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4 - The theatre of Shakespeare’s London

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2011

Margreta De Grazia
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
Stanley Wells
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
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Summary

Actors

Hamlet, excited at having just successfully extemporized a verse, turns to his friend Horatio, asking 'Would not this . . . get me a fellowship in a cry of players, sir?' Horatio is less impressed. He thinks it would win Hamlet only 'half a share', but Hamlet is adamant: 'A whole one, I' (3.2.253-7). The exchange works on a number of levels. Hamlet is delighted that he has the improvisational skill of an actor; the irony is, of course, that Hamlet is actually able to 'act' only in this performative sense, while in reality, as he recognizes elsewhere, he can merely 'unpack my heart with words' (2.2.563). But the conversation also references the structure of an early modern acting company. 'Cries' or troupes were set up by 'sharers' who contributed to them two separate but equally important qualities: acting talent and money. Thus Hamlet thinks his skills alone should earn him a 'share' in a company, while Horatio thinks they merit only half that right.

Shakespeare himself was a full 'sharer' in a company known first as the Lord Chamberlain's Men (1594-6; 1597-1603) and later as the King's Men (1603-1642). This meant that Shakespeare was bound to be performance-focused, for it was at the end of a day's playing that the money taken at the doors of entrance was 'parcel'd out upon the sharing-board' - placed upon a table and distributed among the sharers. And, as theatrical income was specifically linked to performance, then if plague closed the theatre, or fire destroyed it, Shakespeare would make no money, and nor would anyone else.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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