Yes, player and playwright meant the same thing in Shakespeare’s day

Here we go again!
Here we go again!

In case you have missed it, last week saw a new chapter emerged concerning Shakespeare and the dreaded authorship argument. Long time readers and friends know why I use the word dreaded; it is an argument born from ego and suspicion of all things labeled accepted academic. I’ve learned to stay far away from this fight as no good usually comes from it. But, if you haven’t heard of Heather Wolfe, I’d like to introduce her to you, as I have a feeling she is going to become a leading figure in Shakespeare academia.

Wolfe holds my dream job as a curator at the Folger’s Library; her expertise as a paleographer is in old English manuscripts. She has been dubbed the “Sherlock Holmes of the library” due to her ability to not only find often overlooked written clues, but forensic clues such as hair and odd bits of DNA. Scholars hold Wolfe in high esteem, which is why when she announced she had found proof that the playwright known as Shakespeare, and the Stratford born Shakespeare were one and the same, the academic world took notice.

I will link to the full news article below. For our purposes we only need to know that Wolfe found a 1602 list of “mean persons” (deemed unworthy) whose applications for a coat of arms was wrongfully “preferred” by Sir William Dethick, the Garter King of Arms. Among those who were called out as being unworthy yet somehow “preferred” was Shakespeare the player. The only application noted in the official College of Arms record at the time was an application by William Shakespeare of Stratford. This Coat of Arms Shakespeare of Stratford was petitioning for included the motto, Not without right.

The Guardian article reminds us that “Around the same time Ben Jonson, in his satire Every Man out of his Humour, poked fun at his artistic rival (Shakespeare the player) as a rustic buffoon who pays £30 for a ridiculous coat of arms with the humiliating motto ‘Not Without Mustard‘.”

So it does appear that Wolfe is right, that Shakespeare of Stratford, Shakespeare the player, and Johnson’s rival are one and the same. But what about Shakespeare the playwright? Why did the list include the word player and not playwright? Sigh, here we go…

As soon as I read the article I knew, I just knew, someone from anti-Stratfordian camp would argue that player and playwright did not mean the same thing. In fact, I mentioned this on Twitter while discussing the subject with some friends. And sure enough, a couple of days ago, a self-professed “expert” Oxfordian, tweeted out this very argument. But instead of letting my gut reaction take hold, I asked myself, “Does he have a point?”

My quest to find the answer first led me to wanting to know when the word playwright was first used. The answer was a little surprising; it seems Ben Johnson coined the term (at least this is the first recorded use of the word) in an epigram (49 to be exact) in which Johnson counterfeits a complaint against those that dare shed light on man’s darker nature:

XLIX. — TO PLAYWRIGHT.

PLAYWRIGHT me reads, and still my verses damns,
He says I want the tongue of epigrams ;
I have no salt, no bawdry he doth mean ;
For witty, in his language, is obscene.
Playwright, I loath to have thy manners known
In my chaste book; I profess them in thine own.

Epigrams, in case you are wondering, are what I would call the anti-sonnet. Sonnets by definition are usually love poems, while epigrams are usually humors complaints; mostly about women. As you might expect the use of epigrams as poems were not as popular as sonnets and so their use as poetry devices quickly died out.

Johnson uses the term playwright in a derogatory manner. The context in which he uses it begins to form an argument against the idea that player and playwright are not the same thing. You see in Johnson’s and Shakespeare’s day wrights were craftsmen; ploughwrights made ploughs, cartwrights wagons, etc. These craftsmen, or wrights were of the labor class, and as such were not looked upon as worthy for consideration. By attaching the word wright to play, Johnson was liking a dramatist to a laborer. In other words, someone unworthy for consideration. The fact that this playwright draws attention to the bawdry and obscene makes him all the more unworthy of attention. The term as we know it today was not widely used in the early 17th century. And, as I soon learned, any mention of a writer of plays during this period of history is hard to find at all.

A good primary source of information for this subject is G. Blakemore Evan’ book, Elizabethan-Jacobean Drama, The Theatre in its Time. This delightful book contains primary sources that give us a better understanding of how the theatre was viewed by critics, officials, noblemen, and ordinary people. It contains pieces of long forgotten plays, and beautiful illustrations you’d be hard pressed to find outside of academic libraries. My copy is dog-eared from the many times I’ve used it as a reference guide.

All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players; they have their exits and their entrances. Jaques to Duke Senior in As You Like It

Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more: it is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
Macbeth

In all of Shakespeare’s work he never uses the term “playwright”, although he does reference players several times; most notably in his stage directions for Hamlet’s play-within-a play. The acting troupe that visits Elsinore is referred to both singularly and collectively as player(s). The more I researched the subject of player vs. playwright, the more this began to make sense. Of all of the primary sources I read,( both in print and online) none used the term playwright. It’s clear that this term was not in vogue during Shakespeare’s lifetime, and therefor would not have been used in a list of “mean persons”. As a matter of fact, the term for he who writes plays in any form is hardly worth mentioning at all. The writer is absent even in the most grievous of complaints against the theater.

