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Shakespeare's Ear

Dark, Strange, and Fascinating Tales from the World of Theater

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Shakespeare's Ear presents dark and sometimes funny pieces of fact and folklore that bedevil the mostly unknown history of theater. All manner of skullduggery, from revenge to murder, from affairs to persecution, proves that the drama off-stage was just as intense as any portrayed on it. The stories include those of:
  • An ancient Greek writer of tragedies who dies when an eagle drops a tortoise on his head.
  • A sixteenth-century English playwright who lives a double life as a spy and perishes horribly, stabbed above the eye.
  • A small Parisian theater where grisly horrors unfold on stage.
  • The gold earring that Shakespeare wears in the Chandos portrait, and its connections to bohemians and pirates of the time.
    Journey back to see theatrical shenanigans from the ancient Near East, explore the violent plays of ancient Greece and Rome, revel in the Elizabethan and Jacobean golden age of blood-thirsty drama, delight in the zany and subversive antics of the Commedia dell'arte, and tremble at ghostly incursions into playhouses. Here you will find many fine examples of playwrights, actors, and audiences alike being horrible to each other over the centuries.
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      • Booklist

        July 1, 2017
        In entertaining, bite-size biographies of notable playwrights and entertainers from ancient Greece to modern times, and in accounts of strange doings behind the scenes, Rayborn focuses on the dark side of theaterthe staging of gory scenes in Elizabethan and commedia dell'arte theater, debauched players and playwrights, ghost tales, and famous superstitions. Characters range from the well known, like Shakespeare, who gets a chapter of his own, in which Rayborn examines the ongoing research to prove the Bard's identity, to Moll Cutpurse, a notorious cross-dresser, pipe smoker, and pimp. By emphasizing gore and violence, Rayborn means to reveal a timeless side to the theater worldour fascination with the underbelly of things extends from the ancients to today's news. This single perspective may feel reductive to those looking for something more nuanced, but there is method in Rayborn's seeming tunnel vision: learning about the astonishing and often violent antics that happened behind the scenes of great dramas makes the whole genre even more fun. For many readers, it's likely to do just that.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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    • English

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