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Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry | A Wisdom Archive on Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry |  | Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry A selection of articles related to Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry |  |
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Shakespeare's reputation, Shakespeare's reputation - 17th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 20th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Britain, Shakespeare's reputation - Critical quotations, Shakespeare's reputation - Elsewhere in Europe, Shakespeare's reputation - Film, Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in criticism, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in performance
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry | |
 |  |  | Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 17th centuryIt is impossible to calculate Shakespeare's reputation in his own lifetime and shortly after. England scarcely had a modern literature to speak of prior to the 1570s, and detailed critical commentaries on modern authors did not begin to appear until the reign of Charles I. The facts about his reputation must be surmised from fragmentary evidence. He was included in some contemporary lists of leading poets, but he seems to have lacked the stature of the aristocratic Philip Sidney, who became a cult figure due to his death in battle at a young ...
See also:Shakespeare's reputation, Shakespeare's reputation - 17th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Britain, Shakespeare's reputation - Elsewhere in Europe, Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in performance, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in criticism, Shakespeare's reputation - 20th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Film, Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry, Shakespeare's reputation - Critical quotations Read more here: » Shakespeare's reputation: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 17th century |
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 |  |  | Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 20th centuryShakespeare continued to be considered the greatest English writer of all time throughout the 20th century. Most Western educational systems required the textual study of two or more of Shakespeare's plays, and both amateur and professional stagings of Shakespeare were commonplace. Shakespeare's reputation was so sterling, his preeminence so unchallenged, that it was assumed. It was, indeed, the proliferation of high-quality, well-annotated texts and the unrivalled reputation of Shakespeare that allowed for stagings of Shakespeare's plays to remain textually faithful, but with an extraord ...
See also:Shakespeare's reputation, Shakespeare's reputation - 17th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Britain, Shakespeare's reputation - Elsewhere in Europe, Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in performance, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in criticism, Shakespeare's reputation - 20th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Film, Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry, Shakespeare's reputation - Critical quotations Read more here: » Shakespeare's reputation: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 20th century |
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 |  |  | Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century
Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in performance.
Theatres and theatrical scenery became ever more elaborate in the 19th century, and the acting editions used were progressively cut and restructured to emphasize more and more the soliloquies and the stars, at the expense of pace and action. Performances were further slowed by the need for frequent pauses to change the scenery, creating a perceived need for even more cuts in order to keep performance length within tolerable limits; it became a generally accep ...
See also:Shakespeare's reputation, Shakespeare's reputation - 17th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Britain, Shakespeare's reputation - Elsewhere in Europe, Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in performance, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in criticism, Shakespeare's reputation - 20th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Film, Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry, Shakespeare's reputation - Critical quotations Read more here: » Shakespeare's reputation: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century |
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 |  |  | Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century
Shakespeare's reputation - Britain.
In the 18th century, Shakespeare dominated the London stage, while Shakespeare production turned increasingly into the creation of star turns for star actors. After the Licensing Act of 1737, one fourth of the plays performed were by Shakespeare, and on at least two occasions rival London playhouses staged the very same Shakespeare play at the same time (Romeo and Juliet in 1755 and King Lear the next year) and still commanded audiences. This occasion was a striki ...
See also:Shakespeare's reputation, Shakespeare's reputation - 17th century, Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Britain, Shakespeare's reputation - Elsewhere in Europe, Shakespeare's reputation - 19th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in performance, Shakespeare's reputation - Shakespeare in criticism, Shakespeare's reputation - 20th century, Shakespeare's reputation - Film, Shakespeare's reputation - Poetry, Shakespeare's reputation - Critical quotations Read more here: » Shakespeare's reputation: Encyclopedia II - Shakespeare's reputation - 18th century |
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