Saturday, April 27, 2013

Elizabethan Times and the Theatre


Hello fellow bloggers.

This week’s blog post is centered on the ELIZABETHAN TIMES and THEATRE. As you are reading  this week’s blog post title you must have started wondering.. Why was it called the Elizabethan Era? What was SO exalting about this time? Were the theatres important in that time? What are some differences between the Elizabethan Theatre and modern day theatres?


As an ardent Shakespeare devotee, I assure you that the Elizabethan Era was very significant to  reminisce.



Primarily, the Elizabeth epoch was during Queen Elizabeth I reign (1558-1603), and thus it had been named the Elizabeth Era. In fact this era was symbolized as the Golden Age.



So what was so special about this time?


The golden age was a period in a field of endeavor when great tasks were accomplished, such as :
  •        Significant scientific progress in astronomy, magnetism, cartography, surveying, and navigation.
  •     New inventions of the spring-suspension coach. For me this invention is self-explanatory of the                               Elizabethan Era, don’t you think  so?

The Spring-Suspension Coach

  •        The beginning of New World English explorations for colonization, of course!
  •     The Defeat of the Spanish Armada.

Can you get a sense of why this era was awfully  important to the Brits? It was their portal to upcoming victories. Sorry fellow bloggers, I will have an attempt  in avoiding any aberration. It’s just that it saddens me when my fellow blogger Mariam vandalizes my dearly Shakespeare’s image in her blog post (see here: http://shakespeareanabode-not.blogspot.ae/2013/04/who-was-shakespeare.html), when his time was the rise of England from the dooms.

The Elizabethan Theatre
In Elizabethan England, theatre-going was very popular, and although the theatres themselves were in London, travelling theatre  companies went round the country and were hired by those who wanted a play to be performed as an attraction. Often plays were performed in temporary theatres created in inn  yards, as well as at court and in the country houses of the wealthy. The plays, therefore, were seen by a wide range of people from all kinds of social background.

An inn-yard

By the end of the 16th century, theatre-going was well established in England, but the theatres of Shakespeare’s time were very different from modern theatres.
Shakespeare's time theatre
Modern-day theatre

So, how were the theatres of Shakespeare’s time different from modern theatres?

  •          The majority of them, such as the Globe in Southward, London,  were open-air.
  •          The plays were performed in daylight, since there was no artificial light during the Elizabethan Era.
  •           The theatre’s exterior complexion was round or hexagonal.
  •           There was a trumpeter whom signaled the beginning of the play, where also a flag flew that indicated a performance was in progress.
  •            Only men actors were hired and performed in plays.

Therefore, during the Elizabethan Era people saw the theatre not only as a place to watch and enjoy a play, but as an opportunity to meet friends, exchange gossip and eat and drink. The Elizabethan audience were hard to please, they were only appreciative of flawless plays, if any play appeared to have defects, the audience would often shout out derogatory remarks, make jokes at the actors’ expense and throw things onto the stage, that behavior is rarely seen in the modern day theatre.

4 comments:

  1. Dareen! Great information and your pictures attracted the readers(: It didn't bore me at all, and you focused on a different perspective. Well Done (:

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  2. Wow, I really enjoyed this blog. The pictures helped me visualize the Elizabethan times :)

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  3. Dareen! What a wonderful job! Well to the point with a nice argument, i understood it all! And as Aline & Abbie say, the pictures really help the reader visualise those times! Great job! :D

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  4. Dareen - a great entry this week - I particularly liked that you separated your information into little segments - it made it simple and easy to read - and not boring at all! I also liked that you used dot points in some sections, and included loads of pictures. Keep up the great work!

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