An Outline of Theatre History: Origins through English Restoration


The Origins of Theatre

storytelling                           

mimesis

ritual
   
   
            Egypt: Abydos Passion Play - Ikhernofret Stone 1868 B.C.


Greece: Festival of Dionysu: from dithyramb to tragedy


The Theatre of Ancient Greece

Social and Historical Background

            a “Golden Age” in Athens:

democratic government

philosophy

art & architecture

theatre

Thespis and the City Dionysia (534 B.C.E.)

Plays and Playwrights: Tragedy

            Aeschylus (c. 523 -- 456 B.C.)
       
Prometheus Bound
The Oresteia -- trilogy (458 B.C.) Agamemnon, Libation Bearers, Eumenides
       
                        Aeschylus introduces 2nd actor

                        reduces size of chorus

                        incorporates spectacle (possibly introducing scene painting)


Sophocles (c. 496 -- 406 B.C.)
       
Oedipus Rex (c. 430 -- 425 B.C.)

Antigone (c. 441 B.C.)

Oedipus at Colonus (406 B.C.)
       
       
Sophocles introduces 3rd actor
       
focuses on individual plays

introduces psychologically complex characters

“introduces” scene painting, according to Aristotle)


            Euripides (c. 480 -- c. 406 B.C.)
       
Medea (431 B.C.)

The Bacchae (406 B.C.)

Euripides questions traditional values
       
includes elements of tragicomedy, melodrama

writes episodic plots
       
employs deus ex machina



The theory of tragedy
   
Aristotle (c 384 -- 322 B.C.) Poetics (c 335 -- 323 B.C.)

the elements of tragedy: plot, character, thought, diction, music, spectacle
   
the structure of tragedy
       
prologue
       
parados
       
episodes
choral odes (stasima)
       
exodos


Plays and Playwrights: Comedy:
   
Old Comedy Aristophanes (c 448 -- c. 380 B.C.)
           
Lysistrata (411 B.C.) 
          
The Birds (414 B.C.)
          
Aristophanes addresses & lampoons political issues, in a sexy, bawdy tone
   

structure of Old Comedy:

prologue
       
entrance of the chorus

                        the "happy idea"
       
agon
       
parabasis

                        loosely connected scenes

komos


            Middle Comedy (404 -- 336 B.C.) Aristophanes, Plutus (388 B.C.)

Aristophanes pulls back from political, satirical Old Comedy
   

New Comedy (after 336 B.C.): Menander (342 -- 291 B.C.)
           
The Grouch (Dyskolos)

Menander shifts subjects to domestic issues, family, love

Menander’s plays were models for Roman and later comedy


The Festivals, the Theatres, & the Players
                       
A possible calendar of the City Dionysia:

proagon
   
parade
   
dithyramb contest
   
tragedy contest
       
satyr play

comedy contest
   
prizes and celebration


The organization of the City Dionysia   
                        one full week in early spring

                        archon

choregos


Theatre spaces in 5th Century B.C. Greece
   
major elements include

            orkestra
   
thymele
   
theatron

            skene
   
paradoi


Scenic machines and devices:

            ekkyklema
   
mechane
   
pinakes
   
periaktoi


Later Greek theatre spaces

first stone theatres built c. 325 B.C.

Hellenistic theatres
   
emphasis on stage
   
logeion
   
proskenion
   
episkenion
   
thyromata


Actors, the Chorus, and Mimes

author supervises and performs

three-actor limit

all actors wear masks

males only perform at City Dionysia and other festivals

"Artists of Dionysus"

the chorus
                                   
                    12-15 in the tragic chorus
   
24 in the comic chorus

sets mood, acts as character, sets ethical frame  
                                   
sets rhythm and provides spectacle
                       

music and dance integral to the theatrical event


Mimes

itinerant troupes

women perform along with men


phlyakes
   
vases, players, plays
   
found in Southern Italy


The Theatre of Ancient Rome

Social and historical background

753 B.C. marks legendary beginning (Romulus & Remus)

expands rapidly

moves from Republic (509 B.C.) to Empire (27 B.C.)
                       

Etruscan influence   
                       
festivals
                                   
variety entertainments


Plays and Playwrights: Roman Comedy

Titus Maccius Plautus (c. 254 -- c. 184 B.C.)                                    
   
Miles Gloriosus
   
Pot of Gold
   
The Menaechmi
       
all plays written between 205 and 184 B.C.

