Early Modern Women and Drama
The UCL Centre for Early Modern
Exchanges is delighted to announce the following seminar:
Wed 6th Feb, *6pm*, Foster Court 114
Early Modern Women and Drama
Speakers:
Alison Findlay
(Lancaster): '"Ile be my selfe ... And I must bee a
Queene": Daniel’s Cleopatra and the performance of
sovereignty'
Marion Wynne-Davies (Surrey): 'More
Women, More Weeping: Mary Sidney Herbert's Tragedy of Antonie'
Yasmin Arshad (UCL) and Emma Whipday
(UCL): Staging Daniel's Cleopatra
Chair: Helen Hackett (UCL)
All welcome; for maps and
directions, please see http://www.ucl.ac.uk/find-us
For more on the UCL Centre for Early
Modern Exchanges, please see http://www.ucl.ac.uk/eme/seminars
This seminar will introduce:
Samuel Daniel's Cleopatra
A Jacobean-style performance
2pm, Sunday 3rd March
The Great Hall, Goodenough
College, Mecklenburgh Square, London
WC1N 2AB
For more information, please
see http://thetragedieofcleopatra.wordpress.com/.
Booking details to follow shortly.
Supported by: the UCL Grand
Challenge of Intercultural Interaction, 'Gained in Translation' programme; the
UCL European Institute; UCL Art and Humanities Faculty Institute of Graduate
Studies (FIGS); and UCL English Department.
Samuel
Daniel’s Tragedie of Cleopatra (1594) is the first English drama about
Cleopatra and a source for Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra. This
production arises from the PhD research of Yasmin Arshad (UCL, English) and is
directed by Emma Whipday (UCL English). It brings together a talented
production team from a wide range of UCL departments, with professionally
trained actors in lead roles.
The production will explore
early modern attitudes to race and national identity. The play centres on
tensions between Egypt and Rome and on a non-European heroine who is fascinatingly
different from Shakespeare’s Cleopatra in her nobility and stoicism. It is a
sequel to Mary Sidney’s translation of Robert Garnier’s Antonie, making
it an English play about an Egyptian queen inspired by a translation
from French of a neo-Senecan tragedy. As such it demonstrates that cultural
dialogue across and beyond Europe was the engine of artistic and intellectual
innovation in the early modern period.
The production will also
overturn the widespread perception that women did not participate in drama in
Shakespeare’s time. Although female roles were taken by boys in commercial playhouses
such as the Globe, Daniel’s play belongs to a genre (sometimes called ‘closet
drama’) performed in country house settings with actors including women. Excitingly,
Yasmin Arshad has discovered a portrait of a Jacobean lady in costume as
Cleopatra, inscribed with lines from Daniel’s play.
By investigating
the history of relations between performance, race, and gender in early modern
Europe this production will enhance our understanding of these issues in the
present. The performance will be on Sunday 3rd March 2013 at
Goodenough College; booking details to be announced shortly. A DVD will be made available to researchers and teachers of early
modern drama, and a programme of activities will include a schools workshop, an
Early Modern Exchanges research seminar, and a Read not Dead staged reading at
Shakespeare’s Globe.
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