In an official letter against the theater from the Lord Mayor of London and the Aldermen to the Privy Council dated 28 July 1597 the word “stage-plays” shows up four times. The mayor, convinced playhouses are the “refuse for all sort of evil-disposed and ungodly people that are within and about this City”,goes on to detail the many opportunities for vice that stage-plays afforded the masses but oddly never complains about the actors and writer who put on the stage-plays. They are secondary to his concern.

In a letter about street brawls and the theater, William Fleetwood to Lord Burghley date 18 June 1584, does take the time to concern himself with the players. He uses the term collectively when talking about a particular troupe, “Upon the same night I sent for the Queen’s players and my Lord’s players”. Fleetwood’s collective use of the word player is consistent with what we see from this time period when talking about an acting troupe as a whole or in part. Fleetwood goes on to talk about the “Chiefest of the Highest players” (what ever the hell that means).

The Royal license for the King’s men, dated 19 May 1603 starts off with a list of who they are and what they do:

Pro Laurentio Fletcher et Willielmo Shakespeare et aliis.
James by the Grace of God, etc., to all Justices, Maiors, Sheriffs, Constables, Headboroughs, and other our Officers and lovinge Subjects, Greetinge. Knowe ye that wee of our Speciall Grace, certeine knowledge, and mere motion, have licensed and authorized, and by these presentes doe license and authorise these our Servaunts, Laurence Fletcher, William Shakespeare, Richard Burbage, Augustine Phillippes, John Hemings, Henrie Condell, William Sly, Robert Armyn, Richard Cowly, and the rest of their Associates, Freely to use and exercise the Art and Facultie of playing Comedies, Tragedies, Histories, Enterludes, Morals, Pastoralls, Stage Plaies and such others…

As you can see there is no direct reference to a playwright, Shakespeare or not, in this listing.

John Marston’s 1599 play Histriomastix Act II further bolsters my findings. The term player is used as a catch-all for everyone involved in a stage production. The scene opens up with Usher welcoming Lord Owlet’s men. The stage direction calls for the Players’ (King Owlet’s men) Song; not the actors, and playwright’s song, even though the writer of troupe’s plays is present . It is not until the song is over that one of the players is marked as the group’s “poet” but get ready for how he answers this…..

Belch: Here’s a gentleman scholler writes for us: I pray, Master Posthaste, declare for our credits.

Posthaste: For mine own part, though this summer season, I am desperate of a horse.

Yes, you just read that correctly. Marston’s gentleman scholler (his spelling) just admitted that he spends his summer acting in Shakespeare’s play, Richard III.

In all of my research of primary sources none besides Johnson refers to the word playwright. Nor could I find the word author, dramatist, writer, or any other word that divided he who wrote from he who acted. I am not saying the distinction is not out there, only that it would be uncommon. We also have Marston telling us that writers, or poets, are also actors. And let’s not let this nugget slip past us; Marston uses a nod to a Shakespeare play in order to get his point across. This could either mean that Richard III was a very popular play at the time of Histriomastix so he included it as a piece of cultural reference, or he used it because it was well known at the time that Shakespeare was both an actor and poet. Either way, his audience would have known exactly what Posthaste meant by that line.

Wolfe is right. This list of “mean persons” in which “Shakespeare the player” is one of, does make it clear that Shakespeare the player, and Shakespeare of Stratford are one and the same. It also seems perfectly clear that player and playwright, at least in Shakespeare’s day, meant the same thing after all.

If you can find a primary source that shows the use of the word playwright, I’d love to hear from you. If you want to argue over who wrote the plays, you’ve come to the wrong blog. And if you want to point out that Shakespeare’s home town is Stratford-upon-Avon, yes I am well aware that this is the official name, but for brevity sake, it’s okay to say Stratford, just ask the Guardian.

Works Cited

Evans, G. Blakemore Elizabethan Jacobean Drama The Theatre in its Time. New Amsterdam Press. Print edition

The Guardian, Sherlock Holmes of the library cracks Shakespeare’s identity. Online https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2017/jan/08/sherlock-holmes-of-the-library-cracks-shakespeare-identity

Luminarium. Org Ben Johnson, epigram 49. Online http://www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/jonson/epigram49.htm

Just in time for winter A quick guide to Shakespeare illustrations online

It’s been almost a week since a large winter storm hit Northern Nevada. 2005 was the last time we experienced this much snow and rain and I had hoped to never see this much again. I saw a great meme the other day on Facebook that rather nicely sums up what we are going through.

xss2x

Yes, winter is here, so it’s time to curl up and thankful for central heating. But what to do on these long winter nights when we find ourselves cooped up in the house. There is only so much one can do at home without going a little stir crazy. Thank goodness for the Internet.

