“The Farcical Tragedies of King Richard III”: The Nineteenth-Century Burlesques

Unlike other Shakespearean tragedies, King Richard III was never turned into a comedy through the insertion of a happy ending. It did, however, undergo a transformation of dramatic genre, as the numerous Richard III burlesques and travesties produced in the nineteenth century plainly show. Eight burlesques (or nine, including a pantomime) were written for and/or performed on the London stage alone. This essay looks at three of these plays, produced at three distinct stages in the history of burlesque's rapid rise and decline: 1823, 1844, and 1868. In focusing on these productions, I demonstrate how Shakespeare burlesques, paradoxically, enhanced rather than endangered the playwright's iconic status. King Richard III is a perfect case study because of its peculiar stage history. As Richard Schoch has argued, the burlesque purported to be “an act of theatrical reform which aggressively compensated for the deficiencies of other people's productions. . . . [It] claimed to perform not Shakespeare's debasement, but the ironic restoration of his compromised authority.” But this view of the burlesques’ importance is incomplete. Building on Schoch's work, I illustrate how the King Richard III burlesques not only parodied deficient theatrical productions but also called into question dramatic adaptations of Shakespeare's plays. In so doing, these burlesques paradoxically relegitimized Shakespeare.

In 1920, in one of the first studies on the subject, R. Farquharson Sharp defined the hands of the Shakespearean parodist as "sacrilegious." 10 Nineteenth-century authors of burlesques thought differently. For example, in 1888, the writer, editor, and burlesque composer Francis Cowley Burnand championed the legitimacy of the form in an essay entitled "The Spirit of Burlesque." In it, he declared that burlesque is "the candid friend" of the Drama, who, in as pleasant a way, and in as personally inoffensive manner as possible, by means of parody, travesty, and mimicry, publicly exposes on the stage some preposterous absurdities of stagecraft which may be a passing fashion of the day, justly ridicules some histrionic pretensions, parodies false sentiment, and shows that the shining metal put forward as real gold is only theatrical tinfoil after all. 11 Burlesque attacked what was "false, pedantic, pretentious, snobbish"; 12 it chastised the aberrations and distortions that took place when "a work of genius" was "spoilt, or injured, by the misinterpretation of self-complacent mediocre actors," or "rendered ridiculous by extravagant realism in production." 13 Thus, far from being the destroyer of Shakespeare's authority, burlesque would paradoxically be its restorer.
In the following analysis, I argue that Burnand's claim was accurate in more than one way. First, Shakespeare's plays addressed the issues of his times, and the authors of burlesque pieces based on Shakespeare, with their topicalities, localizations, and domestications, strove to make the Bard's plays contemporary again by "updating" them. As Schoch observes, "If the virtue of legitimate Shakespeare was durability, then the virtue of burlesque Shakespeare was novelty. . . . [T]he burlesque's injunction might be 'always contemporize.'" 14 Second, these burlesques frequently used parody to expose cleverly the "aberrations and distortions" of contemporary "legitimate" productions, which reveled in hyperrealism and historical reconstructions. Third, since the King Richard III that passed for Shakespeare's at the time was Cibber's version (and the authors of the burlesques I examine appear to have been aware of the distinction), the parodic plays highlighted the limits of Cibber's play, meaning that they revealed to what extent "the shining metal put forward as real gold [was] only theatrical tinfoil after all." With Burnand's argument in mind, I demonstrate how Shakespeare burlesques did not compromise the playwright's iconic status, but rather boosted his authority by offering fresh perspectives on a play that was typically produced in a "mangled," "jumbled," "patchwork" form. 15 King Richard III. Travestie (1823) Like other Shakespeare burlesques composed in the first quarter of the nineteenth century, the anonymous King Richard III. Travestie took John Poole's Hamlet Travestie as a model. It was published in 1823 16 and is only two acts in length, which the author justified by stating that Poole's 1810 Hamlet's Travestie, in three acts, had failed on the stage due to its length. 17 In spite of such compression, there is no evidence that the piece was ever performed. It nevertheless stands as an important marker in the development of the burlesque tradition in that it was the first to introduce two features that would become standard practice: humorous descriptions of the dramatis personae and the resurrection of characters who have died in the course of the action (they dance together as the curtain falls). This burlesque was also the first to introduce puns and jokes related to Gloucester cheese, a common feature of later nineteenth-century travesties of Richard III: Richard, while wooing Lady Anne, asks her if she would "choose a cheese cake or a tart," and she replies, "Of all the cheese that's in the world, O give to me plain Glo'ster." 18 Topical allusions are the distinctive feature of Shakespeare burlesques but they are peculiarly abundant in this text. What follows is the facetious description of the villainous protagonist in the "Persons Represented": Richard, Duke of Glo'ster, a little, crooked, fierce-looking Man, with a hoarse Voice, carrotty Whiskers, and long Spurs; fond of Cutting and Maiming; a second Sixteen-string Jack, with Nine Lives like a Cat; a bit of a Miller-always draws a crowded House at his Benefit; but in his last Engagement, receives a Muzzler from Richmond, (the Black) which does him up Brown. (6) This short description contains numerous contemporary references. For example, John Rann, alias Sixteen String Jack, was a notorious yet charming highway robber who wore eight brightly colored ribbons tied around each knee representing the times he had been acquitted. Executed on 30 November 1774, his popularity endured into the nineteenth century, with a play by William Leman Rede entitled Sixteen String Jack produced at the Coburg Theatre in February 1823. Even more interesting is the reference to a famous pugilist who had retired almost a decade earlier: the Black American Bill Richmond. 