Shakespeare’s Contemporary dramatists
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The Elizabethan and Jacobean theatres specialized in new plays which had relatively few performances over a period of a few weeks. There was thus a huge appetite for fresh writing, and hundreds of plays, many now lost, were produced, often collaboratively. In this section of Great Writers Inspire some of these non-Shakespearean plays and authors are introduced through a combination of podcasts, ebooks and supporting materials. Some plays – such as John Webster’s empathic presentation of a woman who follows her own desires in The Duchess of Malfi (1614) – have had an ongoing life in the modern theatre. Others – such as Thomas Dekker’s contemporary fairytale The Shoemakers Holiday (1599) are interesting precisely because they so closely map onto the immediate context of their writing and performance, giving us a window into the late Elizabethan world. Read more
| # | Title | Description | Contributor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | The Shoemaker's Holiday: Thomas Dekker | Like a Busby Berkeley depression-era musical, Dekker's comedy is a feel-good antidote to a context… | Emma Smith |
| 12 | Arden of Faversham: Anon | A true crime story of the murder of Thomas Arden by his wife and her lover, this play is concerned… | Emma Smith |
| 13 | The Spanish Tragedy: Thomas Kyd | Popular tragedy in which Hieronimo pursues aristocratic murderers of his son Horatio and takes… | Emma Smith |