production at court as well as outdoor performance in the public theater should make us cautious about inferring, as some scholars have, that the opportunity provided by the intimacy of the Blackfriars led to a significant change toward a âchamberâ style in his last playsâwhich, besides, were performed at both the Globe and the Blackfriars. After the occupation of the Blackfriars a five-act structure seems to have become more important to Shakespeare. That was because of artificial lighting: there were musical interludes between the acts, while the candles were trimmed and replaced. Again, though, something similar must have been necessary for indoor court performances throughout his career.
Front of house there were the âgatherersâ who collected the money from audience members: a penny to stand in the open-air yard, another penny for a place in the covered galleries, sixpence for the prominent âlordâs roomsâ to the side of the stage. In the indoor âprivateâ theaters, gallants from the audience who fancied making themselves part of the spectacle sat on stools on the edge of the stage itself. Scholars debate as to how widespread this practice was in the public theaters such as the Globe. Once the audience were in place and the money counted, the gatherers were available to be extras onstage. That is one reason why battles and crowd scenes often come later rather than early in Shakespeareâs plays. There was no formal prohibition upon performance by women, and there certainly were women among the gatherers, so it is not beyond the bounds of possibility that female crowd members were played by females.
The play began at two oâclock in the afternoon and the theater had to be cleared by five. After the main show, there would be a jigâwhich consisted not only of dancing but also of knockabout comedy (it is the origin of the farcical âafterpieceâ in the eighteenth-century theater). So the time available for a Shakespeare play was about two and a half hours, somewhere between the âtwo hoursâ trafficâ mentioned in the prologue to
Romeo and Juliet
and the âthree hoursâ spectacleâreferred to in the preface to the 1647 Folio of Beaumont and Fletcherâs plays. The prologue to a play by Thomas Middleton refers to a thousand lines as âone hourâs words,â so the likelihood is that about two and a half thousand, or a maximum of three thousand lines, made up the performed text. This is indeed the length of most of Shakespeareâs comedies, whereas many of his tragedies and histories are much longer, raising the possibility that he wrote full scripts, possibly with eventual publication in mind, in the full knowledge that the stage version would be heavily cut. The short Quarto texts published in his lifetimeâthey used to be called âBadâ Quartosâprovide fascinating evidence as to the kind of cutting that probably took place. So, for instance, the First Quarto of
Hamlet
neatly merges two occasions when Hamlet is overheard, the âFishmongerâ and the ânunneryâ scenes.
The social composition of the audience was mixed. The poet Sir John Davies wrote of âA thousand townsmen, gentlemen and whores, / Porters and servingmenâ who would âtogether throngâ at the public playhouses. Though moralists associated female play-going with adultery and the sex trade, many perfectly respectable citizensâ wives were regular attendees. Some, no doubt, resembled the modern groupie: a story attested in two different sources has one citizenâs wife making a post-show assignation with Richard Burbage and ending up in bed with Shakespeareâsupposedly eliciting from the latter the quip that William the Conqueror was before Richard III. Defenders of theater liked to say that by witnessing the comeuppance of villains on the stage, audience members would repent of their own
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