Palamon and Arcite (Edwardes)

Palamon and Arcite
Written by Richard Edwardes
Date premiered 1566
Place premiered Christ Church, Oxford
Original language English
Subject Two warriors fall out over a beautiful princess
Genre Romance
Setting Ancient Greece

Palamon and Arcite (1566) is a play by Richard Edwardes, which was performed before Elizabeth I at Oxford. It is based on Chaucer's The Knight's Tale. Though the text of the play is lost, there is a detailed record of its structure and plot.

The performance was a highly spectacular affair organised by staff and students of Oxford University. The event was vividly recalled and described by many contemporary witnesses.

Context

The play was created for a visit of the queen to Christ Church, Oxford, part of Oxford University. Edwardes was the courtier whose job it was to organise the Royal entertainments. He is usually credited as its author, but one writer at the time said that it was translated "from the Latin into the English tongue by Master Edwards and some other alumni of the college."[1] However, no Latin original is known, and the source (Chaucer) is English.[2] No other source says this; the writer may be conflating the play with others performed at the same event, a comedy and a tragedy, both in Latin, written by Oxford scholars.[3] The performance was spread over two days, 2 and 4 September 1566.[4]

According to Edwardes's biographer Albert Cook, the play was carefully crafted to appeal to Elizabeth, by emphasising the virginal purity of the heroine Emilia. But it was created at a time when Elizabeth was still young, and it was expected that she would marry at some point, as Emilia does at the end. The final scene was applauded and the queen gave a reward in gold coins (angels) to the actors in the principal female roles, Emilia and Hippolyta. The latter was performed by John Rainolds, who later became a leading Puritan, and recalled his youthful cross-dressing role with embarrassment.[5]

Performance

The actors were students and scholars of the university. Their performance was interrupted several times. Near the end, a spectator tried to intervene to stop the actors who he thought were recklessly destroying valuable items in a fire, which was part of the performance. At another point one of the actors, John Dalaper, completely forgot his lines, and apologised clumsily to the queen, who called him a "knave".[6] More seriously, an accident occurred resulting in three deaths. Due to the pressure from the crowd watching from surrounding buildings, a wall and a flight of stairs collapsed. In addition to the three deaths, five people were seriously injured as a result.[7] Despite the tragic accident, the show continued.

Edwardes's "finessing" of the queen's virgin persona was a success. "The sequel shows that his finesse was a complete success, for the audience greeted the conclusion of the marriage-scene with a riot of applause ('incredibili spectatorum clamore et plausu'), and the Queen gave Emilia a reward of eight angels."[2] The queen especially admired the performance of a scene in which the character was "gatheringe her flowers prettily in ye garden and singing sweetlie in ye pryme of March."

Plot

Though the text was never published the plot was described in a Latin text by John Bereblock, a Fellow of Exeter College and artist, who recorded all the entertainments provided for the queen's visit. There are also records of conversations about the play, and comments by the queen on particular scenes. Albert S. Cook summarises Bereblock's account as follows:

Part I

(Considerable time-interval here in Chaucer.)

Part 2

References

  1. W. Y. Durand, Pub. Mod. Lang. Assoc. 20. 512.
  2. 1 2 3 Albert S. Cook, The Life and Poems of Richard Edwards. Contributors,Yale University Press, 1927, p.76.
  3. F. E. Halliday, Shakespeare Companion, 1550-1950, Funk & Wagnalls, New York, 1952, p.2.
  4. Eugene M. Waith (ed), The Two Noble Kinsmen, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1989, p.28.
  5. Kirby Farrell, Kathleen M. Swaim, The Mysteries of Elizabeth I: Selections from English Literary Renaissance, Univ of Massachusetts Press, 2003, p.37.
  6. Siobhan Keenan, "Spectator and Spectacle: Royal Entertainments at the Universities in the 1560s", in Jayne Elisabeth Archer, The Progresses, Pageants, and Entertainments of Queen Elizabeth I, Oxford University Press, New York, 2007, p.100.
  7. Milton Waldman, Elizabeth and Leicester, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1945, p.143.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, November 29, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.