![[K]](ppics/k.jpg)
ing James was cool and actually became a sponsor of Shakespeare's reformed outfit THE
KINGS MEN -- lending the group money and hanging out with the lads backstage and on
tour.
Theatre of the time was enjoyed by commoners as well as the privileged. Often thee
audiences were completely illiterate. Public theatres like THE HOPE, THE FORTUNE, THE
RED BULL and THE SWAN were "open air" so the players had to compete with livestock
sales, screaming street hawkers, and the ubiquitous drunks.
To reach this crowd Shakespeare could not rely on a large stack of amplifiers. He
needed the most electrifying words and images ever created in the English language.
Concepts that would galvanize common people and make them stop, lose themselves,
rise above the muck for an hour or two.
It was crass. It was business. It was art. And it was genius.
Shakespeare had the rhymes. Everyone knew it. In fact, he used cadences we're still
hearing today to reinforce some of this most important concepts and lines.
The Bard's group was bad. They kicked ass so bad his competitors used to send out
speed writers, shorthand artists and bribe other actors in his plays to try to make their
own bootlegged copies of his plays. The unauthorized "boots" were known as "The Bad
Quartos." (Weird but true.)
![[S]](ppics/s.jpg)
hakespeare was pissed off by this of course, so he hired hls own publishers and
came out with "The Good Quartos" which are pretty much the way he intended his work
to sound.
Over the years theatre companies and scholars pieced together so called "original
texts" of the plays from various notes and good and bad Quartos. There are many
differences from text to text. And Shakespeare probably would have kicked all their
asses.
While none of his plays are set in Florida, it's interesting to note that The Pilgrims
who settled in America spoke Elizabethan English and that Shakespeare's language and
culture were transplanted to the "new continent" in his lifetime.
As his fame and success grew Shakespeare was able to buy the second-largest house
in Stratford, called New Place, a cottage and garden nearby, and 107 acres of soccer
field.
In about 1611, Shakespeare retired permanently to Stratford, having earned the status of
"gentleman." After writing many successful tragedies and comedies, he finished as
he started, with a historical play, "Henry VIII."
In early 1616, he wrote his will, leaving his property to his daughter Susanna. who had
married a prominent doctor, 300 English pounds to his other daughter, Judith, who
was married scandalously at age 32 to a wine maker, and his second-best bed to Anne,
because it was her favorite.
He died young -- on his 52nd birthday. William Shakespeare was buried at Trinity
Church in Stratford as an honored citizen. On his tombstone is carved a rather wry
inscription:
-
Good Friend, for Jesu's sake forbear
To dig the dust enclosed here.
Blest be the man that spares these stones,
And cursed be he who moves my bones.
|