Informace o publikaci

Restored and De-restored : Killing Off Garrick in John Philip Kemble's King Lear

Logo poskytovatele
Autoři

KRAJNÍK Filip

Rok publikování 2021
Druh Článek v odborném periodiku
Časopis / Zdroj Theatralia
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU

Filozofická fakulta

Citace
www Plný text článku.
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/TY2021-1-7
Klíčová slova Adaptation of Shakespeare; David Garrick; Eighteenth century English theatre; George Colman; John Philip Kemble; King Lear; Nahum Tate; Restoration theatre; William Shakespeare
Popis Nahum Tate's Restoration version of King Lear (1680 or 1681) managed to replace Shakespeare's original on English stages for more than a century and a half. While the efforts of David Garick and George Colman to reinstate Shakespeare's plot and language in English theatres in the latter half of the eighteenth century have been acknowledged, little has been said in this respect about the late eighteenth-century actor and theatre manager John Philip Kemble and his version of the play that premiered in 1792. The present article will try to propose the possible motivation of Kemble's step to discard Garrick's popular alteration and will also argue that the decision to erase Garrick's restorations and recur essentially to Tate's outmoded version of the play at the end of the eighteenth century was probably one of the factors that helped to restore Shakespeare's original in English theatres when King Lear was revived in the 1820s after a decade-long hiatus.
Související projekty:

Používáte starou verzi internetového prohlížeče. Doporučujeme aktualizovat Váš prohlížeč na nejnovější verzi.

Další info