Anne s second son who was still in Scotland at Dunfermline Palace was given the title of Duke of York 1 Daughter of Niger costume design by Inigo Jones for The Masque of Blackness Contents 1 Plot and themes 2 Design 3 Plot summary 4 Cast 5 Responses 6 Modern criticism 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksPlot and themes editThe plot of the masque follows the ladies arriving at the royal court to be cleansed of their blackness by King James a stage direction that was impossible to fulfill on stage They had been instructed by a riddle to seek the land Britannia The theme of the masque was a commentary on the Jacobean debate on the Union and the disparate identities of the people of Britain 2 The Masque of Beauty was written as a sequel to The Masque of Blackness and originally intended for the following holiday season It was displaced by Hymenaei the masque for the wedding of the Earl of Essex and Frances Howard Beauty was finally performed in 1608 3 Design editThe sets costumes and stage effects were designed by Inigo Jones Blackness was the first of many masques for the Stuart Court on which Jonson and Jones would collaborate 4 The music for Blackness was composed by Alfonso Ferrabosco Jones designed a raised and mobile stage for the masque forty feet square and four feet off the floor this was employed for many subsequent masques The stage contained inner space for the machines that produced stage effects and the technicians who operated them The King was often stilling on a stool resembling the sun Blackness introduced effects that Jones would repeat with variation throughout his career as a stage designer it opened with a tempestuous seascape simulated by flowing and billowing cloths The opening stormy sea was populated with six blue haired merman like tritons The gods Oceanus blue and Niger black entered mounted upon giant seahorses The twelve daughters of Niger played by the Queen and her ladies in waiting entered in the company of a dozen nymphs of Oceanus as torchbearers the ladies of the Court were dressed in tones of silver and azure to contrast with the blackness of the makeup with pearls and feathers in their hair while the torchbearers in green doublets with gold puffed sleeves had their faces hands and hair dyed blue 5 The ladies rode in a great hollow seashell which seemed to float upon and move with the waves and was accompanied by six large sea monsters carrying more torchbearers 6 With Blackness as with many subsequent masques designed by Jones one of the aspects of the show most commented upon by witnesses was the dazzling intensity of light involved which inevitably says something about the normal conditions of life in the Jacobean era Plot summary editThe text begins with Niger talking to his father Oceanus Oceanus asks him why he has left his usual eastward course and flowed westward into the Atlantic Niger tells him that he has come to request help Niger s daughters are upset because they thought themselves to be the most beautiful goddesses in the world only to discover that paleness is thought more attractive and so no longer feel beautiful 7 The moon goddess Aethiopia tells the daughters that if they can find a country whose name ends in tannia they will be beautiful once more The daughters try desperately to find the country whose name ends in tannia travelling as far as Mauritania North Africa Lusitania Portugal and Aquitania France in their quest Despondent at their lack of success they pray once more to Aethiopia who tells them that the country is Britannia and that they should seek out its sun like king who has the power to bleach their black complexions white Aethiopia further advises the daughters that once a month for the next year they should bathe in sea dew and thus prepared at the same time next year they should appear before the king again whereupon his light will make them beautiful and white 8 Cast editThe principal cast of the masque Queen Anne Euphoris Countess of Bedford Aglaia Lady Herbert Diaphane Countess of Derby Eucampse Lady Rich Ocyte Countess of Suffolk Kathare Lady Bevill Notis Lady Effingham Psychrote Lady Elizabeth Howard Glycyte Lady Susan Vere Malacia Lady Mary Wroth Baryte Lady Walsingham Periphere A newsletter from court described the cast of the Queen s mask in December 1604 noting that three women were excused because of illness the Countess of Nottingham the Countess of Richmond who had measles and the Countess of Northumberland Lady Hatton was not invited to perform and left court 9 Lady Herbert was Anne Herbert a daughter of Henry Herbert 2nd Earl of Pembroke and Mary Sidney 10 Responses editThe masque was controversial in its day in part for the production s use of body paint instead of masks to simulate dark skin One observer Sir Dudley Carleton expressed his displeasure with the play as such Instead of Vizzards their Faces and Arms up to the Elbows were painted black which was a Disguise sufficient for they were hard to be known and you cannot imagine a more ugly Sight than a Troop of lean cheek d Moors 11 12 Carleton also made a topical joke comparing the huge sea monsters that flanked the shell that housed the nymphs with an unusual sighting of a seal in the Thames at Isleworth it came in company with the Sea fish that drew in our Lady Moors and carried a Waiting Gentlewoman and some baggage 13 Another writer described the masque dancers appearance and the expense the Queen and some dozen ladies all paynted like Blackamores face and neck bare and for the rest strangely attired in Barbaresque mantells to the halfe legge having buskins all to be sett with jewells it took the King betweene 4 or 5 000 to