19 We are told that Richard III too is a bit of a Miller (slang for a "prize-fighter"), and that he is eventually defeated ("in his last Engagement") by Richmond the Black, with a Muzzler (in boxing slang, "a blow on the mouth"). 20 This short quotation offers some idea of the range and frequency of topical and local references in travesties and burlesques. Playwrights appealed to audiences with references from the criminal underworld, from boxing, from fashions in costume, and from life in London in general, but also from politics and, quite obviously, from the theatrical world. All this worked to return "Shakespeare" to contemporaneity. Here, the boxing metaphor is used consistently throughout the play. Buckingham is presented as Richard's "Bottle Holder" (6), but in act 2 he betrays Richard and joins the party of "the bold Dutch Sam" (38), another pugilist who had been extremely popular in the previous decade. As the facetious description quoted above announces, the climactic fight between Richard and Richmond is demoted to a boxing combat in the Prize Ring at Moulsey Hurst (a nineteenth-century sporting venue used for cricket, prizefighting, and other sports; Fig. 1). The tradition of substituting "a pugilistic trial of skill, in the last scene, for the more elegant exercise of the rapier" 21 had been inaugurated by Poole's Hamlet Travestie, and boxing matches regularly replaced duels and sword fights in Shakespeare burlesques.
However, the comic representation of working-class leisure activities like boxing does not mean that these entertainments were written for a laboring-class audience, nor does it mean that the author endorsed a socially progressive outlook. Rather, as Schoch has argued, the theatres that attracted working-class audiences preferably staged melodrama, whereas Shakespeare burlesques appealed to the educated middle class and, in particular, to the so-called "'men about town' who had professional careers, disposable income, leisure time, and no domestic responsibilities." 22 Indeed, appreciating the burlesque's pointed satire required familiarity with legitimate Shakespeare (and with the Bard's plays in general), which was more easily within reach of middle-class audiences. Although burlesques spoofed the middleclass cult of respectability, they did not do so on behalf of the working class and, generally, they did not give voice to class-based antagonism. 23 Heavy drinking is another recurring topic in this 1823 travesty, which again corresponds with the low treatment of high subjects typical of burlesque. Richard uses alcohol to win Lady Anne, who, as the opening description explains, is fond of "a drop of Blue Ruin" (6; i.e., of low-quality, home-made gin). His plan is clear from the start, since he confidently tells the audience: "if she refuses, I'll ask her to drink" (13). His strategy is obviously successful, and later on Lady Anne, singing to the tune of "False Man, You Courted Sally," regrets her pliability: This strategy, indeed, is a clever expedient to overcome the improbability of the courtship scene, which had been a serious cause of embarrassment to eighteenthcentury sentimental critics. 24 Richard tries the same stratagem to convince the Queen to let him marry her daughter "Bet," but this time he fails: These scenes are reminiscent of eighteenth-century comic pieces such as John Gay's 1728 Beggar's Opera, in which drink is employed for parodic purposes. In King Richard III. Travestie, the influence of Gay's ballad opera-itself a burlesque of the contemporary vogue for Italian operatic styles-is overtly underlined by the use of the melody from "Cease Your Funning." 25 Drinking runs like a leitmotif throughout this travesty: King Edward is referred to as "the drunken jockey" (17); on his death, Stanley wants to comfort the Queen with "a drop of jackey" (19; a slang word for gin, the most popular drink of the period), and, at the end of the scene, the idea is reproposed by Gloucester himself through the air "Come Let Us Dance and Sing": "All the day let's dance and play, / The blind fiddler I will pay / We will drink, 'till we blink, / To drive dull care away" (21). Then, as one would expect from her, when Lady Anne's Ghost rises at the end of the play, she declares: "I will keep a brandy shop / And drink away the profit" (52). Burlesque's transposition from high to low involved the setting, the situations, and the language. "Bet," which substitutes for Elizabeth in the above-quoted exchange, is not the only diminutive used in the play: King Edward at times becomes "Neddy" (12) and "Poor Ned" (19), and the crowd is urged by Buckingham to cry out "Long live King Dick!" (27). Street slang and colloquialisms abound, and sense is sacrificed to sound in what, at times, appear as endless chains of puns. Although based on Cibber's adaptation, this burlesque begins with a parody of Shakespeare's Richard's opening soliloquy rather than King Henry's murder in the tower. 