                        farce, centered on tricky plot
   
"parasite"


Publius Terentius Afer, commonly called Terence (195 -- 159 B.C.)
   
Andria (166 B.C.)
   
The Mother-in-Law (165 B.C.)
   
Eunuch (161 B.C.)
   
sentimental comedy, character-based


Plays and Playwrights: Roman Tragedy

Seneca (5 B.C. -- 65 C.)
   
Thyestes (unclear as to date)

Oedipus (unclear as to date)

Characteristics include
   
lengthy soliloquies
   
violence and horror
   
ghosts
   
revenge
   
"closet drama"


Dramatic Theory:

Horace (65 -- 8 B.C.) Ars Poetica
   
five-act structure

genres of comedy and tragedy should not be mixed together
   
drama should "teach and delight"


Other Theatrical Forms:
   
Atellan farce - stock characters: Bucco, Pappus, Maccus, Dossenus
   

mime

similar to Greek mime troupes
       
women perform in this genre

Theodora (c. 500 B.C. – 548 B.C.) and the Emperor Justinian


pantomime
           
solo performer

spectacle
   

naumachia


Roman Theatre Spaces
   
Theatre of Pompey (55 B.C.)
   
Vitruvius (flourished 1st century B.C.) De Architectura

Major elements of a Roman theatre include

cavea

            orchestra
   
vomitoria
   
pulpitum
   
scaena

            scaenae frons

periaktoi
   
curtains
       
auleum
       
siparium


Roman Actors

histriones   

Roscius (131 -- 63 A.D.)


The Fall of Rome and its theatre
   
rise of Christianity
       
Council of Carthage (398 A.D.)
   

“barbarians” - Rome sacked again & again, finally in 476 A.D.


The Byzantine (or Eastern Roman) Empire

capital moved to east to Constantinople, 330 A.D.
   
division of eastern and western empires in 395 A.D.
   
preservation of classical Greek Manuscripts


The Medieval Theatre

Social and historical background
   
feudalism
           
            the Catholic Church

"mimi, histriones, ioculatores"
   
Charlemagne


Liturgical drama
   
            tropes
     
"Quem quaeritis?"
       
Regularis Concordia (966 – 975) - compiled by Bishop Ethelwold of Winchester 

visitatio plays  

            the staging of liturgical drama

mansion

platea


Two unique playwrights

Hroswitha (c. 935 -- 973) Dulcitius – modeled on Terence

Hildegard von Bingen (1098 -- 1179) Ordo Virtutum (The Play of Virtues)


Vernacular religious drama
   
The Play of Adam (c. 1150) - theatre moves outside the church


Cycle plays
   
the Feast of Corpus Christi (incorporated 1264 by Pope Urban IV)

English cycles

York, Chester, Wakefield, Coventry (Ludus Coventriae), many others
       

cycles throughout Europe

Lucerne, Valenciennes, Bourges, Rome, many others


the staging of cycle plays
   
mansion and platea as basis
   
movable staging - pageant wagons
   

fixed staging

ancient Roman amphitheatres

"rounds"
       
public squares
           
Lucerne Passion Play
           
Valenciennes Passion Play
   
                        the pageant master – an early director? "Martyrdom of St. Apollonia"


Kinds of religious plays
   
Mystery (maistrie, mastery) play, aka cycle play

presented by trade guilds and religious confraternities
       
The Second Shepherd's Play (Wakefield Cycle)
   

            Miracle plays - Miracles de Notre-Dame, St. Meriasek
   
Morality Plays - Everyman (c. 1500)


Secular drama in the Medieval Era
           
Farce – crude, physical, “low” comedy
       
Pierre Patelin (c. 1470) – the trickster tricked

Hans Sachs (1494 -- 1570) The Wandering Scholar and Exorcist
                                   
John Heywood (c. 1497 -- c. 1580) Johan, Johan (1533)
       
   
Folk Plays - pastoral themes, settings
           
Adam de la Halle (1240 -- 1288)

The Play of the Greenwood  (1276 -- 77)
                                 
The Play of Robin and Marion (c. 1283)


Staging and performing secular drama

trestle (booth) stage

interludes

rise of the professional player

rectangular shape of later theatres


The decline of medieval drama
   
the banning of religious plays

            the beginnings of theatre for profit


The Theatre of the Italian Renaissance

Social and historical background:
   
collapse of feudal system
   
emergence of a "middle" class
   
invention of the printing press
   
fall of Constantinople in 1453 -- ancient manuscripts brought west
   
new interest in the classical world
       
humanism
   
new discoveries


Italy is central
   
geography
   
the Church


Neoclassicism
   
theory has origins in
       
Horace: "to teach and delight"
       
