Richard Burbage Shakespeares Star
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=n4Myi6ala1Y
Welcome to the second instalment of a series looking at the players that were the first people to perform the plays of William Shakespeare in the hope that it might provide us with a “way in” to this playwright’s creative process. This episode looks at Richard Burbage… • I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting! • Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos. • Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: • Instagram: katrina.marchant • Twitter: @kat_marchant • Clubhouse: @kat_marchant • TikTok: @katrina_marchant • Email: [email protected] • Intro / Outro song: Silent Partner, Greenery [ • Greenery – Silent Partner (No Copyrig... ] • SFX from https://freesfx.co.uk/Default.aspx • Linked videos and playlists: • Shakespeare’s Players: • Shakespeare's Players • • Images (from Wikimedia Commons, unless otherwise stated): • Portrait of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, attributed to Steven van der Meulen, previously attributed to Lucas de Heere (c.1564). Held by Waddesdon Manor. • London map showing Shakespearean theatres, in the 16th and 17th century, from Shakespearean Playhouses by Joseph Quincy Adams. Image credit C. W. Redwood, formerly technical artist at Cornell University. • Photograph of the exterior of the Guildhall and Schoolroom, Church Street, Stratford-upon-Avon (2015). David P Howard / Almshouses, Church Street, Stratford-upon-Avon / CC BY-SA 2.0 • Portrait of Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon by Steven van Harwijck (c.1561-1563). Held in a private collection. • Portrait of Richard Burbage, reputedly a self-portrait by Richard Burbage himself (c.1600). From Peter Ackroyd, Shakespeare: The Biography (2005). Colour plate, opp. p.338. • Engraving of English Elizabethan clown Will Kempe dancing a jig from Norwich to London in 1600 from Kempes Nine Daies Wonder. • The Chandos Portrait of William Shakespeare, attributed to John Taylor (1610). Held by the National Portrait Gallery. • Portrait of James I of England in state robes by Paul van Somer I (c.1620). Held by the Royal Collection. • Illustration from Giacomo di Grassi’s Discourse on Wielding Arms with Safety” (1570). From https://wiktenauer.com/wiki/Giacomo_d... • Illustration from Vincentio Saviolo’s fencing manual entitled His Practise, in Two Bookes (1595). From https://wiktenauer.com/wiki/Vincentio... • Illustration from George Silver’s Paradoxes of Defence (1599). From https://wiktenauer.com/wiki/George_Si... • Second Globe Theatre rebuilt after the fire of 1613, detail from Wenceslas Hollar’s Long View of London, 1647. • • Quoted texts: • (Contested) Chronology of Shakespeare’s Extant Plays from The Norton Shakespeare. • Mary Edmond, Burbage [Burbadge], Richard (1568–1619), actor. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry. • Also consulted, were: • Mary McElroy and Kent Cartwright. “Public Fencing Contests on the Elizabethan Stage.” Journal of Sport History 13, no. 3 (1986): 193–211. • Joan Ozark Holmer. “‘Draw, If You Be Men’: Saviolo’s Significance for Romeo and Juliet.” Shakespeare Quarterly 45, no. 2 (1994): 163–89. • Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online. • #Shakespeare #History #Elizabethan
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