26 Here, the author uses rhymed couplets to spoof Richard's arch-famous lines: These lines, with their slang words ("mugs," which stands for "faces, esp. unattractive ones," OED), colloquialisms ("tripey" and "larking," which mean, respectively, "inferior, trashy, rubbishy, worthless," and "frolicsome, sportive," OED), oaths ("by goles"), domestication ("court plaister" and "walking sticks"), not to mention the concluding debased reformulation of Richard's unbridled libido coronae (where "bread-basket" is the name pugilists gave to "the stomach"), 27 set the tone for the whole piece. In this travesty too, Shakespeare's tragic characters are demoted to the level of ordinary Londoners, and their use of modern-day slang can be seen as a strategy for updating the Bard. This burlesque further addresses its contemporary audience by setting numerous monologues and dialogues to popular melodies. To be more precise, the play consists almost exclusively of songs. 28 Music was central to burlesque entertainments, a response to the 1737 Licensing Act, which limited spoken drama to the patent houses (Drury Lane and Covent Garden) and obliged other theatres to rely on music to escape prosecution. Nevertheless, the presence of as many as twenty-seven airs in this 1823 piece is surprising: by comparison, Poole's Hamlet Travestie contains only sixteen songs. In King Richard III. Travestie, the scene depicting Richard's wooing of Lady Anne incorporates four airs. The woman sings to the tune of "Go, George, I Can't Endure You" and "Oh Miss Bailey"; Richard to the tune of "Since Kathleen Has Prov'd So Untrue," and, finally, Anne's yielding (through drinking) is presented in a duet to the tune of "Nancy Dawson": We'll drink away till all is blue, Glo'ster: And I will be your flash chap! 29 (16)(17) Following these exchanges, the couple dances off to the tune of "Off She Goes," the jig cited in the opening soliloquy. The song references London low life, since All Max was a pub in the East End (Fig. 2). The shift from high to low is rendered more evident here by the circumstance that the name All Max itself was a parody of the exclusive Almack's Assembly Rooms, a famous West End club and one of a limited number of upper-class mixed-sex public social venues in the capital. 30 Charles Selby's Kinge Richard ye Third (1844) In February 1844 not one but two Richard III burlesques were produced in West End theatres. Both targeted what George Bernard Shaw named "bardolatry," that is, the worshipful cult of Shakespeare, which originated in the mid-eighteenth century and, on the Victorian legitimate stage, gave rise to elaborate, reverential productions, obsessed with historical accuracy and packed with antiquarian reconstructions, as well as to sombre, bombastic, overweening recitation. 31 Solemnity inspired satire, and the two 1844 burlesques with their ample metatheatrical allusions were a direct response to the spectacular performances staged by Charles Kean at Drury Lane in January. Of the two, I have chosen to analyze the second, more successful, production, as it perfectly illustrates the Shakespeare burlesque at its height: Charles Selby's Kinge Richard ye Third; or, Ye Battel of Bosworth Field: Being a familiar alteration of the celebrated history . . . , called Ye True Tragedie of King Richard ye Third. 32 Whereas the other 1844 burlesque, Joseph Sterling Coyne's Richard III. A Burlesque. In One Act, ran for one month at the Adelphi Theatre and counted twenty-three performances, 33 Selby's travesty had at least sixty performances in the Strand. As the reviewer of The Times testified, Hammond, the actor who played Richard, "made a great deal of laugh in the fight at the end by an imitation of Charles Kean. Wigan, as Henry VI, was also capital, imitating Macready very effectively, and singing his parodies in a very amusing fashion." 34 Given the notorious rivalry between Kean and Macready, the scene where Richard tries to murder Henry must have been rendered particularly amusing by Hammond and Wigan's caricatures. In fact, Selby's travesty was so popular that it was performed concurrently at the Royal Pavilion Theatre, a unique phenomenon in the nineteenth century, and also found success in several productions in the United States. 35 The play's American production makes sense when we consider that Cibber's King Richard III was itself the most popular play on the American stage. 36 As Lawrence Levine has argued, "while [Cibber's] work was done in the England of 1700, it could have been written a hundred years later in the United States, so closely did it agree with American sensibilities concerning the centrality of the individual, the dichotomy between good and evil, and the importance of personal responsibility." 37 To facilitate the mise-en-scène, the print edition of Selby's burlesque specified the "Time of Representation": one hour, fifteen minutes. 38 This highly spectacular travesty included a "Gigantic Equestrian Pageant" (sc. 8) that burlesqued the shows at Astley's Amphitheatre and spoofed the equestrian scenes in the Drury Lane production of the tragedy. 39 In the burlesque, the main male characters "gallop rapidly round the stage," then: In keeping with the form, the play is in rhymed couplets, and "contains so many songs, . . . that it virtually becomes a burletta." 41 Although the ban on the production of scripted drama at the nonpatent houses had been lifted the previous year through the Theatre Regulation Act, music had become a defining feature of burlesque productions. There are fifteen songs in Selby's burlesque, and the anonymous reviewer of the Illustrated London News reported that the "absurdities" of the "many parodies of favourite songs from those of the older melodists to Balfe's last new ballads . . . kept the audience in excellent humour." 42 There are several operatic allusions too. Dancing, which was increasingly becoming an integral part of these entertainments, is likewise present, as are choruses and what is called a "concerted piece" (238), with four voices and a chorus.
