
Embracing Disruption
Clowning, Improvisation, and the Unscripted in Early Shakespearean Performance
Series: Routledge Advances in Theatre & Performance Studies;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 23 July 2025
- ISBN 9781032740799
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages168 pages
- Size 216x138 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations 8 Illustrations, black & white; 8 Halftones, black & white 700
Categories
Short description:
This volume celebrates the centrality of clowning to Shakespeare?s conception of theatre and how he purposefully invites the clown?s anarchic energy into the heart of his dramaturgy.
MoreLong description:
This volume celebrates the centrality of clowning to Shakespeare?s conception of theatre and how he purposefully invites the clown?s anarchic energy into the heart of his dramaturgy.
Having evoked his comic inheritance in the person and practice of the great clown Dick Tarlton, the book examines Shakespeare?s innovative deployment of his company clown Will Kemp alongside leading man Richard Burbage. In chapters on Romeo and Juliet and Henry IV, the book explores the enormously generative, unstable, and compelling relationship between these two actors, Burbage and Kemp?the hero and the clown?and how this extraordinary dynamic between them was experienced by the audience in performance. Subsequent chapters show the ghosts of both Tarlton and Kemp informing Burbage?s performance as Hamlet and then Kemp?s successor Robert Armin continuing this dynamic as the Fool alongside Burbage in King Lear. In each instance, the presence of the clown (or Hamlet?s own clown-like behavior) radically informs the audience?s understanding of the hero. Furthermore, the clown?s increasingly sophisticated deployment and absorption into Shakespeare?s plays comments on and resists the transformation of the Elizabethan theatre.
This study will be of great interest to students and scholars in Performance studies and Shakespeare studies.
''Embracing Disruption brilliantly fuses historical reconstruction and clown practice to demonstrate how Shakespeare preserved and exploited the disruptive nature of the clown in the face of growing constraints on clowning and improvisation. An essential text for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in Shakespeare.''
Professor Robert Knopf, Professor Emeritus, Department of Theatre nad Dance, University at Buffalo
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Table of Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Thriving Beyond Authorial Control
Chapter 1: The Man Who Could ?Please All? Dick Tarlton?s World and Playground
Chapter 2: ?Enter Will Kemp? Revivifying the Clown Peter in Romeo and Juliet
Chapter 3: ?A Good Wit Will Make Use of Anything? Kemp?s Playful Clowning in Serious History
Chapter 4: Clown Prince Hamlet - Exposing the Fictions of Decorum.
Chapter 5: ?The Worst Returns to Laughter,? Transformation through Collaboration, Robert Armin as Lear?s Fool
Index

Embracing Disruption: Clowning, Improvisation, and the Unscripted in Early Shakespearean Performance
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