The Required Amount at the Prescribed Rate (Handcrafted From the Finest Corinthian Leather)
The Groundlings Were Grungy in the 1590s
Though it gets a bit technical at times, James Shapiro's book A Year in the Life of Shakespeare:1599 truly illustrates that though The Bard's writing appears to be timeless, Shakespeare himself was truly a man of his times and a man determined-- through his writing-- to push forward, artistically and financially . . . the book details the impact the Globe Theater-- built by Shakespeare and his acting company to exacting specifications-- had on the most experienced playgoers in the history of theater-- Shakespeare broke free of the clowning and the jig, and wrote and directed some of the most politically, linguistically, and emotionally ambiguous and complex plays ever written-- artistry that was even more compelling in Elizabethan England than it is now-- while his plays are still astounding, they are but a "walking shadow" to how they must have been received in London in 1599-- when the allusions resonated, the inventive language was newly coined, and the political turmoil in his histories was reflective of the same issues faced by Elizabeth and Essex and the rest of the nobles of England.
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A New Sentence Every Day, Hand Crafted from the Finest Corinthian Leather.
2 comments:
Ah yes, like Random Idiots were grunge when grunge meant filth.
we would have crushed it back then, the Elizabethans loved a filthy jig
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