Aristotle, somewhat misread
       
            Renaissance theorists include: Scaliger, Castelvetro, Minturno

primary rule: verisimilitude
           
three "unities" (time, place, action)
           
decorum

confidante


Plays and Playwrights: Neoclassical drama

            Ariosto (1474 -- 1533) La Cassaria (1508)
   
Machiavelli (1469 -- 1527) The Mandrake (1513 -- 1520)
   
Trissino (1478 -- 1550) Sofonisba (1515)

Cynthio (1504 -- 1574), The Orbecche (1541)  
   

the pastoral play
       
Tasso, Aminta (1573)
       
Guarini, The Faithful Shepherd (1590)


intermezzi

Buontalenti (1536 -- 1608) designs the first intermezzi, in Florence, for the Medici

emphasis on spectacle
       

Opera

born in courts of Florence, Mantua

Jacopo Peri & Ottavio Rinuccini, Dafne (1594)
           
Monteverdi (1567 -- 1643) Orfeo (1607)


Italian Scenic Spectacle, Stage Design, and Theatre Architecture
   
Vitruvius re-examined (1486)
   
perspective


Serlio (1475 -- 1554) Architettura (1545)
       
single vanishing point -- illusion of depth on stage
       
three scenes: comic, tragic, pastoral
   
changeable scenery

periaktoi
   
fixed wing
   
wing and groove
   
chariot and pole
       
                             devised by Giacomo Torelli (1608 -- 1678)

features a vista scene changes

            staging devices

Sabbattini (1574 -- 1654)  publishes manual (1638)
       
flying, trap doors, machinery, candles


Teatro Olimpico, Vicenza (1580 -- 84)

designed by Palladio (1518 -- 1580), then Scamozzi (1552 -- 1616)


Teatro Farnese, Parma (1618)

designed by Aleotti (1546 -- 1636)
       
first permanent proscenium arch


            Venetian public opera houses
       
San Cassiano, 1637
       
pit, box, and gallery


Commedia dell'Arte (approx. 1550 -- 1750)
   
Possible origins in Atellan Farce, plays of Plautus & Terence
   
Characteristics
       
improvisation
       
highly physical action
       
stock characters
   
soggetti -- scenarios
   
concetti -- stock speeches
   
lazzi -- comic physical business
   
zanni -- clowns


Commedia troupes
       
I Gelosi - Isabella (1562 -- 1604) and Francesco Andreini (1548 -- 1624)

I Fideli, I Confidenti, other troupes

           
Representative commedia characters:

lovers: Innamorata (-o)
blocking characters:
Pantalone
Dottore
Capitano
comic servants:
Arlecchino (Harlequin)
Columbina
Pulcinella
Brighella
Scapino

The Theatre of Elizabethan England

Social and Historical Background
   
creation of Church of England
   
defeat of Spanish Armada
   
Elizabeth I strengthens the central government
   
the concept of “Fortune


Restrictions on plays and players

Religious drama banned 1559

Master of Revels appointed 1574

legitimacy of professional actors, in recognized troupes


Plays and Playwrights

school plays

mix of medieval and neoclassical styles

Nicholas Udall (1505 -- 1566) Ralph Roister-Doister (1553 -- 54?)
   
Mr. S. (?) Gammer Gurton's Needle (acted between 1552 and 1563)
   
Thomas Preston (1537 -- 1598) Cambises (c. 1561)
   
Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton, Gorboduc (1561)


the University Wits
   
Robert Greene (1560 -- 1592), Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay (c. 1589)
       
uses blank verse in his writing
   
John Lyly (c. 1554 -- 1606), Endimion (1588)

writes English pastorals


Thomas Kyd (1558 -- 1594), The Spanish Tragedy (c. 1587)

exploits Senecan-style revenge tragedy
   

Christopher Marlowe (1564 -- 1593)
       
Doctor Faustus (1588)
       
The Jew of Malta (1589)
       
Edward II (1592)
       
writes psychologically complex characters
       
perfects blank verse form


William Shakespeare (1564 -- 1616)

First Folio
   
History plays
                                   
Richard II (1595-96), Henry IV 1 & 2, Henry V (1597-99)
       
