The Ladies: Female Patronage of Restoration Drama, 1660-1700Clarendon Press, 1989 - Počet stran: 188 This is the first in-depth study of a female audience that shows how and why women went to the theater in Restoration England. Robert challenges the assumption that a "ladies' faction" played an important part in encouraging the playhouses to present a more moral, less bawdy or "satirical" style of comedy, thus changing the course of English drama. He shows that there is no evidence of this faction, and that "sentimental" comedies really did cater to the interest of their female audience by incorporating the fashionable concern for women's rights. Drawing on many sources, including the life of Elizabeth Pepys, the book investigates just who these "ladies" were, what determined their theater-going, how often they went, what they liked and did in the theater, and the role of patronage at the court of three Restoration queens. |
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Strana 49
... visits made by Pepys with and without his wife and her maid , and produces some interesting but confessedly partial ... visits . 2 From 1 Jan. to 31 Aug. Pepys went to the theatre 73 times ; for 33 of those visits Elizabeth was away in ...
... visits made by Pepys with and without his wife and her maid , and produces some interesting but confessedly partial ... visits . 2 From 1 Jan. to 31 Aug. Pepys went to the theatre 73 times ; for 33 of those visits Elizabeth was away in ...
Strana 57
... visits to the theatre throughout the whole period covered by the diary : for Elizabeth's one hundred and ninety - eight visits her husband , for all his vows and guilty pangs , made three hundred and eighty - two , nearly twice her ...
... visits to the theatre throughout the whole period covered by the diary : for Elizabeth's one hundred and ninety - eight visits her husband , for all his vows and guilty pangs , made three hundred and eighty - two , nearly twice her ...
Strana 83
... visits were scarcely out of the ordinary ; there was no reason for him to regard the box as the only proper place for his patron's children.58 So far we have seen that the boxes , although they were the centre of much of the activity of ...
... visits were scarcely out of the ordinary ; there was no reason for him to regard the box as the only proper place for his patron's children.58 So far we have seen that the boxes , although they were the centre of much of the activity of ...
Obsah
Introduction I | 1 |
Elizabeth Pepys Playgoer | 49 |
Women in the Playhouse | 65 |
Autorská práva | |
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