Theatre

The drama after Shakespeare. Jacobean drama and theatre.

British drama came of age as James Burbage built the Theatre:

— - professional acting;

— - dramatic forms;

— - the drama of everyday life;

— - the theatre-building fused in (bebiztosította) the late 1570s to culminate in the majestic plays of Shakespeare and, a few years later, in those of the Jacobeans.

One reason for this was the change in beliefs.

Dramatic form began to change. The old Interlude had a binary structure: most scenes had two characters only and, sometimes, only one who addressed the audience. Marlowe developed this structure so that one character was opposed to several figures acting as one, particularly in Tamburlain.

JACOBEAN DRAMA

Around the turn of 16th century, Shakespeare’s drama fell into neglect. The Elizabethan drama of Shakespeare gave way to the Jacobеan drama of Johnson. Beside Johnson, John Marston, Thomas Middleton, George Chapman, Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher and John Webster were the other dramatists of the age.

The drama after Shakespeare to 1642

Period of decline of the Renaissance; The 17th century was the great century of English thinking and philosophy.

Drama

Shakespeare set the fashion in tragedy and romance, but an other ‘Elizabethan’, Ben Jonson did the same in comedy. Most of the playhouses were built in the 16th century.

Theatre

The theatre could not keep away from the changing social, political and economic conditions for a long time, and certain elements of change began to present themselves within the Jacobean theatre. Whereas in Queen Elizabeth’s days it was the same theatre, the same play and also the same style of acting that was enjoyed by the spectators, by the nobles, well-to-do citizens or underpaid artisans, in the Jacobean time, on the other hand, something like a social and financial hierarchy was created in the world of theatre. The distance between the tastes and demands of the upper classes and of those of the lower section of the population became fairly distinct. The repertoires as well as the admissions of the playhouses, favoured by the lower social strata also became different from those of the private theatres, whose patrons came from the upper classes. These private theatres enjoyed a higher social status. The conclusion is that something like two cultures, sharply separated from each other, were gradually taking shape in the Jacobean theatre.

The turnover of the audience was not too large, the plays would seldom be performed on more than three successive nights, and as it was the same gentlemen-about-town who went to see the performances, there had to be a new play on as often as possible. By the 1640s the number of theatres increased, dramatists had to provide plays for six London theatres. They could do it only by inventing plots or taking them wherever they could find, so they turned to the evergreen collections of fables and stories of earlier days. In 1642 London theatres were closed by Act of Parliament and dramatic performances practically ceased in London for fourteen years.