The text includes a ludicrous imitation of Charles Kean, parodying Cibber's spider simile to re-create the actor's stagy exaggerations and distinctive "snarl": "Oh, Bucky, there are two daddy long legs / Crr-aw-ling in my path . . . / Unless some kind friend will upon them trr-ead, / They'll crr-awl, and crr-awl, till they scrr-atch me out of bed" (240). 43 Kean is also ridiculed later in the play, when, just before Lady Anne's entrance in the wooing scene, Richard "retires, and stands leaning against the wing" (222). This passage refers to a piece of stage business that Edmund Kean had introduced thirty years earlier, which William Hazlitt had much appreciated: "Mr. Kean's attitude in leaning against the side of the stage before he comes forward in this scene, was one of the most graceful and striking we remember to have seen. It would have done for Titian to paint." 44 However, what Hazlitt had saluted as a novelty at the time of Edmund Kean's debut had evidently become a mannerism with the younger Kean, as we learn from the critic of The Era, who lamented that he "indulged in his favourite trick of hanging to the side scenes till the effect became almost ludicrous." 45 Although Selby's play was based on Cibber's adaptation, it also restored some Shakespeare insofar as it showed both Richard's and Richmond's tents onstage on the eve of the battle, and the ghosts appeared to both contenders. In the print edition, the "Telescopic View of ye Argument & Scenery" highlighted the change, describing the scene as "grand Shaksperian restoration" (211). In this way, Shakespeare burlesques strove to reestablish Shakespeare's authority in a culture where rampant and multivalent adaptation dominated. The playbill for Selby's production makes clear how the burlesque critiqued Cibber's "improved" version: The text is, of course, improved by copious alterations, additions and omissions. Many of the original passages by the Gentleman from Stratford, although no doubt abounding in beauties, being beyond the comprehension of the Adaptor, he naturally supposes (like Colley Cibber) that the Public must be as ignorant as himself, and will prefer the Drama of Effect to the Drama of Literature. 46 Indeed, the Shakespeare versus Cibber debate had gained momentum with Charles Kean's production, a revival of Cibber's version announced in the playbills as "SHAKESPEARE'S Historical play." Several theatre reviewers criticized Drury Lane's choice, bearing witness to an increasing desire to see Shakespeare's plays performed in their original, unadulterated form. 47 The querelle was also satirized in an "Operatic Sketch" entitled "Cibber Detected," which appeared in Punch. In it, a "Judicious Individual" declared: Will Shakspeare was a mighty man,-no author could be glibber, He wrote foul Richard's tragedy, wherein grim spectres gibber; But once there came a traitor bold whose name was Colley Cibber, He mangled noble Shakspeare's play with ruthless hoe and dibber.
'T was a terrible alteration And it causes great vexation. 48 Echoing this sentiment, Selby's burlesque spoofed Cibber's most famous interpolated line-"Off with his head. So much for Buckingham" 49 -in the following parodic exchange, in which Richard is preempted from speaking his cue: Catesby: My liege, the Duke of Buckingham is taken, And we've cut his head off! Richard: That saves his bacon! Had he been ta'en alive and hither led, It was my intention to have said, The play opens, like Cibber's, with King Henry in the Tower, and the protagonist's famous soliloquy becomes a part text, part song piece, recited by a Richard who enters "dancing joyfully, to the air of the 'College Hornpipe'" (218). This time, humor prevails over nonsense: Richard Unsurprisingly, this passage features localization (fashionable places of London are mentioned, and we even find interjections in Cockney dialect), domestication (the dogs in the original play become "a lady's lap-dog"), and a topical allusion to the Télémaque, a French ship that, as the legend reported, was wrecked with a treasure at Quillebeuf, in Normandy, in 1790. The play also makes effective use of simile to draw closer to the everyday experience of the audience. The following lines, taken from the wooing scene (sc. 4), illustrate the stylistic hybridity typical of these burlesques. Here, the numerous prosaic details of ordinary life blatantly clash with Richard's avowed intention of eulogizing Lady Anne's "fatal beauty": Richard: Thy beauty (like Battersean billows, Which market barges smash to shivereens, And cheat the town of sparrow grass and greens) Thy fatal beauty, for whose dear sake, Of all the world I'd Epping sausage make! (225) Familiar similes and metaphors were an important formal feature of theatrical burlesques and one of their main sources of amusement. In this play, it is Richard who makes extensive use of such device, in expressions like the following: "I'll hang 'em like onions, all of a row" (244)  The usual debasement of Shakespeare's language is found in the extensive use of colloquialisms ("artful dodger," "old codger," "pack off") and nicknames ("Duke Humpy" and "Dicky"), which undoubtedly conferred the piece an arresting immediacy at the time it was staged. At the end of the play, however, the still living King Henry rather incoherently returns with the ghosts for the closing tableau, snatching the crown from Richmond to put it on his own head, "over his night cap" (254). 