Shakespeare's reputation
In his own time, William Shakespeare (1564?1616) was seen as merely one among many talented playwrights and poets, but ever since the late 17th century he has been considered the supreme playwright, and to a lesser extent poet, of the English language. No other dramatist has been performed even remotely as often on the British (and later the world) stage as Shakespeare. The plays have often been drastically adapted in performance; King Lear, for instance, had a happy ending between 1681 and 1838. During the 18th and 19th centuries, the era of the great acting stars, to be a star on the British stage became synonymous with being a great Shakespeare actor. The emphasis was then on the soliloquies as declamatory turns, at the expense of pace and action, and Shakespeare's plays threatened to disappear under music, scenery, thunder, lightning and wave machines.
Related Topics:
William Shakespeare - 1564 - 1616 - Playwright - Poet - 17th century - King Lear - 1681 - 1838 - 19th - Stars - Soliloquies - Scenery
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Editors and critics of the plays, disdaining the showiness and melodrama of Shakespearean stage representation, began early to focus on Shakespeare as dramatic poet, to be studied on the printed page rather than in the theatre. The rift between Shakespeare on the stage and Shakespeare on the page was at its widest in the early 19th century, at a time when both the Shakespeares were hitting peaks of fame and popularity: theatrical Shakespeare was successful spectacle and melodrama for the masses, while book or closet drama Shakespeare was being elevated by the reverential commentary of the Romantics into unique poetic genius, prophet, and bard. Before the Romantics, Shakespeare was simply the most admired of all dramatic poets, especially for his insight into human nature and his realism, but Romantic critics such as S. T. Coleridge refactored him into an object of almost religious adoration or "bardolatry" (from bard + idolatry, a word coined by George Bernard Shaw) who towered above mere mortal writers, and whose plays were to be worshipped as not "merely great works of art" but as "phenomena of nature, like the sun and the sea, the stars and the flowers" and "with entire submission of our own faculties" (Thomas de Quincey, 1823). To the later 19th century Shakespeare became in addition an emblem of national pride, the crown jewel of English culture, and a "rallying-sign", as Thomas Carlyle wrote in 1841, for the whole British empire.
Related Topics:
Critics - Melodrama - Closet drama - Romantics - Genius - Prophet - Bard - S. T. Coleridge - George Bernard Shaw - Thomas de Quincey - 1823 - Thomas Carlyle - 1841
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Beginning around the turn of the 20th century, the historic rift between poet and playwright has begun to heal.
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | 17th century |
| ► | 18th century |
| ► | 19th century |
| ► | 20th century |
| ► | Critical quotations |
| ► | External links |
| ► | References |
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