The other night I found myself looking for Shakespeare related news and came across a Tweet mention by Folger’s Library. The tweet invited readers to check out the Victorian Illustrated Shakespeare Archives by Michael John Goodman https://shakespeareillustration.org/ It is a blog devoted to the cataloging of Victorian illustrations found in various works of Shakespeare. Thanks to the Romantics, there was a wave of early Victorian populism in Shakespeare publishing, but unlike the multitude of “subject’ books we see today, these books simply reproduced the plays and added their own artistic flare by including illustrations. Goodman has taken it upon himself to archive and catalog many of these pictures.

While I admit the undertaking is ambitious, the execution is lacking. The front page gives no bio or reason why this concordance of illustrations was created Was it a school project, or the work of a Shakespeare loving coder?

The header is broken up by Victorian illustrators while the body is cataloged by theme. I do not want to be the first to tell Goodman, but the works by the illustrator Kenny Meadows has Pericles housed in the comedy section. It’s a slight mistake given the work that must have gone into making this site, but it would throw off a person who is unfamiliar with Shakespeare’s work. The mistake is further compounded when one clicks on the Comedy theme in the body of the first page. Clicking on comedy takes you to pictures found in Pericles. You would think this mistake would have been found right way because of this.

Clicking on a picture gives you bare-bones information about the history of the picture. An example would be here, in the picture Benedict listens in.

Source Text: The Works of Shakespeare / Edited by Howard Staunton / The Illustrations by John Gilbert / Engraved by the Dalziel Brothers / Vol. I
Source Text: The Works of Shakespeare / Edited by Howard Staunton / The Illustrations by John Gilbert / Engraved by the Dalziel Brothers / Vol. I

Staunton? Who is Staunton? So much for him.

The pictures Goodman includes tell us less about Shakespeare and more about Victorian illustrators. Often the pictures tell their own story, as each expand upon a particular scene and widen our view of it. Other times the illustrators simply takes a character and draws them just for the sake of drawing them. Why Kenny Meadows paired Cleopatra and cherub we may never know. It would have served Goodman and his viewers better had he included some historical perspective.

Cleopatra and cherub Illustrator: Kenny Meadows Engraver: John Orrin Smith Original Illustration Size: 155 x 115 mm / 6″4 x 4″16 Illustration Number: 9/19
Cleopatra and cherub Illustrator: Kenny Meadows
Engraver: John Orrin Smith
Original Illustration Size: 155 x 115 mm / 6″4 x 4″16
Illustration Number: 9/19

It would have been nice had Goodman included some history of the book, even if that history was repeated in every picture from the book. Goodman doesn’t bother to guide us through his collection or offer any assistance to further reading. I was somewhat irked by Goodman’s only comment on the site. He has a very long winded paragraph on how to cite his work. Reading the paragraph it is clear he is no scholar as his views on citing have more to do with making sure he is given proper acknowledgment than how to properly cite a source. I hope I have given him his deserved credit.

For a better site and historical look at Shakespeare themed Victorian illustrations I would suggest heading to Open Source 3,000 Illustrations of Shakespeare’s Complete Works from Victorian England, Neatly Presented in a New Digital Archive

tempest-kmtemp41-1
Here you will find some very wild illustrations, many with a short bio or comment. Take this picture from the Tempest. Open Source tells us,

“The Knight’s edition is joined by one from Kenny Meadows, who contributed some very different illustrations to an 1854 edition. Just above, see a Goya-like illustration from The Tempest”.

I love the Goya-like reference to this picture. It told me I might not have been the first to mutter, “WTF?” when I first saw it.  Open Source takes the time to comment and offer some history of the works presented. Be warned, this is an addictive site, perfect for a warm winter weekend viewing.

the-first-illustrated-works-2302_b_14_vol1_frontispiece
For those who love online collections, no post is complete without mentioning the British Library’s Collections The First illustrated works of Shakespeare edited by Nicholas Rowe, 1709  The BL must be commended for making so much of its content freely available. If you love museums and books, this is a dream come true.

I don’t know about you, but I plan on sitting down with a a pot of tea and looking at all 3,000 Shakespeare inspired illustrations. With so much vitriol over ,and about the Internet these days, sites like these are nice reminders that there is more to it than just “fake news” and platforms for narcissistic personalities.

Works Referenced and Cited

British Library Collections The First illustrated works of Shakespeare edited by Nicholas Rowe, 1709 Online. No date given.  https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/the-first-illustrated-works-of-shakespeare-edited-by-nicholas-rowe-1709.

Goodman. Michael, John. Victorian Illustrated Shakespeare Archives by Michael John Goodman. Online 2016 https://shakespeareillustration.org/. (that, Micheal, is how you site a source)

Open Source 3,000 Illustrations of Shakespeare’s Complete Works from Victorian England, Neatly Presented in a New Digital Archive. Online. No date given. http://www.openculture.com/2016/09/3000-illustrations-of-shakespeares-complete-works-from-victorian-england.html

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