50 In the following scene (sc. 4), we find an analogous descent into familiarity when Lady Anne's dead husband is called "Prince Ned, her hubby" and King Edward, again, "Neddy" (222). Later on, the Queen refers to herself as "The wretched Lizzy" (236). After the marriage, Lady Anne becomes the traditional shrew (Richard calls her "my vixen wife") who "does nought but scold and fret" her husband, and complains that Richard, "Instead of coming home to sup and sleep, / All night in cellars and coal holes he'll keep, / Smoking and singing Barcarolles till day" (234). The references to Bohemian culture and its drinking establishments, common in burlesques of the Victorian period, are self-evident. Familiarities and colloquialisms proliferate in the humorous exchange between Richard and the young Princes. A few lines will suffice to show the tenor of the conversation: Edward: How are you, Dicky? Tip us your fist, old fellow! York: Right as a brick! (Seeing Richard-slapping him on the back.) What? old Punchinello! . . . Richard: (Aside.)-Oh, you dear, pretty-merry-downy-chick! 'Tis pity you'll so soon the bucket kick! (230-1) Topical allusions are also numerous. For example, in the dialogue between King Henry and Richard that precedes the (attempted) assassination of the old King, Richard is compared to the eighteenth century's most notorious robber and thief: "Blackguard, thief, and vile presumer! / Oh, thou wert born to rob and slay, / And like Jack Shepherd, fake away" (220). 51 The historical Jack Sheppard was arrested several times and spectacularly escaped from various prisons, including Newgate, until he was hanged at Tyburn in 1724. Daniel Defoe was so fascinated by Sheppard's daring escapes that he wrote his biography, The History of the Remarkable Life of John Sheppard. John Gay was similarly fascinated with the man, who served as the inspiration for the character of Macheath in The Beggar's Opera. Gay's ballad opera fed precisely on the contemporary avid public interest in the underworld, which was fostered by the detailed reports of criminal exploits in London newspapers and the many "biographies" and "memoirs" of the most notorious lawbreakers. By 1844, Sheppard's popularity had been revived by William Harrison Ainsworth's serialized novel, Jack Sheppard: A Romance, published in Bentley's Miscellany from January 1839 with illustrations by George Cruikshank. 52 Topicality, of which we have already seen many instances, was thus one of the chief means through which burlesque Shakespeare "embraced its own provisionality" 53 and made the Bard contemporary again.
Word games and puns abound in this travesty, with puns italicized in the text. The following extract from the wooing scene (sc. 4) plays on the homophony between "bier" and "beer": Later, Lady Anne threatens Richard playing on the similar sounds of "far" and "fur": "Aggravating villain! Don't go too fur, sir; / Though you're a Bengal tiger I'm your match! / My nails are long-you know that they can scratch!" (235). On another occasion the playwright took advantage of material already present in the originals. In both Shakespeare and Cibber, the Duke of Norfolk (whose Christian name is John) finds a piece of paper in his tent just before the battle, wherein the contraction of the diminutive "Johnkin" is used in the famous sentence "Jockey of Norfolk be not too bold, / For Dickon thy Master is bought and sold." 54 In the burlesque, the character, rather predictably, becomes an actual jockey and is described in the dramatis personae as "a sporting Gentleman, well known on the Turf" (210). He wears a "Jockey's dress complete" (212), and the entire exchange between Richard and Norfolk in scene 10 is built around the horse-racing metaphor: Richard: Well, Norfolk, think you we shall win the race? Norfolk: Why, you see, guv'ner, if yer can go the pace, And your jockeys don't come the cross, you will. But I've had the office, there's a plant afoot To put you in the hole-just read that ere, And see if it arn't likely you'll be nowhere! (Gives paper.) Richard: (Reading.)-"Jockey of Norfolk, be not too cheeky-For yer chance o' winning's very squeaky! There is such things as jockeys being bought, And coming dodges as they didn't ought-Therefore, I say, don't cut it quite so fat, For you, and yer cause, it's all round my hat," A weak invention of the opposition! (250-1) The use of regional dialects is another important aspect of localization. Norfolk speaks "With a Yorkshire dialect" (250) and, as was typical of burlesques, begins with an exclamation that contains an obvious localization: "Look sharp, my lord, the foe's at Tattenham Corner!" (250). In Coyne's travesty of Richard III, the character had similarly been presented as "the oldest Jockey on record," 55 and this was to be a long-lasting association. In the 1850s, in one of the six Shakespearean cartoons cumulatively labeled "New Readings for Unconventional Tragedians," Norfolk was again depicted as a jockey presenting Richard with a copy of the contemporary sporting journal Bell's Life. 56 In addition to dialect, costumes served to bring a contemporary spin to Shakespeare. The costume descriptions in the print edition of Selby's play appear invariably extravagant and often symbolical. For example, a "moveable weather arrow with N.S.E.W., made of pasteboard and gold paper" (213) was fastened on the top of Lady Anne's head to spoof her mutability. Other anachronistic details point to the comic use of costumes and properties. For instance, King Edward was dressed in a "Short black velvet tunic, showing muslin trousers, flesh legs, white socks, and black shoes, large leghorn, or white beaver hat, with large rosette, and plume of white feathers, hair in ringlets to represent a child dressed in caricature of modern fashion" (212). Unsurprisingly, the reviewer of the Illustrated London News declared that "the costumes were a tissue of ludicrous anachronisms." 57 In scene 4 the Footman was dressed in "an extravagant modern livery" and "carr[ied] an eccentric crimson umbrella" (223), whereas in the last scene, at the point when Richard dramatically asserted, "of one or both of us, the time is come," Richmond, taking the metaphor literally, looked "at a large watch" (253). References to trains (249), cabs (241), and omnibuses (245) underscore the comic use of anachronistic details to meld Shakespeare and contemporary culture.