execute to Queen s fancy 14 A poem perhaps by John Donne or Henry Goodere was addressed to one of the masquers possibly Lucy Countess of Bedford It begins Why chose shee black was it that in whitenes She did Leda equall 15 The make up used could not be quickly removed so a metamorphosis from black to white was not staged 16 Anne of Denmark s apothecary John Wolfgang Rumler is known to have devised a more easily removeable blackface make up for a masque in 1621 The Gypsies Metamorphosed 17 The masque was expensive costing 3000 It caused consternation among some English observers due to the perceived impropriety of the performance Controversy also stemmed from the predominant role of female actresses playing what were considered traditionally male roles 18 The texts of The Masque of Blackness and The Masque of Beauty were published together in quarto form in 1608 by the bookseller Thomas Thorpe they were reprinted in the first folio collection of Jonson s works in 1616 Modern criticism editThe representation of African people in court masques had precedents both in England and Scotland 19 Anne of Denmark had African servants 20 There was a masque involving blackface at the coronation of Christian IV of Denmark in 1596 witnessed by Anne of Denmark s brother the Duke of Holstein and perhaps by Inigo Jones 21 Kim F Hall draws attention to The Masque of Blackness and the documented reactions of its audience in the context of the growth of actual contact with Africans Native Americans and other ethnically different foreigners and a collision of the dark lady tradition with the actual African difference encountered in the quest for empire 22 A pride in the revival of ancient Britain is continually yoked to the glorification of whiteness 23 For Bernadette Andrea the masque reveals complicity with an emerging institutional racism as England s increasing investment in the transatlantic slave trade underwrote its imperialist expansion in to the Americas 24 Notes edit Edmund Sawyer Memorials of Affairs of State vol 2 London 1725 pp 43 4 Martin Butler The Stuart Court Masque and Political Culture Cambridge 2008 p 111 Leapman p 94 Giles Worsley Inigo Jones and the European Classical Tradition Yale 2007 p 6 Lesley Mickel Glorious Spangs and Rich Embroidery Costume in The Masque of Blackness and Hymenaei Studies in the Literary Imagination 36 2 2003 Leapman pp 73 7 Sujata Iyengar Shades of Difference Mythologies of Skin Color in Early Modern England Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 2005 p 84 Butler Martin The Court Masque The Cambridge Works of Ben Jonson universitypublishingonline org Retrieved 30 March 2017 Memorials of Affairs of State from the papers of Ralph Winwood vol 2 London 1725 pp 39 40 John Packer to Winwood 12 December 1604 Leeds Barroll Anna of Denmark Queen of England A Cultural Biography Philadelphia 2001 pp 102 200 fn 53 Memorials of Affairs of State from the papers of Ralph Winwood vol 2 London 1725 p 44 Susan Dunn Hensley Anna of Denmark and Henrietta Maria Virgins Witches and Catholic Queens Palgrave Macmillan 2017 p 89 John Nichols Progresses of James the First vol 1 London 1828 p 474 Carol Chillington Rutter Enter The Body Women and Representation on Shakespeare s Stage Routledge 2001 p 97 Mary Anne Everett Green Calendar State Papers Domestic 1603 1610 London 1857 p 187 citing TNA SP14 12 f 28 Arthur F Marotti Neighbourhood Social Networks and a Manuscript Collection James Daybell amp Peter Hinds Material Readings of Early Modern Culture Texts and Social Practices Basingstoke 2010 p 188 Daniel Starza Smith John Donne and the Conway Papers Patronage and Manuscript Circulation Oxford 2014 p 218 British Library Add MS 25707 f34r Morwenna Carr Material Blackness Race and Its Material Reconstructions on the Seventeenth Century English Stage Early Theatre 20 1 2017 p 79 Andrea Stevens Mastering Masques of Blackness Jonson s Masque of Blackness The Windsor text of The Gypsies Metamorphosed and Brome s The English Moor English Literary Renaissance 39 2 Spring 2009 pp 396 426 414 420 Oroszlan Aniko 2005 Actors in Barbaresque mantells the blackness of the female performers in Ben Jonson s Masque of Blackness PDF The AnaChronisT 23 via Literature Resource Center Martin Butler The Stuart Court Masque and Political Culture Cambridge 2008 p 114 Jemma Field Anna of Denmark The Material and Visual Culture of the Stuart Courts Manchester 2020 pp 169 71 Eva Griffith A Jacobean Company and its Playhouse The Queen s Servants at the Red Bull Theatre Cambridge 2013 p 158 Kim F Hall Things of Darkness Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England Cornell University Press 1996 p 129 Kim F Hall Things of Darkness Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England Cornell University Press 1996 p 133 Bernadette Andrea Black Skin The Queen s Masques Africanist Ambivalence and Feminine Author ity in the Masques of Blackness and Beauty English Literary Renaissance 29 2 Spring 1999 pp 246 281 at p 247 References editGurr Andrew The Shakespearean Stage 1574 1642 Third edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1992 Jonson Ben The Masque of Blackness 1608 In Ben Jonson Complete Masques Ed Stephen Orgel New Haven Yale University Press 1969 pp 61 74 Leapman Michael Inigo The Troubled Life of Inigo Jones Architect of the English Renaissance London Headline Book Publishing 2003 External links editThe Masque of Blackness Masque of Blackness Cambridge edition online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Masque of Blackness amp oldid 1185681266, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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