Laughing and Weeping in Early Modern TheatresA study of laughter and weeping in English theatres, broadly defined, from around 1550 until their closure in 1642. The book is concerned both with the representation of these actions on the stage, and with what can be reconstructed about the laughter and weeping of theatrical audiences themselves. |
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... has a decisive advantage = ?? blunder !? interesting move ?! dubious move Acknowledgements In ! good move balanced position !! excellent move ? bad move possibilities on the kingside . 17 ... xd2 18.xd2 f4. Explanation of symbols.
... has a decisive advantage = ?? blunder !? interesting move ?! dubious move Acknowledgements In ! good move balanced position !! excellent move ? bad move possibilities on the kingside . 17 ... xd2 18.xd2 f4. Explanation of symbols.
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Common terms and phrases
accounts action actor appears argues associated audience laughter audience weeping Beaumont body Cambridge University Press cause Chapter character claim clown collection comedy comic considered Criticism cultural described detail discussed drama early modern early modern theatre effect Elizabethan emotion English evidence example expected expression eyes face fool gesture give grief hands head heart History idea imagines implied stage directions indicate induce instance interesting John Jonson King laugh laughter and weeping lines London look means merely mirth move nature noise noted observation occurs offers onstage Oxford particular passion performance phrase physical play practice produced Prologue question reaction references Renaissance represent representation Richard scene seems seen sense Shakespeare Shakespeare in Love shows sorrow sound stage directions suggest tears texts theatre theatrical theory Thomas thou Titus Tragedy usually wept whole writing