A similar alienating result was achieved with the introduction of "eccentric" dancing (249), "extravagant" action and attitudes (236, 240, 250, and 253), and, above all, the insertion of musical effects that stage directions frequently describe as dissonant: "discord in orchestra" (221 and 249), "discordant flourish" (229, 243, and 251), and "discord and flourish" (250). This, again, appears as a parody of the incidental musical effects that characterized the performance of the tragedy at the legitimate theatre, which critics deemed inappropriate or excessive. The critic of The Times, for instance, found that "the fiddling . . . between the acts was almost intolerable," and declared that "with the marches and flourishes with which Richard III abound[ed], there [was] quite enough to make a bad performance in this respect a positive drawback." 58 Selby's burlesque also ridiculed the presence of numerous extras in the Drury Lane production, which the press had likewise criticized: "the bustle and confusion of the supernumeraries was anything but conducive to the interest of the scene," 59 stated the reviewer of Lloyd's Weekly London Newspaper. If the playbill for the Drury Lane performance advertised "Standard Bearers, Trumpeters, Cannoneers, Banner Bearers, Archers, Bellmen, French Troops, Poursuivants, Soldiers, Body Guard, Peasants, &c., &c.," the list of the dramatis personae in the travesty included "Sheriffs and Aldermen, Standard Bearers, Trumpeters, Banner Bearers, Commoners, Archers, Bellmen, French Troops, Pursuivants, Soldiers, Body Guard, &c. &c." (210). The "bustle and confusion of the supernumeraries" in the legitimate performance was parodied, in the burlesque, in the already mentioned "Gigantic Equestrian Pageant" (sc. 8), which was "kept in motion by the Knights, Squires, Pages, Heralds, &c., running off and on, bringing and carrying messages" (244).
Selby also took pains to mock the hyperrealism of the final battle scene. The newspapers recorded that the Drury Lane Richard and Richmond were "surrounded by the implements of war, slain horses, broken carriages, and the dead and the dying," 60 and made reference to "the dying and the dead in heaps on the field, and bows and arrows of the slain scattered over the plain." 61 This was echoed in the "Battle Tableau" that opened scene 13, where "Soldiers, Horses, Knights, &c., [are] discovered, lying dead, in extravagant melodramatic attitudes," and "after a short pause they all rise, and fight off" (253). In this "very identical battel field!" (211), the burlesque Richard was killed in "an unapproachably terrific combatafter a variety of extravagant pantomime" (253) that, again, satirized the excesses of the final sword fight in its legitimate counterpart at Drury Lane. However, despite the protestations of King Henry, this burlesque Richard refused to stay dead, and, in a "Transatlantic Finale" (211) set to "Yankee Doodle," apostrophized the audience and begged its favor. The closing scene of Selby's travesty shows how travesties, besides chastising, as Burnand claimed, the "misinterpretation of selfcomplacent mediocre actors" and the "extravagant realism" of legitimate theatrical productions, made fun of contemporary London culture in general. In this case, the target was the increasingly widespread influence of American culture.
Though it is tempting to decipher every burlesque pun or allusion used, doing so does not offer a key to understanding such plays. In fact, contemporary accounts demonstrate that many burlesque jokes eluded the audience when they were first put onstage. The Illustrated London News reported that in Selby's Kinge Richard ye Third "the jokes were so thick that the hearers had not time to reflect on the worth of one before the wit of another flashed forth." 62 However, as the above analysis of costumes and properties, music, dancing, and dialect shows, the text was only one element in a highly complex theatrical entertainment that appealed to audiences in a number of different ways.

Francis Cowley Burnand's The Rise and Fall of Richard III (1868)
Whereas the first play I examined represented one of the earliest experiments in the genre and Selby's piece showed the dramatic form at its apogee, the last burlesque I have selected was produced when the fashion for burlesques was fading. Indeed, as Schoch records, "No new Shakespeare burlesque was performed for almost the entire 1860s." 63 The Rise and Fall of Richard III; or, A New Front to an Old Dicky was written by Francis Cowley Burnand, who, like Selby, was a prolific dramatist who composed more than seventy comic plays. He was also the editor of Punch from 1880 to 1906 and the author of the above-quoted defence of the burlesque form. 64 The play was staged at the New Royalty Theatre on 24 September 1868 and was "the last major Shakespeare burlesque of the professional theatre." 65 From the 1850s onward, the relationship between the burlesques and their source texts progressively slackened. For example, the plot of The Rise and Fall of Richard III departs in significant ways from both Shakespeare's original and Cibber's adaptation. As the critic of The Observer stated, the author had "not told the old story in a new way, but had, to a great extent, made a story of his own." 66 When the action starts, not only King Henry but also King Edward is dead, and the visit of the Lord Mayor and the Aldermen immediately follows the wooing of Lady Anne. Then, in the second scene, Richmond, the Duchess, Richard, and Elizabeth (or 'Lisbeth, to her Grandmamma) are shown together at Lord Stanley's house, and both Richard and Richmond propose to the girl. The group meets again at a ball at Westminster Palace in scene 3. Then, in scene 4, the Duchess, Elizabeth, and the Lord Mayor are all present in