Henry VI 1, 2 & 3 (1590 -- 92), Richard III (1592 -- 93)
       
episodic, loose structure, largest casts
   
Tragedies
       
Hamlet (1599 -- 1601)
        
Othello (1604 -- 05)
       
Macbeth (1605 -- 06)
       
King Lear (1605 -- 06)

                        matters of public importance, love, inner conflict

Comedies

A Midsummer Night's Dream (1595-96)
       
Much Ado About Nothing (1598-99)
As You Like It (1599)

Twelfth Night (1600 -- 01)

                        private matters, love & obstacles to it

"problem plays"
           
All's Well That Ends Well (1602 -- 03)
           
Measure for Measure (1604 -- 05)
           
dark comedies, disturbingly modern
      
“romances”
           
A Winter's Tale (1610 -- 11)
           
The Tempest (1611 -- 12)
           
late plays, strangeness, adventure, magic

structure of the plays - strong plots AND strong characters
       
early point of attack
       
clever foreshadowing
       
at climax a "coup de theatre"


other Elizabethan playwrights
   
Ben Jonson (1572 -- 1637) Volpone (1606), The Alchemist (1610)
       
"humours" comedy -- Every Man in his Humour (1598)
       
publication
       
poet laureate

anonymous, The Revenger's Tragedy (c. 1606)

Thomas Middleton (1580 -- 1627) & William Rowley (c. 1558 -- 1625)
       
The Changeling (1622)

Jacobean and Caroline playwrights
   
Francis Beaumont (c. 1584 -- 1616) & John Fletcher (1579 -- 1625)
       
The Maid's Tragedy (between 1608 -- 1613)
       
A King and No King (between 1608 -- 1613)

John Webster (c. 1580 -- c.1630) The Duchess of Malfi (1613 -- 14)
   
John Ford (1586 -- c.1639) Tis Pity She's a Whore (1629 -- 33)

Philip Massinger (1583 -- 1639/40) A New Way to Pay Old Debts (1622)

            James Shirley (1596 -- 1666) The Lady of Pleasure (1635)


Elizabethan Public Theatres
       
beginnings in innyards, bull and bear-baiting arenas

attempt to recreate ancient Roman theatres

The Theatre, 1576 - foundations discovered 2008
   
The Rose, 1587 -- c. 1606
       
Philip Henslowe (c. 1550 – 1616) as producer 

foundations discovered 1989   

The Swan, 1595 -- c. 1632
       
only pictorial evidence of interior--DeWitt/Von Buchell sketch
   
The Globe, 1599 -- 1613, burned down, second Globe 1614 – 1644

Lord Chamberlain’s (later King’s) Men

Richard and Cuthbert Burbage

William Shakespeare 
   
The Fortune, 1600 -- 1621, 1621 -- 1661
   
another Henslowe theatre

                        only rectangular public theatre

The Hope 1613 – 1617 - removable stage for bear baiting on alternate nights     

others – The Red Lion, The Curtain, The Newington Butts, The Red Bull
   
Features of public theatres:
       
polygonal
       
three galleries
       
yard
       
roof (shadow, heavens)
       
raised wooden platform stage
           
trap door
           
two stage doors
                       
tiring house
           
2nd level
                                               
3rd level
       
“discovery” space


Elizabethan Private Theatres
   
more expensive ticket prices than in public theatres
       
indoors
           
stage seating

lit by candles
           
benches in pit
           
2 galleries
       
located in “liberties"
           
Blackfriars -- boy companies to 1608, then professional

Scenery and costumes in public and private theatres
   
evidence
       
Master of Revels' accounts
       
Henslowe's list

medieval influence--mansion & platea style staging

the text and “spoken décor”

costumes - contemporary Elizabethan clothes, except for:
           
ancient, fanciful, traditional, racial emblems
       
Peacham’s drawing of Titus Andronicus (1595?)


Elizabethan audiences – wide variety, from all classes


Elizabethan acting companies
   
Lord Chamberlain’s Men (after 1603, King’s Men)

Shakespeare and the Burbages

Structure - shareholders, hirelings, apprentices
           
Lord Admiral’s Men
       
Philip Henslowe as sole producer 
           
Edward Alleyn (1566 -- 1626) as lead actor


The Stuart Court Masque

intent: to show an ideal vision of the monarchy, bringing order from disorder

masquing dances as center of action

scenically splendid…and expensive

Ben Jonson, primary writer

Inigo Jones (1573 -- 1652), primary designer
   
introduces the Italian scenic ideal to England
   
Salmacida Spolia (1640)


