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Shakespeare in Company by Bart van Es

Peter J. Smith on the Bard as collaborative figure

Published on
March 14, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Ben Jonson鈥檚 extravagant eulogy, included in the First Folio of 1623, praised Shakespeare as a unique talent worthy of elevation above other canonical writers: 鈥淚 will not lodge thee by/Chaucer or Spenser鈥. Jonson鈥檚 enthusiastic praise describes Shakespeare as eclipsing Thomas Kyd and Christopher Marlowe, and ranks him among the greatest of the ancients: Aeschylus, Euripides and Sophocles. Right from the outset, Shakespeare鈥檚 poetic capabilities have been lauded as transcendent, exceptional and, not infrequently, those of a genius. From the Romantics down to the idiosyncratic pronouncements of Harold Bloom, Shakespeare, like his egotistical creation Richard of Gloucester, is himself alone.

More recently, however, a good deal of work has been done on the collaborative nature of early modern drama. This does not simply encompass the writing partnerships of Shakespeare鈥檚 early and late plays, or the alterations and additions subsequently made by writers such as Thomas Middleton, but also the cooperative and occasionally competitive working relationships between individuals such as actors, patrons, playwrights and publishers, and institutions such as companies, repertories, theatre spaces or the mechanisms of censorship, not to mention audiences. Early modern theatre has been shown to be no less collaborative than that of today, and Shakespeare studies, responding to the pressures of a materialist agenda, are increasingly prepared to recognise the playwright as part of a larger theatrical industry. This was initiated and backed by prosperous businessmen such as James Burbage, Edward Alleyn and Philip Henslowe, with the Bard writing alongside George Peele, Thomas Dekker, Marlowe, Thomas Nashe and (later) John Fletcher, creating characters for specific performers such as Will Kemp, Robert Armin and Richard Burbage. Shakespeare鈥檚 creative art was circumscribed and invigorated by working among these partners and organisations.

Shakespeare鈥檚 creative art was circumscribed and invigorated by working among these partners and organisations

As the title of this book suggests, the playwright needs to be studied as a constituent of and a contributor to these creative relationships. Moreover, the economic connotations of 鈥渃ompany鈥 alert us to the fact that Shakespeare鈥檚 output was formed in part by financial arrangements, not least his acquiring a stake in the company and then the theatre for which he was writing. As van Es states unarguably: 鈥淭here is inevitably a connection between the literary features of a work and the material conditions of its creation.鈥

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Shakespeare in Company is a meticulous account of the institutional and economic forces that shaped the plays themselves and an acute analysis of the ways in which this shaping occurred. For instance, in 1594 Shakespeare became a sharer in the Chamberlain鈥檚 Men and, as such, an 鈥渁ttached鈥 playwright. Unlike Kyd, Chapman, Jonson, Ford, Webster or Beaumont, Shakespeare wrote for a single company, an arrangement, claims van Es, that he 鈥渋nitiated鈥. This facilitated the composition of roles with particular actors in mind and 鈥渁 new concern with the process of casting individual performers [which in turn] enabled the creation of psychological depth鈥.

In 1599, Shakespeare bought part ownership 鈥渙f the most impressive performance venue in London鈥 and the Globe became the company鈥檚 permanent residence. This financial security cemented Shakespeare鈥檚 association with Burbage, for whom he wrote the roles of Hamlet, Othello, Lear and Macbeth, among others: 鈥淭he great tragedian was now Shakespeare鈥檚 primary partner and by the middle of the decade the dramatist would entirely abandon the writing of comedies.鈥

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Van Es argues that the late plays written with Fletcher 鈥渆vince a gradual loosening of [Shakespeare鈥檚] acting-company connections鈥 and this is manifest in the yielding of characterisation to 鈥渁 more choreographic interest in visual impact and rhetorical effect鈥. This is a sensitive, erudite and intriguing study that demonstrates the inseparability of the rarefied perfections of Shakespeare鈥檚 art and the day-to-day business of the entertainment industry.

Shakespeare in Company

By Bart van Es
Oxford University Press, 384pp, 拢25.00
ISBN 9780199569311
Published 14 February 2013

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