Richard's camp, and, outside the King's tent, the young woman tells Richmond the various, naive tricks she has played on Richard to sabotage him. The Duchess and the Lord Mayor are even involved in the battle, and the combat itself, with its abundance of visual slapstick humor, is pantomimic and chaotically ludicrous: Enter, L. 2 E., man with mace, and Recorder with sword, fighting. Man with sword victorious. Enter Duchess of York, R. 2 E., with Lord Mayor, fighting. Duchess takes mace from man falling R., hits Recorder with sword, floors the Lord Mayor. Lord Mayor down, mace down, Recorder down. Enter Catesby; he is just about to hit the Duchess when she turns, he runs, she pursues. Exit Duchess R. Enter L. Buckingham and Tyrrel fighting; then to them Stanley; the three fight. Buckingham is in the middle. They lunge and run each other through, as Buckingham steps back and runs them through again with his two swords. Enter Elizabeth L. They all bow politely and fall down in different attitudes. Exit Elizabeth R. triumphantly. Drums. Trumpets. 67 Tellingly, several critics noted the similarity between this piece and a pantomime. In 1844, the reviewer of The Times had already commented on the suitability of the tragedy of King Richard III for this kind of entertainment when he had declared that "the subject, being full of action, allowed all the practical fun of a pantomime, which not a little enhanced the success of it." 68 In 1868, the commentator for Lloyd's Weekly London Newspaper stated more generally that, at the time, it had become "difficult . . . to draw the line between burlesque and pantomime," adding that, "with the exception of one or two scenes from the Shakespeare-Cibber tragedy," The Rise and Fall of Richard III could "properly be described as an extravagant pantomime opening into which several of the clown's scenes ha[d] been introduced." 69 Notwithstanding the perplexities expressed by reviewers, who mainly objected to the extreme freedom with which the author had treated his models (both Shakespeare and Cibber), Burnand's travesty continued to attract audiences for four months.
Burnand greatly reduced the number of dramatis personae but introduced new, extravagant characters, including "the Recorder," "the Mace," and "Pages of History." As was to become common in burlesques produced in the last quarter of the century, several roles (Richmond, Buckingham, Catesby, and the Duchess) were played en travestie. 70 The setting was unusual and absurd, with only five scenes, including "Old Holborn Valley, near the Bishop of Ely's Strawberry Gardens," and "Lord Stanley's Residence in the Romantic Village of Seven Dials." In the description of Lord Stanley's "suburban residence" (205) as "romantic," we see both localization and irony at work, since, as Schoch points out, Seven Dials was "an area of St Giles' parish in central London then notorious for squalor and homicide." 71 Burnand also drew on other plays by Shakespeare in composing his burlesque, and on one occasion the operation is explicit and associated with a sarcastic remark on Cibber: "Richard. Of all men else I'd have avoided thee. / Richmond. Richard, that's from Macbeth, and I won't suffer / Such mal-quotations on your great Mac-duffer" (240). In a footnote, the author justified himself by referring to the adapter's way of proceeding: "Cibber selected any passages from other plays of Shakespeare, and fitted them in as best he could. So here" (240). Such an ironic thrust can be seen, again, as a way of reinstating Shakespeare's authority in a theatrical panorama dominated by (often-unacknowledged) adaptation.
Allusions to contemporary theatrical culture are present in this burlesque as well. On the title page, the play is described as "A Richardsonian burlesque"-a reference to the fair-booth showman John Richardson, who had died thirty years earlier, but whose reputation as a producer of brief, sensational melodramas continued to be alive, as the following lines suggest: Richard These are not the only metatheatrical allusions: the last quoted line parodies Cibber's Richard's defiant exclamation after the nightmare ("Conscience ava [u] nt; Richard's himself again") 73 and the actorial pose that regularly accompanied it. The play similarly satirizes other famous lines from the source play, which offered good "points" to actors and on which the Richards of the time fought their battles. Cibber's already mentioned interpolation is evoked twice, and in both instances the lines are spoken out of turn. Richard: Guards! Ho! Soldiers! Waiter! "Off with his head so much"-(Corrects himself.)-no that comes later. (217) On the second occasion, Stanley's sudden entrance makes Richard cut his chin while shaving, which jibes well with the unexpected decapitation order: Richard: (Furiously.)-Off with his head, so much for Buckingham. Elizabeth: He's not the Duke-Richard: He's not, but he came in So suddenly, he made me cut my chin. (236) Richard's last desperate cry becomes: "A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a courser! / Well, I do get a little hoarse, and hoarser. / That's an old joke" (239). The comment "that's an old joke" highlights how many Richard III jokes had by the midnineteenth century become stale and overused. Burnand nevertheless continued to recycle such jokes, as the following tour de force return to Gloucester cheese puns suggests: Richard: I see that you a passion for me foster. Anne: Passion for you! High, mighty, double Gloster.

Richard:
Oh, call me double Gloster, if you please, As long as I, in your eyes, am the cheese. Anne: A cheese! Why then I cut you.
(Going to R., he stops her.) Richard (L.): I've the daring To ask you to consider this cheese paring. Anne: You are hump-backed. Richard: Oh, hump-bug! Anne: And knock knee'd.