Spanish Theatre of the Golden Age

Social and historical background
   
defeat of Moors
   
Spanish Inquisition (1480)
   
Spain as major world power

Religious drama
   
cofradias
   
autos sacramentales
   
carros


Plays and Playwrights
   
Fernando Rojas (c. 1465 – 1541, La Celestina (1492)
   
Juan del Encina (1469 -- 1529)
         
         Pastorals & religious drama, El triunfo del amor (The Triumph of Love, 1497)
   
Lope de Rueda (c. 1510 -- c 1565), early professional actor/manager
       
The Frauds (1552 -- 1558)
       
pasos -- The Olives


Miguel de Cervantes (1547 -- 1616)
       
Siege of Numancia (written between 1580 and 1587)
       
Entremese


Lope de Vega (1562 -- 1635) 

colorful biography
       
religious and secular plays

comedia nueva

capa y espada
       
Fuentovejuna (c. 1614)
       
Lope’s attitude towards rules
   

Guillen de Castro (1569 -- 1631)
       
Las Mocedades del Cid (1612 -- 1618)
   

Tirso de Molina (c. 1584 -- 1648)
       
El Burlador de Sevilla (1616 -- 30)
   

Calderon de la Barca (1600 -- 1681)
       
deep philosophical issues
       
religious and secular plays
      
Life is a Dream (c. 1636)


Spanish Theatre Spaces
   
Corrales: Corral de la Cruz (1579), Corral de Principe (1585)

auditorium
       
patio
           
taburetes

mosqueteros

alojero
       
gradas
       
aposentos
       
desvanes
        
cazuela

tertullia
   

stage
       
bare platform
       
2nd level


scenic and costuming practices similar to those in England

actors
   
shareholders
   
women on stage


Court Theatres
   
Alcazar
   
Buen Retiro, Madrid -- after 1633
   
Cosme Lotti (1571?  -- 1643)
       
The Greatest Enchantment is Love (1635)


Spanish theatre the first western theatre in the Americas, from 1567

            religious and secular plays presented

Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (1651 -- 1695)
           
The Second Celestina (1675) co-author, Augustin Salazar y Torres
           
The Trials of a Noble House (1683)


The French Theatre in the Seventeenth Century

pre-17th century theatrical, social and political background

French Catholics and the Huguenots

St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre 1572

Henry IV of Navarre
   
Early Theatrical Efforts

the Pléiade: Cleopatre Captive, by Etienne Jodelle

mix of classical and medieval elements

ballet de cour

            French farce and commedia dell’arte


the early professional theatre in Paris

religious drama banned in 1548

Confrérie de la Passion
   
            Hôtel de Bourgogne
           

Plays and Playwrights

Alexandre Hardy (c. 1572 -- 1632)

Valleran le Comte (fl. 1592 -- 1613), Les Comédiens du Roi

                       
French Neoclassicism

Cardinal Richelieu (1586 -- 1642)

The French Academy

Pierre Corneille (1606 -- 1684)
   
Le Cid (1636-37)
   

Horace (1640)
   
simple characters, complex plots

                        L’Illusion Comique (The Theatrical Illusion) 1636

tragicomedy


Jean Racine (1639 -- 1699)
   
Andromaque (1667)

Bérénice (1670)

                        Phèdre (1677)

                        simple plots, complex characters
   
Alexandrine
       
                        caesura


Molière (Jean-Baptiste Poquelin) (1622 -- 1673)
   
The Illustrious Theatre
       
the Béjart family (Madeleine & Armande)

Molière as actor/manager

            Molière’s farces and comedies of manners

                        raissoneur
       
School for Wives (1662)
       
The Miser (1668)
       
Tartuffe (1664. 1667. 1669)

The Misanthrope (1666)
       
The Imaginary Invalid (1673)
           
comédies-ballets
           

Molière’s death
   

Comédie Française (founded 1680)


