Medieval DramaMedieval Drama is a textbook, designed to be used by A level and undergraduate students of theatre and drama. It is divided into two major areas, mystery cycles and morality plays, and it examines the plays from a performance perspective. The book makes special reference to those texts contained within selections of plays which can be readily obtained by students, including A.C.Cawley's Everyman and Medieval Miracle Plays (Dent). The staging conventions of pageant waggon performance, place and scaffold playing and the drama of the Hall are explored in relation to the cultural context of the medieval period. |
From inside the book
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Page 59
... tradition adopted it , probably in analogy with the star which appeared to the Magi . In exactly the same way the Shepherds were generally believed to have presented gifts to the Christ - child , just as the Magi presented their gold ...
... tradition adopted it , probably in analogy with the star which appeared to the Magi . In exactly the same way the Shepherds were generally believed to have presented gifts to the Christ - child , just as the Magi presented their gold ...
Page 127
... traditions , both in the content of the entertainment and in method of staging . The elaborate and costly medium of ' coterie ' theatre had a tradition of highly decorative sets , scenic machinery and an impulse towards the social ...
... traditions , both in the content of the entertainment and in method of staging . The elaborate and costly medium of ' coterie ' theatre had a tradition of highly decorative sets , scenic machinery and an impulse towards the social ...
Page 149
... tradition . In the early sixteenth century two writers with courtly connec- tions , John Skelton and John Bale , both wrote plays with a popular impetus , borrowing elements from the traditions of native English drama . Skelton's ...
... tradition . In the early sixteenth century two writers with courtly connec- tions , John Skelton and John Bale , both wrote plays with a popular impetus , borrowing elements from the traditions of native English drama . Skelton's ...
Contents
PARTI MYSTERY PLAYS | 3 |
Everyman and other Morality Plays | 97 |
The Place | 108 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
Medieval Drama Christine Richardson,Colette Rausch,Jackie Johnston,Leigh A. Payne No preview available - 1991 |
Common terms and phrases
A. C. Cawley Abel Play Abel's actors allegory Angel appear audience audience's biblical Cain and Abel Cain's Castle of Perseverance characters Chester play Christ Christian contrast Corpus Christi plays costumes Coventry Cross Crucifixion Crucifixion Play cycle plays demonstrate Devils didactic ditch EETS effect Elizabethan entertainment episode Everyman fifteenth century God's guilds Hell Interludes Last Judgement Last Judgement Play liturgical liturgical drama London Mankind Medieval Drama Medieval English Drama medieval period Medieval Theatre Mercers Mercy Mischief Morality plays Mummers Mystery Cycles Mystery plays N-Town Cycle N-Town play Noah offer pageant wagon Passion sequence performance physical play world playing area popular possible recognise records reference religious represent response role salvation scaffolds Secunda Pastorum Shepherds Play shows social soldiers souls space spectators speech spiritual stage directions survived theatre tithe Titivillus Towneley Towneley-Wakefield Cycle Towneley-Wakefield play tradition Tudor vices Wakefield Wakefield Master York Cycle