Richard:
A friend in-knee'd, maam, is a friend in deed. (200) The legibility of these word games-for example, the puns on "paring" and "pairing," and on "knee'd" and "need"-offer one reason for their staying power. Equally comprehensible is the metaphor "to be the cheese" (i.e., "to be the best or first rate") and the wordplay on "cut," which stands for both "to slice" and the slang word "to run away, make off" (OED). In addition to recycling old jokes to great effect, Burnand's burlesque parodied climactic moments in performance such as the final sword fight between Richard and Richmond, as evidenced by the stage direction: "They fight the regular old stereotyped 'Richard' combat. Richard falls" (240). Metadramatic allusions are discernible in the following punning exchange, which unexpectedly references two editors of Shakespeare: As the above quotation implies, speech effects became a source of comedy in this play, not through the use of dialect, but through the "broken English" (205) spoken by Richmond, who "passed the best years of his life in Britanny [sic], and was more of a Frenchman than an Englishman" (194).
In keeping with the burlesque form, Burnand includes numerous topical references, as in the pun in which the Lord Mayor is assimilated to "a New Zealand Savage" because he is "a Maorie Chief" (202). Or, again, in the scene where the group formed by Richmond, Elizabeth, Richard, the Duchess, and Anne takes up the suggestion of Richmond, who sustains that the Cancan is "a little thing from France" that "belongs to France and England too" (221), and performs a "grand dance and chorus" (222) on the notes of L'OEil Crevé, an opéra bouffe by Hervé that had been produced the previous year: again, "Shakespeare" is made contemporary. The weird show appears as a veritable hymn to the Cancan: The Cançan! The Cançan! No dance can please us more. To the gay Cançan, to the gay Cançan Of the Cançan Conqueror. 74 (222) The performance degenerates in a "wild dance, in which Richmond, Richard, Elizabeth, Anne and Duchess take prominent parts" (223). In this scene, the habitual reference to Bohemian culture is clearly perceivable, since at the time the Cancan was considered extremely inappropriate by respectable society.
Heavy drinking is another recurring topic, as the following passage in which Richard and his mother spend their time drinking shows: Richard: You look untidy. (Examining Duchess's dress.) Duchess: Don't repeat "untidy" when you see I've something neat.
( Burnand introduced anachronisms and incongruities to render the situations funnier, and the play more entertaining: in the wooing scene, Anne threatens Richard with a parasol (201); Richmond smokes cigarettes (206); Stanley enters carrying coats and umbrellas (209); in scene 3, Elizabeth and Richmond go to the ball wearing Tyrolean dress (219) and, with the Duchess and Richard, sing to the tune of Offenbach's "[Valse] Tyrolienne" (220); later on, Elizabeth participates to the battle "dressed after the manner of Joan of Arc" (234). In this burlesque too, the songs were numerous and varied, and they were set either to contemporary airs or to operatic tunes. On some occasions, the publisher of the original song was noted (see 204, 212, 216, 225, and 229). Dancing was, again, prominent. As customary, the dead came back to life in the finale. The Duchess delightedly announces: "here's Anne, who wasn't killed by my bad son," and Anne continues the sentence with a pun: "But is as much alive as Annie one" (241). Immediately after, at Richmond's triumphant assertion "There Richard lays," Richard instantly resuscitates and defiantly exclaims, using, again, a pun: "To order, sir, I rise. / Who says 'he lays' grammatically lies" (241). Then, in the final song (to the tune of "Naughty Mary Anne")-in line with the concepts that Burnand would expound two decades later in his essay "The Spirit of Burlesque," where he would declare that the office of burlesque is "to expose, ridicule and satirise dramatic pedantry and theatrical pretension," 75 -Elizabeth asserts that the play (aptly subtitled A New Front to an Old Dicky) has "amended" Richard's story: Elizabeth: The tragic tale is ended, And you have seen it all, The history amended Of Richard's rise and fall. With ranting and with raving, I think he's had his fling, Oh hasn't he been behaving As a Richardsonian King. (241) To conclude this essay, it could be appropriate to recall the Bakhtinian idea of parody as a hybrid of multiple registers and languages. Hybridity characterized nineteenth-century theatrical culture at large, which witnessed an astonishing proliferation and cross-fertilization of dramatic genres, and an equally striking experimentation within traditional generic modes. The stage was dominated by a combination of high and low, legitimate and illegitimate, elite and popular, past and present. In hybridity lies the key to the popularity and success of the burlesque form and of Shakespeare travesties in particular. As David Francis Taylor has put it: "Burlesque operates in, and wilfully collapses, the disjunction between the registers of Shakespearean drama and of the modern everyday." 76 However, nineteenth-century Shakespearean parodies were not intended as attacks on Shakespeare; rather, their targets were the follies of the pseudo-Shakespeareanism of the contemporary age, and the misrepresentations it entailed. Burnand's statement on the subject finds an echo in the exchange between the characters of "Burlesque" and "Tragedy" in James Robinson Planché's 1853 extravaganza The Camp at the Olympic: . . . I fling your follies in your face, And call back all the false starts of your race, Show up your shows, affect your affectation, And by this homoeopathic aggravation, Would cleanse your bosom of that perilous stuff, Which weighs upon our art-bombast and puff. 77 With all their absurdity, nonsense, and eccentricities, nineteenth-century Shakespeare burlesques purported to be the defenders of good sense and good theatre. More important, they saw themselves as the restorers of the Bard's status, imperiled, at the time, by extravagant productions and what had increasingly come to be regarded as "mangled" dramatic adaptations.