French Theatre Spaces and Spectacle

            Hôtel de Bourgogne
           
pit (parterre)
           
boxes (loges), galleries
           
paradis
           

simultaneous settings

Laurent Mahelot, Le Mémoire
       
jeu du paume

Théâtre du Marais

neutral settings
   
                        un chambre a quatre portes

                        palais a volonte


Palais Cardinal, later Palais Royal
   

Giacomo Torelli (1608 -- 1678)
       
converts Salle du Petit Bourbon (1645), Palais Royal (1646)

creates Italian style scene changes via chariot and pole
   
Gaspare Vigarani (1586 -- 1663)
       
creates the Salle des Machines
           
                        inaugural production: Ercole Amante (Hercules in Love) in 1662

Gaspare’s son Carlo Vigarani


Jean Berain the elder (1638 – 1711); Jean Berain the younger (1678 – 1726)

father and son team, first major French-born designers


Actors and Theatrical Troupes

frequent changes of venue for acting companies
           
after Molière’s death, several mergers of theatre troupes

   
Comédie Française, founded 1680 by decree of Louis XIV

                        sociétaire
       
pensionaire

Montdory (1594 -- 1654)
   
Madeleine Béjart (1618 -- 1672)
   
Armande Béjart (1642 -- 1700)
   
Mlle du Parc (1633 -- 1668)
   
Mlle Champmeslé (1642 -- 1698)
   
Michel Baron (1653 -- 1729)

Costumes
   
habit à la Romaine


The Theatre in Restoration England

Social and Historical Background

Civil War (1642 -- 1649)

theatres closed by Parliament, many torn down

Commonwealth (1642 -- 1649)
           
“drolls”


Origins of English opera
       
The Siege of Rhodes (1656)
           
produced by William Davenant  (1606 -- 1668)
           
designed by John Webb (1611 -- 1672)

                       
Charles II restored to the throne 1660

from Puritanism to pleasure
           
James II 1685
           
William of Orange 1688


The restoration of the theatre

            a new, largely upper-crust audience

French influence
   

Plays and Playwrights

Revivals of
       
Beaumont and Fletcher
       
Shakespeare "improved"
           
Nahum Tate’s King Lear (1681)
   

Samuel Pepys (1633 -- 1703) and the theatre
   
            Serious drama in the Restoration:

heroic tragedy - John Dryden (1631 -- 1700), The Indian Queen (1664)
   
Restoration tragedy
       
Dryden, All for Love (1677)

Neoclassical unities loosened

blank verse used
       
Thomas Otway (1652 -- 1685), Venice Preserv'd (1682)

Restoration comedy

comedy of intrigue - Aphra Behn (1640 -- 1689) The Rover (1677-80)
       
other women writers include
           
Catherine Trotter  (1679 -- 1749)
           
Delarivier Manley (c. 1672 -- 1724)
           
Mary Pix  (1666 -- 1706)
       
Susannah Centlivre (c. 1670 -- 1723) The Busybody (1709)
   

comedy of manners
       
the format:

all deal with the leisure class.
                                    sexual seduction is the goal.
playing the game is important
women are as good at the game as men
marriage is a joke!
Sir George Etherege (c.1634 -- 1691)
           
The Man of Mode; or, Sir Fopling Flutter (1676)
       
William Wycherley (1640 -- 1715) The Country Wife (1675)
                                                           

William Congreve (1670 -- 1729) The Way of the World (1700)


decline of Restoration-style Comedy
Jeremy Collier, “A Short View on the Immorality and
Profaneness of the English Stage” (1698)
invokes Horace’s “teach & delight


Restoration Theatre Companies

Royal patents to
   
William Davenant (1606 -- 1668)  (Duke's Company)
   
Thomas Killigrew (1612 -- 1683) (King's Company)
   
the two companies merge in 1682

Christopher Rich as producer
   
Betterton rebels and forms company in 1695
   

 the “business” of the theatre

            profit motive

            three nights a week

            bill of fare
   
benefit


Restoration Theatre Spaces and Design
   
Davenant's co.:  from Lisle's Tennis Court to Lincoln's Inn Fields (1661)
to Dorset Garden (1671)
   
Killigrew's co.:  from Gibbon's Tennis Court to Theatre Royal, Bridges
Street (1663) to Drury Lane (1674)


theatre interiors
   
pit, box, gallery system
       
a raked pit with benches

proscenium arch stage
       
forestage
       
scenic stage
       
wing and groove retained

            candlelight

                        keepers of the candles

                        footlights

            costumes

                        habit à la Romaine


Restoration Actors…and Actresses
   
women take the stage

social and sexual side effects

Nell Gwynn (1650 -- 1687)
       
            Elizabeth Barry (1658 -- 1713)

            Ann Bracegirdle (c.1663 -- 1748)
   

            and a few famous men:
       
Charles Hart (c. 1630 -- 1683)

Edward Kynaston (1643 -- 1712)

Thomas Betterton (c. 1635 – 1710) first major actor/manager

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